:banner: banners/views.jpg .. highlight:: xml .. _reference/views: ===== Views ===== .. _reference/views/structure: Common Structure ================ View objects expose a number of fields, they are optional unless specified otherwise. ``name`` (mandatory) only useful as a mnemonic/description of the view when looking for one in a list of some sort ``model`` the model linked to the view, if applicable (it doesn't for QWeb views) ``priority`` client programs can request views by ``id``, or by ``(model, type)``. For the latter, all the views for the right type and model will be searched, and the one with the lowest ``priority`` number will be returned (it is the "default view"). ``priority`` also defines the order of application during :ref:`view inheritance <reference/views/inheritance>` ``arch`` the description of the view's layout ``groups_id`` :class:`~openerp.fields.Many2many` field to the groups allowed to view/use the current view ``inherit_id`` the current view's parent view, see :ref:`reference/views/inheritance`, unset by default ``mode`` inheritance mode, see :ref:`reference/views/inheritance`. If ``inherit_id`` is unset the ``mode`` can only be ``primary``. If ``inherit_id`` is set, ``extension`` by default but can be explicitly set to ``primary`` ``application`` website feature defining togglable views. By default, views are always applied .. _reference/views/inheritance: Inheritance =========== View matching ------------- * if a view is requested by ``(model, type)``, the view with the right model and type, ``mode=primary`` and the lowest priority is matched * when a view is requested by ``id``, if its mode is not ``primary`` its *closest* parent with mode ``primary`` is matched View resolution --------------- Resolution generates the final ``arch`` for a requested/matched ``primary`` view: #. if the view has a parent, the parent is fully resolved then the current view's inheritance specs are applied #. if the view has no parent, its ``arch`` is used as-is #. the current view's children with mode ``extension`` are looked up and their inheritance specs are applied depth-first (a child view is applied, then its children, then its siblings) The result of applying children views yields the final ``arch`` Inheritance specs ----------------- There are three types of inheritance specs: * An ``xpath`` element with an ``expr`` attribute. ``expr`` is an XPath_ expression\ [#hasclass]_ applied to the current ``arch``, the first node it finds is the match * a ``field`` element with a ``name`` attribute, matches the first ``field`` with the same ``name`` * any other element, the first element with the same name and identical attributes (ignoring ``position``) is matched The inheritance spec may have an optional ``position`` attribute specifying how the matched node should be altered: ``inside`` (default) the content of the inheritance spec is appended to the matched node ``replace`` the content of the inheritance spec replaces the matched node ``after`` the content of the inheritance spec is added to the matched node's parent, after the matched node ``before`` the content of the inheritance spec is added to the matched node's parent, before the matched node ``attributes`` the content of the inheritance spec should be ``attribute`` elements with a ``name`` attribute and an optional body: * if the ``attribute`` element has a body, a new attributed named after its ``name`` is created on the matched node with the ``attribute`` element's text as value * if the ``attribute`` element has no body, the attribute named after its ``name`` is removed from the matched node. If no such attribute exists, an error is raised A view's specs are applied sequentially. .. _reference/views/list: Lists ===== The root element of list views is ``<tree>``\ [#treehistory]_. The list view's root can have the following attributes: ``editable`` by default, selecting a list view's row opens the corresponding :ref:`form view <reference/views/form>`. The ``editable`` attributes makes the list view itself editable in-place. Valid values are ``top`` and ``bottom``, making *new* records appear respectively at the top or bottom of the list. The architecture for the inline :ref:`form view <reference/views/form>` is derived from the list view. Most attributes valid on a :ref:`form view <reference/views/form>`'s fields and buttons are thus accepted by list views although they may not have any meaning if the list view is non-editable ``default_order`` overrides the ordering of the view, replacing the model's default order. The value is a comma-separated list of fields, postfixed by ``desc`` to sort in reverse order: .. code-block:: xml <tree default_order="sequence,name desc"> ``colors`` allows changing the color of a row's text based on the corresponding record's attributes. Defined as a mapping of colors to Python expressions. Values are of the form: :samp:`{color}:{expr}[;...]`. For each record, pairs are tested in order, the expression is evaluated for the record and if ``true`` the corresponding color is applied to the row. If no color matches, uses the default text color (black). * ``color`` can be any valid `CSS color unit`_. * ``expr`` should be a Python expression evaluated with the current record's attributes as context values. Other context values are ``uid`` (the id of the current user) and ``current_date`` (the current date as a string of the form ``yyyy-MM-dd``) ``fonts`` allows changing a row's font style based on the corresponding record's attributes. The format is the same as for ``color``, but the ``color`` of each pair is replaced by ``bold``, ``italic`` or ``underline``, the expression evaluating to ``true`` will apply the corresponding style to the row's text. Contrary to ``colors``, multiple pairs can match each record ``create``, ``edit``, ``delete`` allows *dis*\ abling the corresponding action in the view by setting the corresponding attribute to ``false`` ``on_write`` only makes sense on an ``editable`` list. Should be the name of a method on the list's model. The method will be called with the ``id`` of a record after having created or edited that record (in database). The method should return a list of ids of other records to load or update. ``string`` alternative translatable label for the view .. deprecated:: 8.0 not displayed anymore .. toolbar attribute is for tree-tree views Possible children elements of the list view are: .. _reference/views/list/button: ``button`` displays a button in a list cell ``icon`` icon to use to display the button ``string`` * if there is no ``icon``, the button's text * if there is an ``icon``, ``alt`` text for the icon ``type`` type of button, indicates how it clicking it affects Odoo: ``workflow`` (default) sends a signal to a workflow. The button's ``name`` is the workflow signal, the row's record is passed as argument to the signal ``object`` call a method on the list's model. The button's ``name`` is the method, which is called with the current row's record id and the current context. .. web client also supports a @args, which allows providing additional arguments as JSON. Should that be documented? Does not seem to be used anywhere ``action`` load an execute an ``ir.actions``, the button's ``name`` is the database id of the action. The context is expanded with the list's model (as ``active_model``), the current row's record (``active_id``) and all the records currently loaded in the list (``active_ids``, may be just a subset of the database records matching the current search) ``name`` see ``type`` ``args`` see ``type`` ``attrs`` dynamic attributes based on record values. A mapping of attributes to domains, domains are evaluated in the context of the current row's record, if ``True`` the corresponding attribute is set on the cell. Possible attributes are ``invisible`` (hides the button) and ``readonly`` (disables the button but still shows it) ``states`` shorthand for ``invisible`` ``attrs``: a list of states, comma separated, requires that the model has a ``state`` field and that it is used in the view. Makes the button ``invisible`` if the record is *not* in one of the listed states ``context`` merged into the view's context when performing the button's Odoo call ``confirm`` confirmation message to display (and for the user to accept) before performing the button's Odoo call .. declared but unused: help ``field`` defines a column where the corresponding field should be displayed for each record. Can use the following attributes: ``name`` the name of the field to display in the current model. A given name can only be used once per view ``string`` the title of the field's column (by default, uses the ``string`` of the model's field) ``invisible`` fetches and stores the field, but doesn't display the column in the table. Necessary for fields which shouldn't be displayed but are used by e.g. ``@colors`` ``groups`` lists the groups which should be able to see the field ``widget`` alternate representations for a field's display. Possible list view values are: ``progressbar`` displays ``float`` fields as a progress bar. ``many2onebutton`` replaces the m2o field's value by a checkmark if the field is filled, and a cross if it is not ``handle`` for ``sequence`` fields, instead of displaying the field's value just displays a dra&drop icon ``sum``, ``avg`` displays the corresponding aggregate at the bottom of the column. The aggregation is only computed on *currently displayed* records. The aggregation operation must match the corresponding field's ``group_operator`` ``attrs`` dynamic attributes based on record values. Only effects the current field, so e.g. ``invisible`` will hide the field but leave the same field of other records visible, it will not hide the column itself .. note:: if the list view is ``editable``, any field attribute from the :ref:`form view <reference/views/form>` is also valid and will be used when setting up the inline form view .. _reference/views/form: Forms ===== Form views are used to display the data from a single record. Their root element is ``<form>``. They are composed of regular HTML_ with additional structural and semantic components. Structural components --------------------- Structural components provide structure or "visual" features with little logic. They are used as elements or sets of elements in form views. ``notebook`` defines a tabbed section. Each tab is defined through a ``page`` child element. Pages can have the following attributes: ``string`` (required) the title of the tab ``accesskey`` an HTML accesskey_ ``attrs`` standard dynamic attributes based on record values ``group`` used to define column layouts in forms. By default, groups define 2 columns and most direct children of groups take a single column. ``field`` direct children of groups display a label by default, and the label and the field itself have a colspan of 1 each. The number of columns in a ``group`` can be customized using the ``col`` attribute, the number of columns taken by an element can be customized using ``colspan``. Children are laid out horizontally (tries to fill the next column before changing row). Groups can have a ``string`` attribute, which is displayed as the group's title ``newline`` only useful within ``group`` elements, ends the current row early and immediately switches to a new row (without filling any remaining column beforehand) ``separator`` small horizontal spacing, with a ``string`` attribute behaves as a section title ``sheet`` can be used as a direct child to ``form`` for a narrower and more responsive form layout ``header`` combined with ``sheet``, provides a full-width location above the sheet itself, generally used to display workflow buttons and status widgets Semantic components ------------------- Semantic components tie into and allow interaction with the Odoo system. Available semantic components are: ``button`` call into the Odoo system, similar to :ref:`list view buttons <reference/views/list/button>` ``field`` renders (and allow edition of, possibly) a single field of the current record. Possible attributes are: ``name`` (mandatory) the name of the field to render ``widget`` fields have a default rendering based on their type (e.g. :class:`~openerp.fields.Char`, :class:`~openerp.fields.Many2one`). The ``widget`` attributes allows using a different rendering method and context. .. todo:: list of widgets & options & specific attributes (e.g. widget=statusbar statusbar_visible statusbar_colors clickable) ``options`` JSON object specifying configuration option for the field's widget (including default widgets) ``class`` HTML class to set on the generated element, common field classes are: ``oe_inline`` prevent the usual line break following fields ``oe_left``, ``oe_right`` floats_ the field to the corresponding direction ``oe_read_only``, ``oe_edit_only`` only displays the field in the corresponding form mode ``oe_no_button`` avoids displaying the navigation button in a :class:`~openerp.fields.Many2one` ``oe_avatar`` for image fields, displays images as "avatar" (square, 90x90 maximum size, some image decorations) ``groups`` only displays the field for specific users ``on_change`` calls the specified method when this field's value is edited, can generate update other fields or display warnings for the user .. deprecated:: 8.0 Use :func:`openerp.api.onchange` on the model ``attrs`` dynamic meta-parameters based on record values ``domain`` for relational fields only, filters to apply when displaying existing records for selection ``context`` for relational fields only, context to pass when fetching possible values ``readonly`` display the field in both readonly and edition mode, but never make it editable ``required`` generates an error and prevents saving the record if the field doesn't have a value ``nolabel`` don't automatically display the field's label, only makes sense if the field is a direct child of a ``group`` element ``placeholder`` help message to display in *empty* fields. Can replace field labels in complex forms. *Should not* be an example of data as users are liable to confuse placeholder text with filled fields ``mode`` for :class:`~openerp.fields.One2many`, display mode (view type) to use for the field's linked records. One of ``tree``, ``form``, ``kanban`` or ``graph``. The default is ``tree`` (a list display) ``help`` tooltip displayed for users when hovering the field or its label ``filename`` for binary fields, name of the related field providing the name of the file ``password`` indicates that a :class:`~openerp.fields.Char` field stores a password and that its data shouldn't be displayed .. todo:: classes for forms .. todo:: widgets? Business Views guidelines ------------------------- .. sectionauthor:: Aline Preillon, Raphael Collet Business views are targeted at regular users, not advanced users. Examples are: Opportunities, Products, Partners, Tasks, Projects, etc. .. image:: forms/oppreadonly.png :class: img-responsive In general, a business view is composed of 1. a status bar on top (with technical or business flow), 2. a sheet in the middle (the form itself), 3. a bottom part with History and Comments. Technically, the new form views are structured as follows in XML:: <form> <header> ... content of the status bar ... </header> <sheet> ... content of the sheet ... </sheet> <div class="oe_chatter"> ... content of the bottom part ... </div> </form> The Status Bar '''''''''''''' The purpose of the status bar is to show the status of the current record and the action buttons. .. image:: forms/status.png :class: img-responsive The Buttons ........... The order of buttons follows the business flow. For instance, in a sale order, the logical steps are: 1. Send the quotation 2. Confirm the quotation 3. Create the final invoice 4. Send the goods Highlighted buttons (in red by default) emphasize the logical next step, to help the user. It is usually the first active button. On the other hand, :guilabel:`cancel` buttons *must* remain grey (normal). For instance, in Invoice the button :guilabel:`Refund` must never be red. Technically, buttons are highlighted by adding the class "oe_highlight":: <button class="oe_highlight" name="..." type="..." states="..."/> The Status .......... Uses the ``statusbar`` widget, and shows the current state in red. States common to all flows (for instance, a sale order begins as a quotation, then we send it, then it becomes a full sale order, and finally it is done) should be visible at all times but exceptions or states depending on particular sub-flow should only be visible when current. .. image:: forms/status1.png :class: img-responsive .. image:: forms/status2.png :class: img-responsive The states are shown following the order used in the field (the list in a selection field, etc). States that are always visible are specified with the attribute ``statusbar_visible``. ``statusbar_colors`` can be used to give a custom color to specific states. :: <field name="state" widget="statusbar" statusbar_visible="draft,sent,progress,invoiced,done" statusbar_colors="{'shipping_except':'red','waiting_date':'blue'}"/> The Sheet ''''''''' All business views should look like a printed sheet: .. image:: forms/sheet.png :class: img-responsive 1. Elements inside a ``<form>`` or ``<page>`` do not define groups, elements inside them are laid out according to normal HTML rules. They content can be explicitly grouped using ``<group>`` or regular ``<div>`` elements. 2. By default, the element ``<group>`` defines two columns inside, unless an attribute ``col="n"`` is used. The columns have the same width (1/n th of the group's width). Use a ``<group>`` element to produce a column of fields. 3. To give a title to a section, add a ``string`` attribute to a ``<group>`` element:: <group string="Time-sensitive operations"> this replaces the former use of ``<separator string="XXX"/>``. 4. The ``<field>`` element does not produce a label, except as direct children of a ``<group>`` element\ [#backwards-compatibility]_. Use :samp:`<label for="{field_name}>` to produce a label of a field. Sheet Headers ............. Some sheets have headers with one or more fields, and the labels of those fields are only shown in edit mode. .. list-table:: :header-rows: 1 * - View mode - Edit mode * - .. image:: forms/header.png :class: img-responsive - .. image:: forms/header2.png :class: img-responsive Use HTML text, ``<div>``, ``<h1>``, ``<h2>``… to produce nice headers, and ``<label>`` with the class ``oe_edit_only`` to only display the field's label in edit mode. The class ``oe_inline`` will make fields inline (instead of blocks): content following the field will be displayed on the same line rather than on the line below it. The form above is produced by the following XML:: <label for="name" class="oe_edit_only"/> <h1><field name="name"/></h1> <label for="planned_revenue" class="oe_edit_only"/> <h2> <field name="planned_revenue" class="oe_inline"/> <field name="company_currency" class="oe_inline oe_edit_only"/> at <field name="probability" class="oe_inline"/> % success rate </h2> Button Box .......... Many relevant actions or links can be displayed in the form. For example, in Opportunity form, the actions "Schedule a Call" and "Schedule a Meeting" have an important place in the use of the CRM. Instead of placing them in the "More" menu, put them directly in the sheet as buttons (on the top right) to make them more visible and more easily accessible. .. image:: forms/header3.png :class: img-responsive Technically, the buttons are placed inside a ``<div>`` to group them as a block on the right-hand side of the sheet. :: <div class="oe_button_box oe_right"> <button string="Schedule/Log Call" name="..." type="action"/> <button string="Schedule Meeting" name="action_makeMeeting" type="object"/> </div> Groups and Titles ................. A column of fields is now produced with a ``<group>`` element, with an optional title. .. image:: forms/screenshot-03.png :class: img-responsive :: <group string="Payment Options"> <field name="writeoff_amount"/> <field name="payment_option"/> </group> It is recommended to have two columns of fields on the form. For this, simply put the ``<group>`` elements that contain the fields inside a top-level ``<group>`` element. To make :ref:`view extension <reference/views/inheritance>` simpler, it is recommended to put a ``name`` attribute on ``<group>`` elements, so new fields can easily be added at the right place. Special Case: Subtotals ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Some classes are defined to render subtotals like in invoice forms: .. image:: forms/screenshot-00.png :class: img-responsive :: <group class="oe_subtotal_footer"> <field name="amount_untaxed"/> <field name="amount_tax"/> <field name="amount_total" class="oe_subtotal_footer_separator"/> <field name="residual" style="margin-top: 10px"/> </group> Placeholders and Inline Fields .............................. Sometimes field labels make the form too complex. One can omit field labels, and instead put a placeholder inside the field. The placeholder text is visible only when the field is empty. The placeholder should tell what to place inside the field, it *must not* be an example as they are often confused with filled data. One can also group fields together by rendering them "inline" inside an explicit block element like ``<div>``. This allows grouping semantically related fields as if they were a single (composite) fields. The following example, taken from the *Leads* form, shows both placeholders and inline fields (zip and city). .. list-table:: :header-rows: 1 * - Edit mode - View mode * - .. image:: forms/placeholder.png :class: img-responsive - .. image:: forms/screenshot-01.png :class: img-responsive :: <group> <label for="street" string="Address"/> <div> <field name="street" placeholder="Street..."/> <field name="street2"/> <div> <field name="zip" class="oe_inline" placeholder="ZIP"/> <field name="city" class="oe_inline" placeholder="City"/> </div> <field name="state_id" placeholder="State"/> <field name="country_id" placeholder="Country"/> </div> </group> Images ...... Images, like avatars, should be displayed on the right of the sheet. The product form looks like: .. image:: forms/screenshot-02.png :class: img-responsive The form above contains a <sheet> element that starts with: :: <field name="product_image" widget="image" class="oe_avatar oe_right"/> Tags .... Most :class:`~openerp.fields.Many2many` fields, like categories, are better rendered as a list of tags. Use the widget ``many2many_tags`` for this: .. image:: forms/screenshot-04.png :class: img-responsive :: <field name="category_id" widget="many2many_tags"/> Configuration forms guidelines ------------------------------ Examples of configuration forms: Stages, Leave Type, etc. This concerns all menu items under Configuration of each application (like Sales/Configuration). .. image:: forms/nosheet.png :class: img-responsive 1. no header (because no state, no workflow, no button) 2. no sheet Dialog forms guidelines ----------------------- Example: "Schedule a Call" from an opportunity. .. image:: forms/wizard-popup.png :class: img-responsive 1. avoid separators (the title is already in the popup title bar, so another separator is not relevant) 2. avoid cancel buttons (user generally close the popup window to get the same effect) 3. action buttons must be highlighted (red) 4. when there is a text area, use a placeholder instead of a label or a separator 5. like in regular form views, put buttons in the <header> element Configuration Wizards guidelines -------------------------------- Example: Settings / Configuration / Sales. 1. always in line (no popup) 2. no sheet 3. keep the cancel button (users cannot close the window) 4. the button "Apply" must be red .. _reference/views/graph: Graphs ====== The graph view is used to visualize aggregations over a number of records or record groups. Its root element is ``<graph>`` which can take the following attributes: ``type`` one of ``bar`` (default), ``pie``, ``line`` and ``pivot``, the type of graph to use (``pivot`` technically isn't a graph type, it displays the aggregation as a `pivot table`_) ``stacked`` only used for ``bar`` charts. If present and set to ``True``, stacks bars within a group The only allowed element within a graph view is ``field`` which can have the following attributes: ``name`` (required) the name of a field to use in a graph view. If used for grouping (rather than aggregating) ``type`` indicates whether the field should be used as a grouping criteria or as an aggregated value within a group. Possible values are: ``row`` (default) groups by the specified field. All graph types support at least one level of grouping, some may support more. For pivot tables, each group gets its own row. ``col`` only used by pivot tables, creates column-wise groups ``measure`` field to aggregate within a group ``interval`` on date and datetime fields, groups by the specified interval (``day``, ``week``, ``month``, ``quarter`` or ``year``) instead of grouping on the specific datetime (fixed second resolution) or date (fixed day resolution). .. warning:: graph view aggregations are performed on database content, non-stored function fields can not be used in graph views .. _reference/views/kanban: Kanban ====== The kanban view is a `kanban board`_ visualisation: it displays records as "cards", halfway between a :ref:`list view <reference/views/list>` and a non-editable :ref:`form view <reference/views/form>`. Records may be grouped in columns for use in workflow visualisation or manipulation (e.g. tasks or work-progress management), or ungrouped (used simply to visualize records). The root element of the Kanban view is ``<kanban>``, it can use the following attributes: ``default_group_by`` whether the kanban view should be grouped if no grouping is specified via the action or the current research. Should be the name of the field to group by when no grouping is otherwise specified ``default_order`` cards sorting order used if the user has not already sorted the records (via the list view) ``class`` adds HTML classes to the root HTML element of the Kanban view ``quick_create`` whether it should be possible to create records without switching to the form view. By default, ``quick_create`` is enabled when the Kanban view is grouped, and disabled when not. Set to ``true`` to always enable it, and to ``false`` to always disable it. Possible children of the view element are: ``field`` declares fields to aggregate or to use in kanban *logic*. If the field is simply displayed in the kanban view, it does not need to be pre-declared. Possible attributes are: ``name`` (required) the name of the field to fetch ``sum``, ``avg``, ``min``, ``max``, ``count`` displays the corresponding aggregation at the top of a kanban column, the field's value is the label of the aggregation (a string). Only one aggregate operation per field is supported. ``templates`` defines a list of :ref:`reference/qweb` templates. Cards definition may be split into multiple templates for clarity, but kanban views *must* define at least one root template ``kanban-box``, which will be rendered once for each record. The kanban view uses mostly-standard :ref:`javascript qweb <reference/qweb/javascript>` and provides the following context variables: ``instance`` the current :ref:`reference/javascript/client` instance ``widget`` the current :js:class:`KanbanRecord`, can be used to fetch some meta-information. These methods are also available directly in the template context and don't need to be accessed via ``widget`` ``record`` an object with all the requested fields as its attributes. Each field has two attributes ``value`` and ``raw_value``, the former is formatted according to current user parameters, the latter is the direct value from a :meth:`~openerp.models.Model.read` (except for date and datetime fields that are `formatted according to user's locale <https://github.com/odoo/odoo/blob/8.0/addons/web_kanban/static/src/js/kanban.js#L900>`_) ``read_only_mode`` self-explanatory .. rubric:: buttons and fields While most of the Kanban templates are standard :ref:`reference/qweb`, the Kanban view processes ``field``, ``button`` and ``a`` elements specially: * by default fields are replaced by their formatted value, unless they match specific kanban view widgets .. todo:: list widgets? * buttons and links with a ``type`` attribute become perform Odoo-related operations rather than their standard HTML function. Possible types are: ``action``, ``object`` standard behavior for :ref:`Odoo buttons <reference/views/list/button>`, most attributes relevant to standard Odoo buttons can be used. ``open`` opens the card's record in the form view in read-only mode ``edit`` opens the card's record in the form view in editable mode ``delete`` deletes the card's record and removes the card .. todo:: * kanban-specific CSS * kanban structures/widgets (vignette, details, ...) Javascript API -------------- .. js:class:: KanbanRecord :js:class:`Widget` handling the rendering of a single record to a card. Available within its own rendering as ``widget`` in the template context. .. js:function:: kanban_color(raw_value) Converts a color segmentation value to a kanban color class :samp:`oe_kanban_color_{color_index}`. The built-in CSS provides classes up to a ``color_index`` of 9. .. js:function:: kanban_getcolor(raw_value) Converts a color segmentation value to a color index (between 0 and 9 by default). Color segmentation values can be either numbers or strings. .. js:function:: kanban_image(model, field, id[, cache][, options]) Generates the URL to the specified field as an image access. :param String model: model hosting the image :param String field: name of the field holding the image data :param id: identifier of the record contaning the image to display :param Number cache: caching duration (in seconds) of the browser default should be overridden. ``0`` disables caching entirely :returns: an image URL .. js:function:: kanban_text_ellipsis(string[, size=160]) clips text beyond the specified size and appends an ellipsis to it. Can be used to display the initial part of potentially very long fields (e.g. descriptions) without the risk of unwieldy cards .. _reference/views/calendar: Calendar ======== Calendar views display records as events in a daily, weekly or monthly calendar. Their root element is ``<calendar>``. Available attributes on the calendar view are: ``date_start`` (required) name of the record's field holding the start date for the event ``date_stop`` name of the record's field holding the end date for the event, if ``date_stop`` is provided records become movable (via drag and drop) directly in the calendar ``date_delay`` alternative to ``date_end``, provides the duration of the event instead of its end date .. todo:: what's the unit? Does it allow moving the record? ``color`` name of a record field to use for *color segmentation*. Records in the same color segment are allocated the same highlight color in the calendar, colors are allocated semi-randomly. ``event_open_popup`` opens the event in a dialog instead of switching to the form view, enabled by default ``quick_add`` enables quick-event creation on click: only asks the user for a ``name`` and tries to create a new event with just that and the clicked event time. Falls back to a full form dialog if the quick creation fails ``display`` format string for event display, field names should be within brackets ``[`` and ``]`` ``all_day`` name of a boolean field on the record indicating whether the corresponding event is flagged as day-long (and duration is irrelevant) .. todo:: what's the purpose of ``<field>`` inside a calendar view? .. todo:: calendar code is an unreadable mess, no idea what these things are: * ``attendee`` * ``avatar_model`` * ``use_contacts`` calendar code also seems to refer to multiple additional attributes of unknown purpose .. _reference/views/gantt: Gantt ===== Gantt views appropriately display Gantt charts (for scheduling). The root element of gantt views is ``<gantt/>``, it has no children but can take the following attributes: ``date_start`` (required) name of the field providing the start datetime of the event for each record. ``date_stop`` name of the field providing the end duration of the event for each record. Can be replaced by ``date_delay``. One (and only one) of ``date_stop`` and ``date_delay`` must be provided. If the field is ``False`` for a record, it's assumed to be a "point event" and the end date will be set to the start date ``date_delay`` name of the field providing the duration of the event ``progress`` name of a field providing the completion percentage for the record's event, between 0 and 100 ``default_group_by`` name of a field to group tasks by .. previously documented content which don't seem to be used anymore: * string * day_length * color * mode * date_string * <level> * <field> * <html> .. _reference/views/diagram: Diagram ======= The diagram view can be used to display directed graphs of records. The root element is ``<diagram>`` and takes no attributes. Possible children of the diagram view are: ``node`` (required, 1) Defines the nodes of the graph. Its attributes are: ``object`` the node's Odoo model ``shape`` conditional shape mapping similar to colors and fonts in :ref:`the list view <reference/views/list>`. The only valid shape is ``rectangle`` (the default shape is an ellipsis) ``bgcolor`` same as ``shape``, but conditionally maps a background color for nodes. The default background color is white, the only valid alternative is ``grey``. ``arrow`` (required, 1) Defines the directed edges of the graph. Its attributes are: ``object`` (required) the edge's Odoo model ``source`` (required) :class:`~openerp.fields.Many2one` field of the edge's model pointing to the edge's source node record ``destination`` (required) :class:`~openerp.fields.Many2one` field of the edge's model pointing to the edge's destination node record ``label`` Python list of attributes (as quoted strings). The corresponding attributes's values will be concatenated and displayed as the edge's label ``label`` Explanatory note for the diagram, the ``string`` attribute defines the note's content. Each ``label`` is output as a paragraph in the diagram header, easily visible but without any special emphasis. .. _reference/views/search: Search ====== Search views are a break from previous view types in that they don't display *content*: although they apply to a specific model, they are used to filter other view's content (generally aggregated views e.g. :ref:`reference/views/list` or :ref:`reference/views/graph`). Beyond that difference in use case, they are defined the same way. The root element of search views is ``<search>``. It takes no attributes. .. @string is not displayed anywhere, should be removed Possible children elements of the search view are: ``field`` fields define domains or contexts with user-provided values. When search domains are generated, field domains are composed with one another and with filters using **AND**. Fields can have the following attributes: ``name`` the name of the field to filter on ``string`` the field's label ``operator`` by default, fields generate domains of the form :samp:`[({name}, {operator}, {provided_value})]` where ``name`` is the field's name and ``provided_value`` is the value provided by the user, possibly filtered or transformed (e.g. a user is expected to provide the *label* of a selection field's value, not the value itself). The ``operator`` attribute allows overriding the default operator, which depends on the field's type (e.g. ``=`` for float fields but ``ilike`` for char fields) ``filter_domain`` complete domain to use as the field's search domain, can use a ``self`` variable to inject the provided value in the custom domain. Can be used to generate significantly more flexible domains than ``operator`` alone (e.g. searches on multiple fields at once) If both ``operator`` and ``filter_domain`` are provided, ``filter_domain`` takes precedence. ``context`` allows adding context keys, including the user-provided value (which as for ``domain`` is available as a ``self`` variable). By default, fields don't generate domains. .. note:: the domain and context are inclusive and both are generated if if a ``context`` is specified. To only generate context values, set ``filter_domain`` to an empty list: ``filter_domain="[]"`` ``groups`` make the field only available to specific users ``widget`` use specific search widget for the field (the only use case in standard Odoo 8.0 is a ``selection`` widget for :class:`~openerp.fields.Many2one` fields) ``domain`` if the field can provide an auto-completion (e.g. :class:`~openerp.fields.Many2one`), filters the possible completion results. ``filter`` a filter is a predefined toggle in the search view, it can only be enabled or disabled. Its main purposes are to add data to the search context (the context passed to the data view for searching/filtering), or to append new sections to the search filter. Filters can have the following attributes: ``string`` (required) the label of the filter ``domain`` an Odoo :ref:`domain <reference/orm/domains>`, will be appended to the action's domain as part of the search domain ``context`` a Python dictionary, merged into the action's domain to generate the search domain ``name`` logical name for the filter, can be used to :ref:`enable it by default <reference/views/search/defaults>`, can also be used as :ref:`inheritance hook <reference/views/inheritance>` ``help`` a longer explanatory text for the filter, may be displayed as a tooltip ``groups`` makes a filter only available to specific users ``icon`` an icon to display next to the label, if there's sufficient space .. deprecated:: 7.0 .. tip:: .. versionadded:: 7.0 Sequences of filters (without non-filters separating them) are treated as inclusively composited: they will be composed with ``OR`` rather than the usual ``AND``, e.g. :: <filter domain="[('state', '=', 'draft')]"/> <filter domain="[('state', '=', 'done')]"/> if both filters are selected, will select the records whose ``state`` is ``draft`` or ``done``, but :: <filter domain="[('state', '=', 'draft')]"/> <separator/> <filter domain="[('delay', '<', 15)]"/> if both filters are selected, will select the records whose ``state`` is ``draft`` **and** ``delay`` is below 15. ``separator`` can be used to separates groups of filters in simple search views ``group`` can be used to separate groups of filters, more readable than ``separator`` in complex search views .. _reference/views/search/defaults: Search defaults --------------- Search fields and filters can be configured through the action's ``context`` using :samp:`search_default_{name}` keys. For fields, the value should be the value to set in the field, for filters it's a boolean value. For instance, assuming ``foo`` is a field and ``bar`` is a filter an action context of: .. code-block:: python { 'search_default_foo': 'acro', 'search_default_bar': 1 } will automatically enable the ``bar`` filter and search the ``foo`` field for *acro*. .. _reference/views/qweb: QWeb ==== QWeb views are standard :ref:`reference/qweb` templates inside a view's ``arch``. They don't have a specific root element. A QWeb view can only contain a single template\ [#template_inherit]_, and the template's name *must* match the view's complete (including module name) :term:`external id`. :ref:`reference/data/template` should be used as a shortcut to define QWeb views. .. [#backwards-compatibility] for backwards compatibility reasons .. [#hasclass] an extension function is added for simpler matching in QWeb views: ``hasclass(*classes)`` matches if the context node has all the specified classes .. [#treehistory] for historical reasons, it has its origin in tree-type views later repurposed to a more table/list-type display .. [#template_inherit] or no template if it's an inherited view, then :ref:`it should only contain xpath elements <reference/views/inheritance>` .. _accesskey: http://www.w3.org/TR/html5/editing.html#the-accesskey-attribute .. _CSS color unit: http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-color/#colorunits .. _floats: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/float .. _HTML: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTML .. _kanban board: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanban_board .. _pivot table: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pivot_table .. _XPath: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XPath