Also added error handling in case in case that crypto symbol image is not available
Added a way to display the balance in currently selected currency on the widget
To do this the consumer of this widget needs to implement "getCurrencyBalanceString" based on the currently selected currency
fixes#4079
1. Added icon disabledColor property under StatusIconSettings
2. Added Tertiary and Quaternary type to accomodate hovered behavior needed in many buttons
3. Added a missing gif icon.
This is a select component to pick from various supplied colors.
Usage:
```qml
import StatusQ.Controls 0.1
StatusColorSelector {
model: ["red", "blue", "green"]
}
```
Closes#444
This introduces a `StatusAddress` component which renders an address
and can be made `expandable` by applying a `width`:
```qml
import StatusQ.Components 0.1
// Simple case
StatusAddress {
text: "0x9ce0056c5fc6bb9459a4dcfa35eaad8c1fee5ce9"
}
// Expandable case
Item {
width: 200
height: childrenRect.height
StatusAddress {
text: "0x9ce0056c5fc6bb9459a4dcfa35eaad8c1fee5ce9"
expandable: true
width: parent.width
}
}
```
Closes#430
This introduces a new `StatusSelect` component which is a select form control.
The `model` property can be used to apply a `ListModel` for dynamic data.
To give users full control over what the menu items look like, `StatusSelect`
exposes a `selectMenu.delegate` property.
Most of the time this should be a `StatusMenuItemDelegate` to get access to the
comple `MenuItem` component (remember that `StatusMenuItem` is merely an `Action`
type).
`StatusMenuItemDelegate` derives most of its behaviour by its applied `action`,
so the easiest way to construct a dynamic select with StatusQ menu item look and feel
is a combination of `StatusMenuItemDelegate` and `StatusMenuItem` as shown below.
Further more, because `StatusSelect` can't know what the `delegate` is going to look like
it also can't decide what data goes into a `selectedItem`. Therefore, it offers another API,
the `selectedItemComponent` which can be any component. This component can then be accessed
by menu item actions to set corresponding properties.
Usage:
```qml
import StatusQ.Controls 0.1
StatusSelect {
label: "Some label"
model: ListModel {
ListElement {
name: "Pascal"
}
ListElement {
name: "Khushboo"
}
ListElement {
name: "Alexandra"
}
ListElement {
name: "Eric"
}
}
selectMenu.delegate: StatusMenuItemDelegate {
statusPopupMenu: select
action: StatusMenuItem {
iconSettings.name: "filled-account"
text: name
onTriggered: {
selectedItem.text = name
}
}
}
selectedItemComponent: Item {
id: selectedItem
anchors.fill: parent
property string text: ""
StatusBaseText {
text: selectedItem.text
anchors.centerIn: parent
color: Theme.palette.directColor1
}
}
}
```
Closes#436
This property enables users to load any component into the input field.
This is useful for rendering a "clearable" icon button, simple icons or
even more complex buttons.
Usage:
```qml
StatusBaseInput {
...
component: StatusIcon {
name: "cancel"
color: Theme.palette.dangerColor1
width: 16
}
}
```
The `clearable` property of `StatusBaseInput` also renders and icon button
on the right hand side. With this new feature, `clearable` is just a short-hand
for:
```qml
StatusBaseInput {
...
component: StatusFlatRoundButton {
visible: edit.text.length != 0 &&
statusBaseInput.clearable &&
!statusBaseInput.multiline &&
edit.activeFocus
type: StatusFlatRoundButton.Type.Secondary
width: 24
height: 24
icon.name: "clear"
icon.width: 16
icon.height: 16
icon.color: Theme.palette.baseColor1
onClicked: {
edit.clear()
}
}
}
```
Closes#380
Validators can now define a default `errorMessage` like so:
```qml
StatusValidator {
...
errorMessage: "..."
}
```
Because there's no access to runtime validation errors, `errorMessage` have to
be static. However, if applications wish to provide their own `errorMessage`
they can still override it and make it dynamic:
```qml
SomeValidator {
...
errorMessage: input.errors.someValidator ? "Whoopsie" : ""
}
```
Renamed StatusExpandableSettingsItem to StatusExpandableItem.
Added support for dofferent types of styles for the item.
Type Primary: Relates to Settings Design
Type Secondary: Relates to Collectibles Design
Type Tertiary: Relates to the Collectibles detailed view design
BREAKING CHANGE: Renamed and expanded features of the StatusExpandableSettingsItem to StatusExpandableItem
Due to design updates in AddAccount modal, updates are
needed in StatusBaseInput and StatusInput
* Added the possibility of having the icon on the right
side
* Added secondaryLabel for title
* Added examples in StatusInputPage
Closes#383
Turns out the icons used in the navigation bar of the application actually
are designed to be bigger than the usual icons.
We can't just use the original source and scale them up in QML because that
will impact the stroke width of the SVGs as well, hence we need to introduce
a special set of icons that are design bigger but presever the feature ratios.
This adds a new `value` property to the component to set label for a
selected value and also rendering a chevron as an indicator that the list
item becomes clickable.
This changes the share of the model expected to render search results.
BREAKING CHANGE:
The model has changed in the following way:
- `image` field added
- `color` field added
- `badgeIdenticonColor` field renamed to `badgeIconColor`
- `isLetterIdenticon` field renamed to `badgeIsLetterIdenticon`
There are now two new properties in `StatusModalHeaderSettings`:
- `titleElide`
- `subTitleElide`
These can be used to configure the `elide` property of both header titles.
The default values for both of them is `Text.ElideRight`.
Closes#353
This commit add elide flags to text in title and subtitle and add flexibility to width. Now compoents use next rules:
1. If width is set - text should be elided when implicit text width is more than root object width
2. Component grows if width is not set based on inner elements natural sizes
Closes: #335 and #338
There was an explicit `width` introduced on `statusListItemTitle`, most likely
to make room for it when `titleAsideText` is supplied.
This unfortunately causes the title get a very small width, resulting in broken
UI.
Since we can assume that there should be enough space for the titleAsideText
when it's used, we probably don't have to calculate a fixed width for the title
in the first place.
This commit therefore removes that explicit setting.
* feat(StatusChatListAndCategories): add drag and drop support for categories
This adds support for dragging and dropping chat list categories.
To persist reorder of chat categories, the new `onChatListCategoryReordered`
signal can be leveraged.
Drag and drop of categories is turned off by default and needs to
be turned on using `draggableCategories: true`.
Closes#227
* feat(Status.Core): introduce Utils namespace
This adds a new package for utility related things.
This implements drag and drop capabilities of chat items within a `StatusChatList`.
The commit introduces a `DelegateModal` to visually reorder chat items
when they're being dragged and dropped onto a `DropArea`.
To persist the new order of chat items, various signals have been introduced to chat
list related components:
```qml
StatusChatList {
onChatItemReordered: function (id, from, to) {
// ...
}
}
StatusChatListAndCategories {
onChatItemReordered: function (categoryId, chatId, from, to) {
// ...
}
}
```
There's no such API on the `StatusChatListCategory` type because that one already
exposes its underlying `StatusChatList` via `chatList`, which makes the signal available.
Dragging and dropping chat items is disabled by default and needs to be turned on
using the `draggableItems` property:
```qml
StatusChatList {
draggableItems: true
...
}
```
A click on the item's title or whole item emits appropriate `titleClicked` or
`clicked` signal with `titleId` or `itemId` value respectively. `titleId` and
`itemId` may or may not defer from their display values, it's up to logic which
is applied.
This is introduced because of need of the issue-2934.
There's a new `validators` property that can be used to add validators to `StatusInput` instances, which are executed in the same order:
```qml
StatusInput {
text: "Some value"
validators: [...]
}
```
For convenience StatusQ provides some common validation methods, such as `StatusMinLengthValidator`, StatusMaxLengthValidator` and could be extended to other (e.g. email validation etc):
```qml
StatusInput {
text: "Some value"
validators: [
StatusMinLengthValidator { minLength: 3 }
]
}
```
Validators are executed every time the text of the input changes. They are executed in the same order they have been applied, which enables users to create cascading conditions like "First make sure the value is at least 3 characters long, then make sure it matches a certain pattern".
When a validation fails, it sets the validity of the input (`valid: false`) accordingly and optionally exposes additional error information on `StatusInput.errors`:
```qml
StatusInput {
text: "Fo"
onTextChanged: {
if (errors) {
/**
* errors now has the following structure:
* errors: {
* minLength: { minValue: 3, actual: ... }
* }
* Also, `StatusInput` is now `valid = false`
**/
errorMesssage = "Expected " + errors.minLenght.minValue + " but got: "+ errors.minLength.actual; // i18n'able
}
}
validators: [
StatusMinLengthValidator { minLength: 3 }
]
}
```
There can be any number of error objects on the `errors` property, depending on who many validators have been run that failed validation.
Custom validators can be implemented by introducing a new `StatusValidator` type that has to implement a `validate()` function and defines the validators name. The `validate()` function has to return either `true` or `false` depending on whether the value is valid.
Alternatively, the function can return an error object which gets exposed on the underlying input's `errors` property, at which point it's considered invalid as well.
Here's a simple custom validator:
```qml
// HelloValidator.qml
import StatusQ.Controls.Validators 0.1
StatusValidator {
property string name: "hello"
validate: function (value) { // `value` is the `text` value of the underlying control
return value === "hello"
}
}
```
Applying this validators would look like this:
```qml
StatusInput {
text: "Some value"
validators: [
HelloValidator {}
]
onTextChanged: {
if (errors.hello) {
errorMessage = "Doesn't say hello!"
}
}
}
```
Alternatively, validators can return error objects to provide more information about what went wrong. Here's the implementation of the `StatusMinLengthValidator` as an example:
```qml
StatusValidator {
property int minLength: 0
name: "minLength"
validate: function (value) {
return value.length >= minLength ? true : {
min: minLength,
actual: value.length
}
}
}
```
Because validators as components, they can hold any custom properties they need to be configured.
There has been concern that, with this API, error messages need to be potentially defined in multiple places, given that there could be multiple instances of any validator. This is easily solved by having a centralized function figure out what the error message is, given a certain error object:
```qml
StatusInput {
validators: [
StatusMinLengthValidator { minLength: 3 }
]
onTextChanged: {
if (errors) {
errorMessage = getErrorMessage(errors) // this function is provided by global or elsewhere
}
}
}
```
Closes#298