Drag and Drop in GWT 2.4

Ponty picture Ponty · Sep 11, 2011 · Viewed 8.1k times · Source

I have a custom widget that is actually an image, and i would like to be able to drag it inside an AbsolutePanel and get its coordinates every time. I would like to use the new DND API from GWT 2.4, but i'm having a hard time to implement it. Can someone propose the basic steps i must take?

Answer

z00bs picture z00bs · Sep 29, 2011

The new DnD API introduced with GWT 2.4 doesn't currently support the AbsolutePanel (see the implementations of the HasAllDragAndDropHandlers interface). Looking at the implementation of FocusPanel it shouldn't be too hard to enable it for other panels.

Here's a quick proof of concept on how to solve your problem:

public void onModuleLoad() {
    DragImage image = new DragImage();
    image.setUrl(Resources.INSTANCE.someImage().getSafeUri());
    final DropAbsolutePanel target = new DropAbsolutePanel();
    target.getElement().getStyle().setBorderWidth(1.0, Unit.PX);
    target.getElement().getStyle().setBorderStyle(BorderStyle.SOLID);
    target.getElement().getStyle().setBorderColor("black");
    target.setSize("200px", "200px");

    // show drag over effect
    target.addDragOverHandler(new DragOverHandler() {

        @Override
        public void onDragOver(DragOverEvent event) {
            target.getElement().getStyle().setBackgroundColor("#ffa");
        }
    });

    // clear drag over effect
    target.addDragLeaveHandler(new DragLeaveHandler() {

        @Override
        public void onDragLeave(DragLeaveEvent event) {
            target.getElement().getStyle().clearBackgroundColor();
        }
    });

    // enable as drop target
    target.addDropHandler(new DropHandler() {

        @Override
        public void onDrop(DropEvent event) {
            event.preventDefault();
            // not sure if the calculation is right, didn't test it really
            int x = (event.getNativeEvent().getClientX() - target.getAbsoluteLeft()) + Window.getScrollLeft();
            int y = (event.getNativeEvent().getClientY() - target.getAbsoluteTop()) + Window.getScrollTop();
            target.getElement().getStyle().clearBackgroundColor();
            Window.alert("x: " + x + ", y:" + y);
            // add image with same URL as the dropped one to absolute panel at given coordinates
            target.add(new Image(event.getData("text")), x, y);
        }
    });

    RootPanel.get().add(image);
    RootPanel.get().add(target);
}

And here the custom panel

public class DropAbsolutePanel extends AbsolutePanel implements HasDropHandlers, HasDragOverHandlers,
        HasDragLeaveHandlers {

    @Override
    public HandlerRegistration addDropHandler(DropHandler handler) {
        return addBitlessDomHandler(handler, DropEvent.getType());
    }

    @Override
    public HandlerRegistration addDragOverHandler(DragOverHandler handler) {
        return addBitlessDomHandler(handler, DragOverEvent.getType());
    }

    @Override
    public HandlerRegistration addDragLeaveHandler(DragLeaveHandler handler) {
        return addBitlessDomHandler(handler, DragLeaveEvent.getType());
    }
}

and image class:

public class DragImage extends Image {

    public DragImage() {
        super();
        initDnD();
    }

    private void initDnD() {
        // enables dragging if browser supports html5
        getElement().setDraggable(Element.DRAGGABLE_TRUE);
        addDragStartHandler(new DragStartHandler() {

            @Override
            public void onDragStart(DragStartEvent event) {
                // attach image URL to drag data
                event.setData("text", getUrl());
            }
        });
    }
}