User interface — Concepts and terms |
Based on HTML and XML standards, PRPC can support a wide range of user interaction facilities and approaches. Your application's user interface can take into account the environment, the domain knowledge of your users, their skills, locale, and language.
The appearance, branding, and interaction dynamics of your user interface can match the context and language that is natural to your application's users.
Evolving an application's user interface is best done by designers and developers who have both application domain knowledge and usability skills.
PRPC includes standard facilities for those workers and managers who use PRPC-based applications throughout the workday. These facilities support:
Sophisticated and powerful standard forms known as harnesses are designed for reuse and customization.
For access through the standard portal, PRPC uses harnesses (Rule-HTML-Harness rule type) for work items. Six other rules support the presentation of work items:
The HTML text you enter into HTML rules is known as source HTML. It contains ordinary HTML code plus JSP tags or directives — server-side instructions that PRPC evaluates at runtime to compose the final HTML it sends to the HTTP server (and ultimately to a user's browser session). Known as stream processing, this evaluation accesses the clipboard for text values to insert into the output HTML, incorporates the text of other HTML rules, provides conditional if-then-else testing, and looping through arrays.
Harness forms use the pega:include JSP tag to incorporate multiple sections, which in turn use standard styles and fragments to present properties, labels, and images. For your application, you can copy and tailor parts of these forms as necessary, while inheriting the standard parts.
These tools support your evolution of the user interface of your applications:
Through open authoring, you can use an HTML editor of your choice to revise HTML text.
When a user submits an HTML form, PRPC records the values entered into input fields as property values on the clipboard. The values that users enter may not be in the format required by the property definition, or may not pass validation tests.
See PDN article Top Ten Usability Guardrails.
How stream processing of JSP tags works
Validating user input User Interface category |
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Atlas — Standard Harnesses
Atlas — Standard Portal rules Atlas — Standard Skin rules |