You can end up into long lines of JavaScript code when implementing more complex use cases in JET. This will complicate maintenance and make code hardly readable. To prevent this - plan code structure carefully and use your own modules. Structure code into different modules - to reuse common code across multiple use cases.
Check my JET/ADF BC sample available on GitHub - jetcrud. This sample implements one common module - Customer Controller. Module is responsible to define ADF BC REST service connection. It contains REST service URL, JET model definition with ID attribute and JET collection created based on JET model and assigned with fetch size. This allows not to repeat same definitions again and again in each of JET modules implementing use cases (edit, add, etc.):
Such module is created as any other JET module with define header. We can use it in any other JET module, by specifying module name in define block. For example customers.js module imports Customer Controller through define block:
Within customer.js module we access function from Customer Controller to obtain collection.
Same Customer Controller module is reused inside another module editCustomer.js. Here we are accessing function from Customer Controller to obtain model:
Such approach allows to simplify JavaScript code and render different UIs based on one module. Readonly table is based on customerController.js:
Edit form is based on same customerController.js:
Read previous post - Oracle JET CRUD - Search and Edit Form - Part I.
Check my JET/ADF BC sample available on GitHub - jetcrud. This sample implements one common module - Customer Controller. Module is responsible to define ADF BC REST service connection. It contains REST service URL, JET model definition with ID attribute and JET collection created based on JET model and assigned with fetch size. This allows not to repeat same definitions again and again in each of JET modules implementing use cases (edit, add, etc.):
Such module is created as any other JET module with define header. We can use it in any other JET module, by specifying module name in define block. For example customers.js module imports Customer Controller through define block:
Within customer.js module we access function from Customer Controller to obtain collection.
Same Customer Controller module is reused inside another module editCustomer.js. Here we are accessing function from Customer Controller to obtain model:
Such approach allows to simplify JavaScript code and render different UIs based on one module. Readonly table is based on customerController.js:
Edit form is based on same customerController.js:
Read previous post - Oracle JET CRUD - Search and Edit Form - Part I.
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