Adobe® Flex® 4 Language Reference
Show Packages and Classes List |  Packages  |  Classes  |  Index  |  Appendixes
mx.managers 
ILayoutManager 
Packagemx.managers
Interfacepublic interface ILayoutManager extends IEventDispatcher
Implementors LayoutManager

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Product Version: Flex 3
Runtime Versions: Flash Player 9, AIR 1.1

The LayoutManager is the engine behind Flex's measurement and layout strategy. Layout is performed in three phases; commit, measurement, and layout.

Each phase is distinct from the others and all UIComponents of one phase are processed prior to moving on to the next phase. During the processing of UIComponents in a phase, requests for UIComponents to get re-processed by some phase may occur. These requests are queued and are only processed during the next run of the phase.

The commit phase begins with a call to validateProperties(), which walks through a list (reverse sorted by nesting level) of objects calling each object's validateProperties() method.

The objects in the list are processed in reversed nesting order, with the least deeply nested object accessed first. This can also be referred to as top-down or outside-in ordering.

This phase allows components whose contents depend on property settings to configure themselves prior to the measurement and the layout phases. For the sake of performance, sometimes a component's property setter method does not do all the work to update to the new property value. Instead, the property setter calls the invalidateProperties() method, deferring the work until this phase runs. This prevents unnecessary work if the property is set multiple times.

The measurement phase begins with a call to validateSize(), which walks through a list (sorted by nesting level) of objects calling each object's validateSize() method to determine if the object has changed in size.

If an object's invalidateSize() method was previously called, then the validateSize() method is called. If the size or position of the object was changed as a result of the validateSize() call, then the object's invalidateDisplayList() method is called, thus adding the object to the processing queue for the next run of the layout phase. Additionally, the object's parent is marked for both measurement and layout phases, by calling invalidateSize() and invalidateDisplayList() respectively.

The objects in the list are processed by nesting order, with the most deeply nested object accessed first. This can also be referred to as bottom-up inside-out ordering.

The layout phase begins with a call to the validateDisplayList() method, which walks through a list (reverse sorted by nesting level) of objects calling each object's validateDisplayList() method to request the object to size and position all components contained within it (i.e. its children).

If an object's invalidateDisplayList() method was previously called, then validateDisplayList() method for the object is called.

The objects in the list are processed in reversed nesting order, with the least deeply nested object accessed first. This can also be referred to as top-down or outside-in ordering.

In general, components do not override the validateProperties(), validateSize(), or validateDisplayList() methods. In the case of UIComponents, most components override the commitProperties(), measure(), or updateDisplayList() methods, which are called by the validateProperties(), validateSize(), or validateDisplayList() methods, respectively.

At application startup, a single instance of the LayoutManager is created and stored in the UIComponent.layoutManager property. All components are expected to use that instance. If you do not have access to the UIComponent object, you can also access the LayoutManager using the static LayoutManager.getInstance() method.



Public Properties
 PropertyDefined By
  usePhasedInstantiation : Boolean
A flag that indicates whether the LayoutManager allows screen updates between phases.
ILayoutManager
Public Methods
 MethodDefined By
 Inherited
addEventListener(type:String, listener:Function, useCapture:Boolean = false, priority:int = 0, useWeakReference:Boolean = false):void
Registers an event listener object with an EventDispatcher object so that the listener receives notification of an event.
IEventDispatcher
 Inherited
Dispatches an event into the event flow.
IEventDispatcher
 Inherited
Checks whether the EventDispatcher object has any listeners registered for a specific type of event.
IEventDispatcher
  
Called when a component changes in some way that its layout and/or visuals need to be changed.
ILayoutManager
  
Adds an object to the list of components that want their validateProperties() method called.
ILayoutManager
  
Adds an object to the list of components that want their validateSize() method called.
ILayoutManager
  
Returns true if there are components that need validating; false if all components have been validated.
ILayoutManager
 Inherited
removeEventListener(type:String, listener:Function, useCapture:Boolean = false):void
Removes a listener from the EventDispatcher object.
IEventDispatcher
  
validateClient(target:ILayoutManagerClient, skipDisplayList:Boolean = false):void
When properties are changed, components generally do not apply those changes immediately.
ILayoutManager
  
When properties are changed, components generally do not apply those changes immediately.
ILayoutManager
 Inherited
Checks whether an event listener is registered with this EventDispatcher object or any of its ancestors for the specified event type.
IEventDispatcher
Property Detail

usePhasedInstantiation

property
usePhasedInstantiation:Boolean

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Product Version: Flex 3
Runtime Versions: Flash Player 9, AIR 1.1

A flag that indicates whether the LayoutManager allows screen updates between phases. If true, measurement and layout are done in phases, one phase per screen update. All components have their validateProperties() and commitProperties() methods called until all their properties are validated. The screen will then be updated.

Then all components will have their validateSize() and measure() methods called until all components have been measured, then the screen will be updated again.

Finally, all components will have their validateDisplayList() and updateDisplayList() methods called until all components have been validated, and the screen will be updated again. If in the validation of one phase, an earlier phase gets invalidated, the LayoutManager starts over. This is more efficient when large numbers of components are being created an initialized. The framework is responsible for setting this property.

If false, all three phases are completed before the screen is updated.



Implementation
    public function get usePhasedInstantiation():Boolean
    public function set usePhasedInstantiation(value:Boolean):void
Method Detail

invalidateDisplayList

()method
public function invalidateDisplayList(obj:ILayoutManagerClient):void

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Product Version: Flex 3
Runtime Versions: Flash Player 9, AIR 1.1

Called when a component changes in some way that its layout and/or visuals need to be changed. In that case, it is necessary to run the component's layout algorithm, even if the component's size hasn't changed. For example, when a new child component is added, or a style property changes or the component has been given a new size by its parent.

Parameters

obj:ILayoutManagerClient — The object that changed.

invalidateProperties

()method 
public function invalidateProperties(obj:ILayoutManagerClient):void

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Product Version: Flex 3
Runtime Versions: Flash Player 9, AIR 1.1

Adds an object to the list of components that want their validateProperties() method called. A component should call this method when a property changes. Typically, a property setter method stores a the new value in a temporary variable and calls the invalidateProperties() method so that its validateProperties() and commitProperties() methods are called later, when the new value will actually be applied to the component and/or its children. The advantage of this strategy is that often, more than one property is changed at a time and the properties may interact with each other, or repeat some code as they are applied, or need to be applied in a specific order. This strategy allows the most efficient method of applying new property values.

Parameters

obj:ILayoutManagerClient — The object whose property changed.

invalidateSize

()method 
public function invalidateSize(obj:ILayoutManagerClient):void

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Product Version: Flex 3
Runtime Versions: Flash Player 9, AIR 1.1

Adds an object to the list of components that want their validateSize() method called. Called when an object's size changes.

An object's size can change for two reasons:

  1. The content of the object changes. For example, the size of a button changes when its label is changed.
  2. A script explicitly changes one of the following properties: minWidth, minHeight, explicitWidth, explicitHeight, maxWidth, or maxHeight.

When the first condition occurs, it's necessary to recalculate the measurements for the object. When the second occurs, it's not necessary to recalculate the measurements because the new size of the object is known. However, it's necessary to remeasure and relayout the object's parent.

Parameters

obj:ILayoutManagerClient — The object whose size changed.

isInvalid

()method 
public function isInvalid():Boolean

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Product Version: Flex 3
Runtime Versions: Flash Player 9, AIR 1.1

Returns true if there are components that need validating; false if all components have been validated.

Returns
Boolean — Returns true if there are components that need validating; false if all components have been validated.

validateClient

()method 
public function validateClient(target:ILayoutManagerClient, skipDisplayList:Boolean = false):void

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Product Version: Flex 3
Runtime Versions: Flash Player 9, AIR 1.1

When properties are changed, components generally do not apply those changes immediately. Instead the components usually call one of the LayoutManager's invalidate methods and apply the properties at a later time. The actual property you set can be read back immediately, but if the property affects other properties in the component or its children or parents, those other properties may not be immediately updated.

To guarantee that the values are updated, you can call the validateClient() method. It updates all properties in all components whose nest level is greater than or equal to the target component before returning. Call this method only when necessary as it is a computationally intensive call.

Parameters

target:ILayoutManagerClient — The component passed in is used to test which components should be validated. All components contained by this component will have their validateProperties(), commitProperties(), validateSize(), measure(), validateDisplayList(), and updateDisplayList() methods called.
 
skipDisplayList:Boolean (default = false) — If true, does not call the validateDisplayList() and updateDisplayList() methods.

validateNow

()method 
public function validateNow():void

Language Version: ActionScript 3.0
Product Version: Flex 3
Runtime Versions: Flash Player 9, AIR 1.1

When properties are changed, components generally do not apply those changes immediately. Instead the components usually call one of the LayoutManager's invalidate methods and apply the properties at a later time. The actual property you set can be read back immediately, but if the property affects other properties in the component or its children or parents, those other properties may not be immediately updated. To guarantee that the values are updated, you can call the validateNow() method. It updates all properties in all components before returning. Call this method only when necessary as it is a computationally intensive call.