1

I am using Ext.data.Store to call a PHP script which returns a JSON response with some metadata about fields that will be used in a query (unique name, table, field, and user-friendly title). I then loop through each of the Ext.data.Record objects, placing the data I need into an array (this_column), push that array onto the end of another array (columns), and eventually pass this to an Ext.grid.ColumnModel object.

The problem I am having is - no matter which query I am testing against (I have a number of them, varying in size and complexity), the columns array always works as expected up to columns[15]. At columns[16], all indexes from that point and previous are filled with the value of columns[15]. This behavior continues until the loop reaches the end of the Ext.data.Store object, when the entire arrays consists of the same value.

Here's some code:

columns = [];
this_column = [];

var MetaData = Ext.data.Record.create([
    {name: 'id'},
    {name: 'table'},
    {name: 'field'},
    {name: 'title'}
]);
// Query the server for metadata for the query we're about to run
metaDataStore = new Ext.data.Store({
    autoLoad: true,
    reader: new Ext.data.JsonReader({
        totalProperty: 'results',
        root: 'fields',
        id: 'id'
    }, MetaData),
    proxy: new Ext.data.HttpProxy({
        url: 'index.php/' + type + '/' + slug
    }),
    listeners: {
        'load': function () {
            metaDataStore.each(function(r) {
                this_column['id'] = r.data['id'];
                this_column['header'] = r.data['title'];
                this_column['sortable'] = true;
                this_column['dataIndex'] = r.data['table'] + '.' + r.data['field'];
                // This display valid information, through the entire process
                console.info(this_column['id'] + ' : ' + this_column['header'] + ' : ' + this_column['sortable'] + ' : ' + this_column['dataIndex']);
                columns.push(this_column);
            });

            // This goes nuts at columns[15]
            console.info(columns);

            gridColModel = new Ext.grid.ColumnModel({
                columns: columns
            });

3 Answers 3

0

Okay, since the this_column array was responding correctly on each run, but the columns array was not, I figure it must be an issue with the push().

After a bit more toying with it, I moved altered the code to reset the this_column array on each iteration of the loop - seems to have fixed the issue...

metaDataStore.each(function(r) {
    this_column = [];
    this_column['id'] = r.data['id'];
    this_column['header'] = r.data['title'];
    this_column['sortable'] = true;
    this_column['dataIndex'] = r.data['table'] + '.' + r.data['field'];
    columns.push(this_column);
});
0

I see you've already found something that works, but just to offer some advice for the future: this is much easier if you use a json store and column model directly instead of performing intermediate steps by hand.

I'm not sure if you're using a grid or dataview, but the concept is pretty much the same for both of them. If you have to do a bit of data customization, but instead of doing it by hand here you can actually just do it in a prepareData callback function.

0

Because you first use the variable this_column in the global context (at the top of your example) it becomes a global variable. You should instead instantiate each column definition as an object literal (split into multiple lines for read-ability).

metaDataStore.each(function(r) {
  columns.push({
    id: r.data['id'],
    header: r.data['title'],
    sortable: true,
    dataIndex: r.data['table'] + '.' + r.data['field']
  });
});

Or if you really wanted to use a variable, you could just do this to make sure it's a local variable

metaDataStore.each(function(r) {
    var this_column = {};
    ...

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.