Skip to main content

OTN Nordic ACE Tour

In 1.5 week I'll be travelling to and through the Nordics as one of the speakers during the OTN Nordic ACE Tour. It will be quite a busy schedule!

On Monday afternoon I'll be flying to Copenhagen and will meet my fellow travellers for the week during a dinner hosted by the Danish Oracle User Group. On Tuesday I have two sessions during the event: One about APEX JavaScript API's and one about APEX 5.1.  At the end of the day it's off to the airport to catch the flight to Oslo around 7PM. I foresee an airport dinner here....

Wednesday in Oslo I have even three sessions: About the Universal Theme, APEX 5.1 again and APEX and JET.  At the end of the day it's off to the airport again to catch the flight to Helsinki around 7PM. Probably another airport dinner here ....

Thursday morning Heli will take us for a short (but brisk) walk through Helsinki, before the Finnish event starts around noon. Here I have only one session, about APEX 5.1 again. And again ... back to the airport to catch the flight back to Amsterdam around 7PM. Airport dinner anyone?

So it'll be a very busy few days, but fun as well!
And of course thanks to OTN for supporting this trip.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Filtering in the APEX Interactive Grid

Remember Oracle Forms? One of the nice features of Forms was the use of GLOBAL items. More or less comparable to Application Items in APEX. These GLOBALS where often used to pre-query data. For example you queried Employee 200 in Form A, then opened Form B and on opening that Form the Employee field is filled with that (GLOBAL) value of 200 and the query was executed. So without additional keys strokes or entering data, when switching to another Form a user would immediately see the data in the same context. And they loved that. In APEX you can create a similar experience using Application Items (or an Item on the Global Page) for Classic Reports (by setting a Default Value to a Search Item) and Interactive Reports (using the  APEX_IR.ADD_FILTER  procedure). But what about the Interactive Grid? There is no APEX_IG package ... so the first thing we have to figure out is how can we set a filter programmatically? Start with creating an Interactive Grid based upon the good o...

Refresh selected row(s) in an Interactive Grid

In my previous post I blogged about pushing changed rows from the dabatase into an Interactive Grid . The use case I'll cover right here is probably more common - and therefore more useful! Until we had the IG, we showed the data in a report (Interactive or Classic). Changes to the data where made by popping up a form page, making changes, saving and refreshing the report upon closing the dialog. Or by clicking an icon / button / link in your report that makes some changes to the data (like changing a status) and ... refresh the report.  That all works fine, but the downsides are: The whole dataset is returned from the server to the client - again and again. And if your pagination size is large, that does lead to more and more network traffic, more interpretation by the browser and more waiting time for the end user. The "current record" might be out of focus after the refresh, especially by larger pagination sizes, as the first rows will be shown. Or (even wors...

apex_application.g_f0x array processing in Oracle 12

If you created your own "updatable reports" or your custom version of tabular forms in Oracle Application Express, you'll end up with a query that looks similar to this one: then you disable the " Escape special characters " property and the result is an updatable multirecord form. That was easy, right? But now we need to process the changes in the Ename column when the form is submitted, but only if the checkbox is checked. All the columns are submitted as separated arrays, named apex_application.g_f0x - where the "x" is the value of the "p_idx" parameter you specified in the apex_item calls. So we have apex_application.g_f01, g_f02 and g_f03. But then you discover APEX has the oddity that the "checkbox" array only contains values for the checked rows. Thus if you just check "Jones", the length of g_f02 is 1 and it contains only the empno of Jones - while the other two arrays will contain all (14) rows. So for ...