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This page will walk you through an example of adding the Fluid Rich Text Inline Edit component to an HTML file. For more general information about the Inline Edit API, see Rich Text Inline Edit API.

This tutorial assumes that:

  • you are already familiar with HTML, Javascript and CSS
  • you are familiar with what the Inline Edit is and does
  • now you just want to know how to add it to your file.

Tutorial: How to Use the Inline Edit

Scenario

You've created a database to keep track of your vast collection of CDs, and you're working on a web interface for it. When viewing the details of a CD, you would like to very easily add a personal review. Prone to rambling, you know you will want to add some basic styling so the text is easier to read. This tutorial will show you how to use the Fluid Rich Text Inline Edit for this.

There are three basic steps to adding the Inline Edit to your application:

  • Setup: Download and install the Fluid Infusion library
  • Step 1: Prepare your Markup
  • Step 2: Write the script
  • Step 3: Add the required libraries to your HTML

The rest of this tutorial will explain each of these steps in detail.

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Join the infusion-users mailing list and ask your questions there.

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Infusion13:Tutorial SetupInfusion13:
Tutorial Setup

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Step 1: Prepare your markup

Let's assume that you're working with some HTML that displays the information about a CD in your collection - something simple like this:

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html
html
<h1>Album Details</h1>

<h2>Artist</h2>
Portishead

<h2>Album</h2>
Third

<h2>Year</h2>
2008

<h2>Label</h2>
Universal Music

<h2>Review</h2>
<p>After a hiatus, <strong>Portishead</strong> is back with their first studio
album in 6 years. <em>Third</em> brings back the familiar and
the new, and none of this is best exemplified than in the track
<em>Machine Gun</em>.</p>

<p>It seems that regardless of how <strong>Portishead</strong> sounds now, the one
thing that has stayed constant is their refusal to be ordinary.</p>

The Changes

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In order to apply the Rich Text editor to your markup, you need to tell it three things:

  1. which element is the block of text you want to make editable by identifying a container,
  2. how you want the rich inline edit component to look by using a another container, and
  3. group the above two containers inside a parent container.

If we want to make the review text element editable, then we could

  1. wrap entire review text inside a <div> element and give it the default class flc-inlineEdit-text.
  2. create a new <div> element with the default class name flc-inlineEdit-editContainer for the editor.
  3. place the above two <div> containers inside a <div> and give it a unique ID.

We can also define how big we want the rich edit field to be, and add Save and Cancel buttons.

This might look like the HTML sample to the right.

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Code Block
html
html
<h1>Album Details</h1>

<h2>Artist</h2>
Portishead

<h2>Album</h2>
Third

<h2>Year</h2>
2008

<h2>Label</h2>
Universal Music

<h2>Review</h2>
<div id="cd-review">
  <div class="flc-inlineEdit-text">
    <p>After a hiatus, <strong>Portishead</strong> is back with their first studio
    album in 6 years. <em>Third</em> brings back the familiar and
    the new, and none of this is best exemplified than in the track
    <em>Machine Gun</em>.</p>

    <p>It seems that regardless of how <strong>Portishead</strong> sounds now, the one
    thing that has stayed constant is their refusal to be ordinary.</p>
  </div>

  <div class="flc-inlineEdit-editContainer">
    <textarea rows="10" cols="80" ></textarea>
    <button class="save">Save</button> <button class="cancel">Cancel</button>
  </div>
</div>
That's all - these are the only changes you need to make to your HTML.

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Step 2: Write the script

There are some scripts you will need to add to your HTML file before the Rich Text Inline Edit will function properly.

Define Button Behaviour

The <button> elements by themselves will not do anything special unless we specify some behaviour. This can be done by adding the following script:

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This will make the Save and Cancel buttons perform what we'd expect.

Initialize the Rich Text Inline Editor

Now you need to initialize the Rich Text Inline Editor.

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Note: The FCKEditor integration is deprecated for v1.2. Please use the CKEditor integration instead.

Putting it All Together

Combining all of the above scripts together, it will look like this:

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By putting these functions inside the jQuery(document).ready() call, you ensure that all of your markup is ready before you try to initialize the Rich Text Inline Edit components. This script can also be placed in a <script> block at the end of your document.

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Step 3: Add the Fluid library to your HTML

You'll need to add the Fluid library to your HTML file. In the header of the file, link to the Javascript files with <script> tags:

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