In this example, we will add pagination to an ordered list. Some things to note:
<span>
as well as in a <p>
.Random content with pagination controls embedded inline. Suspendisse vestibulum dignissim quam. Integer vel augue. Phasellus nulla purus, interdum ac, and here they are. and now back to random content habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas.
In this example, we'll be working with a data array stored in YAHOO.example.data.top40
.
All of Paginator's UI Components render inline elements, so you can include them almost anywhere. We'll create two container elements in our content, a <span>
, nested in a paragraph above the list, and a separate <p>
below it.
We'll generate the content by pulling a slice
of our data array and wrapping each item in <li>
and <p>
tags.
Create a Paginator, identifying the two containers span_container
and p_container
. For fun, we use a custom template
and configure the included UI Components for extra customization.
Attach the content handler to the Paginator's changeRequest
event and make the appropriate changes in the handler to use the Paginator's passed state data. render()
the Paginator and, in this case, call the content generation code directly to initialize the list.
For this example, we've given the UI Components some special visual treatment. Outside of this, there is one CSS override that was necessary for the <span>
container.
Though the elements themselves are inline elements, the container is styled as display: block
by Sam skin. To keep the <span>
from breaking the normal rendering of the enclosing <p>
, we add the following CSS:
Note: You are viewing this example in debug mode with logging enabled. This can significantly slow performance.
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