AutoConnectElements
The elements for the custom Web pages¶
Representative HTML elements for making the custom Web page are provided as AutoConnectElements.
- AutoConnectButton: Labeled action button
- AutoConnectCheckbox: Labeled checkbox
- AutoConnectElement: General tag
- AutoConnectInput: Labeled text input box
- AutoConnectRadio: Labeled radio button
- AutoConnectSelect: Selection list
- AutoConnectSubmit: Submit button
- AutoConnectText: Style attributed text
Layout on a custom Web page¶
The elements of the page created by AutoConnectElements are aligned vertically exclude the AutoConnectRadio. You can specify the direction to arrange the radio buttons as AutoConnectRadio vertically or horizontally. This basic layout depends on the CSS of the AutoConnect menu so you can not change drastically.
Form and AutoConnectElements¶
All AutoConnectElements placed on custom web pages will be contained into one form. Its form is fixed and created by AutoConnect. The form value (usually the text or checkbox you entered) is sent by AutoConnectSubmit using the POST method with HTTP. The post method sends the actual form data which is a query string whose contents are the name and value of AutoConnectElements. You can retrieve the value for the parameter with the sketch from the query string with ESP8266WebServer::arg function or PageArgument class of the AutoConnect::on handler when the form is submitted.
AutoConnectElement - A basic class of elements¶
AutoConnectElement is a base class for other element classes and has common attributes for all elements. It can also be used as a variant of each element. The following items are attributes that AutoConnectElement has and are common to other elements.
Sample
AutoConnectElement element("element", "<hr>");
On the page:
Constructor¶
AutoConnectElement(const char* name, const char* value)
name¶
Each element has a name. The name is the String data type. You can identify each element by the name to access it with sketches.
value¶
The value is the string which is a source to generate an HTML code. Characteristics of Value vary depending on the element. The value of AutoConnectElement is native HTML code. A string of value is output as HTML as it is.
type¶
The type indicates the type of the element and represented as the ACElement_t enumeration type in the sketch. Since AutoConnectElement also acts as a variant of other elements, it can be applied to handle elements collectively. At that time, the type can be referred to by the typeOf() function. The following example changes the font color of all AutoConnectText elements of a custom Web page to gray.
AutoConnectAux customPage; AutoConnectElementVT& elements = customPage.getElements(); for (AutoConnectElement& elm : elements) { if (elm.typeOf() == AC_Text) { AutoConnectText& text = reinterpret_cast<AutoConnectText&>(elm); text.style = "color:gray;"; } }
The enumerators for ACElement_t are as follows:
- AutoConnectButton: AC_Button
- AutoConnectCheckbox: AC_Checkbox
- AutoConnectElement: AC_Element
- AutoConnectInput: AC_Input
- AutoConnectRadio: AC_Radio
- AutoConnectSelect: AC_Select
- AutoConnectSubmit: AC_Submit
- AutoConnectText: AC_Text
- Uninitialized element: AC_Unknown
Furthermore, to convert an entity that is not an AutoConnectElement to its native type, you must re-interpret that type with c++.
AutoConnectButton¶
AutoConnectButton generates an HTML <button type="button">
tag and locates a clickable button to a custom Web page. Currently AutoConnectButton corresponds only to name, value, an onclick attribute of HTML button tag. An onclick attribute is generated from an action
member variable of the AutoConnectButton, which is mostly used with a JavaScript to activate a script.
Sample
AutoConnectButton button("button", "OK", "myFunction()");
On the page:
Constructor¶
AutoConnectButton(const char* name, const char* value, const String& action)
name¶
It is the name
of the AutoConnectButton element and matches the name attribute of the button tag. It also becomes the parameter name of the query string when submitted.
value¶
It becomes a value of the value
attribute of an HTML button tag.
action¶
action is String data type and is an onclick attribute fire on a mouse click on the element. It is mostly used with a JavaScript to activate a script.1 For example, the following code defines a custom Web page that copies a content of Text1
to Text2
by clicking Button
.
const char* scCopyText = R"( <script> function CopyText() { document.getElementById("Text2").value = document.getElementById("Text1").value; } </script> )"; ACInput(Text1, "Text1"); ACInput(Text2, "Text2"); ACButton(Button, "COPY", "CopyText()"); ACElement(TextCopy, scCopyText);
AutoConnectCheckbox¶
AutoConnectCheckbox generates an HTML <input type="checkbox">
tag and a <label>
tag. It places horizontally on a custom Web page by default.
Sample
AutoConnectCheckbox checkbox("checkbox", "uniqueapid", "Use APID unique", false);
On the page:
Constructor¶
AutoConnectCheckbox(const char* name, const char* value, const char* label, const bool checked)
name¶
It is the name
of the AutoConnectCheckbox element and matches the name attribute of the input tag. It also becomes the parameter name of the query string when submitted.
value¶
It becomes a value of the value
attribute of an HTML <input type="checkbox">
tag.
label¶
A label is an optional string. A label is always arranged on the right side of the checkbox. Specification of a label will generate an HTML <label>
tag with an id
attribute. The checkbox and the label are connected by the id attribute.
Only will be displayed if a label is not specified.
checked¶
A checked is a Boolean value and indicates the checked status of the checkbox. The value of the checked checkbox element is packed in the query string and sent.
AutoConnectInput¶
AutoConnectInput generates an HTML <input type="text">
tag and a <label>
tag. It can also have a placeholder. The value of the input box is passed to the destination in the query string and can be retrieved programmatically. You can also update from the sketches.
Sample
AutoConnectInput input("input", "", "Server", "MQTT broker server");
On the page:
Constructor¶
AutoConnectInput(const char* name, const char* value, const char* label, const char* pattern, const char* placeholder)
name¶
It is the name
of the AutoConnectInput element and matches the name attribute, the id attribute of the input tag. It also becomes the parameter name of the query string when submitted.
value¶
It becomes a string value of the value
attribute of an HTML <input type="text">
tag. The text entered from the custom Web page will be grouped in the query string of the form submission and the string set before accessing the page will be displayed as the initial value.
label¶
A label
is an optional string. A label is always arranged on the left side of the input box. Specification of a label will generate an HTML <label>
tag with an id attribute. The input box and the label are connected by the id attribute.
pattern¶
A pattern
specifies a regular expression that the AutoConnectInput element's value is checked against on form submission. If it is invalid, the background color will change, but it will be sent even if the data format does not match. To check whether the entered value matches the pattern, use the isValid function.
- The password that must contain 8 or more characters that are of at least one number, and one uppercase and lowercase letter:
(?=.*\d)(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z]).{8,}
-
Email address as characters@characters.domain:
[a-z0-9._%+-]+@[a-z0-9.-]+\.[a-z]{2,}
-
IP address:
(([0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9]{2}|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])\\.){3}([0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9]{2}|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])
-
Host name of Internet:
(([a-zA-Z0-9]|[a-zA-Z0-9][a-zA-Z0-9\-]*[a-zA-Z0-9])\.)*([A-Za-z0-9]|[A-Za-z0-9][A-Za-z0-9\-]*[A-Za-z0-9])
-
Date (MM/DD/YYYY) as range 1900-2099:
(0[1-9]|1[012])[- \/.](0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])[- \/.](19|20)\d\d
-
Twitter account:
^@?(\w){1,15}$
placeholder¶
A placeholder is an option string. Specification of a placeholder will generate a placeholder
attribute for the input tag.
AutoConnectRadio¶
AutoConnectRadio generates few HTML <input type="radio">
tags as grouped and the same number of <label>
tags. AutoConnectRadio can keep the value of a radio button as a collection. The grouped values will be placed in the custom Web page to select only one exclusively.
Sample
AutoConnectRadio radio("radio", { "30 sec.", "60 sec.", "180 sec." }, "Update period", AC_Vertical, 1);
On the page:
Constructor¶
AutoConnectRadio(const char* name, std::vector<String> const& values, const char* label, const ACArrange_t order, const uint8_t checked)
name¶
It is the name
of the AutoConnectRadio element and matches the name attribute of the input tags. It also becomes the parameter name of the query string when submitted.
values¶
A values
is an array of String type for the radio button options which as actually std::vector. It is an initialization list can be used. The input tags will be generated from each entry in the values, the amount of which is the same as the number of items in values
.
label¶
A label is an optional string. A label will be arranged in the left or top of the radio buttons according to the order. Specification of a label will generate an HTML <label>
tag with an id
attribute. The radio buttons and the label are connected by the id attribute.
order¶
A order
specifies the direction to arrange the radio buttons. It is a value of type ACArrange_t
and accepts one of the following:
AC_Horizontal
: Horizontal arrangement.AC_Vertical
: Vertical arrangement.
A label will place in the left or the top according to the order.
checked¶
A checked
specifies the index number (1-based) of the values to be checked. If this parameter is not specified neither item is checked.
AutoConnectSelect¶
AutoConnectSelect generates an HTML <select>
tag (drop-down list) and few <option>
tags.
Sample
AutoConnectSelect select("select", { String("Europe/London"), String("Europe/Berlin"), String("Europe/Helsinki"), String("Europe/Moscow"), String("Asia/Dubai") }, "Select TZ name");
On the page:
Constructor¶
AutoConnectSelect(const char* name, std::vector<String> const& options, const char* label)
name¶
It is the name
of the AutoConnectSelect element and matches the name attribute of the select tags.
options¶
An options
is an array of String type for the options which as actually std::vector for an HTML <option>
tag. It is an initialization list can be used. The option tags will be generated from each entry in the options, the amount of which is the same as the number of items in an options
.
label¶
A label
is an optional string. A label is always arranged on the left side of the drop-down list. Specification of a label will generate an HTML <label>
tag with an id attribute. The select tag and the label are connected by the id attribute.
AutoConnectSubmit¶
AutoConnectSubmit generates an HTML <input type="button">
tag attached onclick
attribute. The native code of the onclick
attribute is the submission of the form with the POST method.
Sample
AutoConnectSubmit submit("submit", "Save", "/mqtt_save");
On the page:
Constructor¶
AutoConnectSubmit(const char* name, const char* value, const char* uri)
name¶
It is the name
of the AutoConnectSubmit element and matches the name attribute of the input tag.
value¶
It becomes a string of the value
attribute of an HTML <input type="button">
tag. The value
will be displayed as a label of the button.
uri¶
A uri
specifies the URI to send form data when the button declared by AutoConnectSubmit is clicked.
The query string of the form data sent with AutoConnectSubmit contains the URI of the page. Its parameter name is _acuri
. In Sketch, you can know the called URI by referring to the _acuri
parameter with the destination page handler. The actual query string is as follows:
_acuri=CALLER_URI
AutoConnectText¶
AutoConnectText generates an HTML <div>
tag. A style
attribute will be attached if a style parameter is passed.
Sample
AutoConnectText text("text", "Publishing the WiFi signal strength to MQTT channel. RSSI value of ESP8266 to the channel created on ThingSpeak", "font-family:serif;color:#4682b4;");
On the page:
Constructor¶
AutoConnectText(const char* name, const char* value, const char* style)
name¶
A name
does not exist in the generated HTML. It provides only a means of accessing elements with the sketches.
value¶
It becomes content and also can contain the native HTML code, but remember that your written code is enclosed by the div tag.
style¶
A style
specifies the qualification style to give to the content and can use the style attribute format as it is.
How to coding for the elements¶
Declaration for the elements in Sketches¶
Variables of each AutoConnetElement can be declared with macros. By using the macros, you can treat element name that is String type as variable in sketches.2
ACElement ( name [ , value ] )
ACButton ( name [ , value ] [ , action ] )
ACCheckbox ( name [ , value ] [ , label ] [ , true | false ] )
ACInput ( name [ , value ] [ , label ] [ , pattern ] [ , placeholder ] )
ACRadio ( name [ , values ] [ , label ] [ , AC_Horizontal | AC_Vertical ] [ , checked ] )
ACSelect ( name [ , options ] [ , label ] )
ACSubmit ( name [ , value ] [ , uri ] )
ACText ( name [ , value ] [ , style ] )
Declaration macro usage
For example, AutoConnectText can be declared using macros.
AutoConnectText caption("caption", "hello, world", "color:blue;")
ACText(caption, "hello, world", "color:blue;")
Variant for AutoConnectElements¶
Some AutoConnectAux APIs specify AutoConnectElements as an argument. There are also functions that return a pointer to AutoConnectElements. AutoConnectElement behaves as a variant type of each element class to make these interfaces a single. Use reinterpret_cast to cast from a variant pointer to an Actual type pointer of AutoConnectElements.
AutoConnectAux aux; ACText(Text1, "hello, world"); aux.add(Text1); AutoConnectText* text_p = reinterpret_cast<AutoConnectText>(aux.getElement("Text1")); AutoConnectText& text = aux.getElement<AutoConnectText>("Text1");