Contents
Contents of this article:
- Contents
- Introduction
- Problem
- Requirements
- Solution
- Snapshots
- Component Design
- Class Diagrams
- Database Diagram
- Characteristics
- Background
- Code Highlights
- Download
Introduction
Today, we are going to create a simple application, actually a simple sheet designing tool. This tool gives the user the flexibility to design his sheets, reports, bills, invoices, and receipts (whatever.)
In this writing, we will refer to reports, bills, invoices, receipts, etc. with just the name sheets. For this, we will need to give a sheet a definition.
A sheet is just like an empty page (i.e. template) that contains sheet items. For example, a resume template is a sheet that has many items (name, birth date, address, etc.) A cash receipt is a sheet that has a few items (date, amount, charged to, received by, etc.)
We will go through this tool in a nice way. We will begin by a very simple system analysis and application design. After that, we will get into coding.
Actually, I’m not an architect, and I think I will never be. So please, DO NOT blame me for this bad analysis. It is just an illustration to get you have a solid understanding of what our application is designed for.
Problem
The user is tied into the sheet designs that the developer has created for him. The user should have the ability to design his own sheets and/or to edit application defined sheets.
Requirements
User Requirements
The following is list of common user requirements:
- The application should allow the user to create, edit, and delete sheets, and to group those sheets into categories he creates.
- For the sake of simplicity, those categories would be only one level, no nested categories are allowed.
- The application should be persistent. The data should be stored in a database and loaded when the user needs it.
- The sheet should be loaded with right data and printed whenever the user asks.
- Like Visual Studio, the user should have a Toolbox that has all types of sheet items. The user could insert a sheet item into his sheet by drawing it into the screen, dragging it from the toolbox, or just double-clicking its icon in the toolbox.
- The user should have a ruler to allow him measuring sheet item dimensions. In addition, he should have a design-time-only grid.
- The user should be allowed to set attributes of the sheet like the page setup, grid settings, background color, etc.
- Not all sheet attributes are printed out; some are for design-mode only (like background color, and grid.)
- Each type of sheet items should have its own attributes and the user should be allowed to change them too.
- The user should be allowed to drag sheet items around the screen and position them.
- The user should be allowed to cut, copy, paste, and delete sheet items.
- Of course, the user should be allowed to print out the sheet, and to preview it too.
- The application should be generic to be used in any system and in any application.
- Other pieces of the system should have the possibility to interact with the sheet.
Functional Requirements
Common functional (developer) requirements are:
- Abstraction. Component/Class abstraction should be considered into the design. The system should consist of several components each of which groups a related features together (e.g. interface objects, business objects, and data management.)
- Extensibility. The system should be extensible. A good class hierarchy should be created, and derivation (inheritance) should be taken into consideration. In addition, every sheet item should be represented by a class in this hierarchy.
- Technically, sheet items would be called shapes. Because they are just drawings into the sketch (or sheet.)
- To allow the user to work with sheet items (shapes) and the application to populate the sheet with data, sheet items should not be drawn directly into the sheet page. Instead every item should represented by a class that has its own drawing routine.
- The sheet should be a container for the shapes. All shapes are children of the sheet.
- The sheet and rulers should be Windows controls to allow them to be hosted by a Windows Form.
- Sheet items should be Windows controls too to allow them to be hosted by the sheet.
- The sheet items should be owner-drawn controls and they should not be derived from existing Windows controls to help integrating them easily into the sheet.
- For the sake of simplicity, the sheet and shapes should be serialized into XML and stored in the database.
- The database should be a SQL Server database to allow faster communication and easier manipulation of XML data.
- The database should have three tables for the three core system components, the category, the sheet, and the shape.
- Every sheet item in a given sheet should have a unique name (or a tag) to allow other system components to interact with it (e.g. populate it with the right data.)
- The developer should have the ability to control the quality of the painting process for each control or item independently.
Solution
After going through project requirements and considering a sophisticated system design, we got a nice plan for our project that would be called Geming SISC (Sheet Infrastructure Components.)
This project would be created using C# and .NET 2.0 (or future versions of course.)
Snapshots
The following are final snapshots of the application. Figure 1 shows a cash receipt sheet designed by labels, boxes, and lines. Figure 2 shows a simple resume template designed by only a few labels and a picture. The left pane of the application lists current sheets grouped by their categories.
Figure 01 - Geming SISC (Cash Receipt)
Figure 2 – Geming SISC (Resume Template)
As you know other system components could fill those fields up with correct information.
Component Design
Figure 3 shows the three components of our system.
Figure 3 – Geming SISC Component Design
The three core components of our system, Geming SISC are:
- Geming.Sisc.Infrastructure:
Contains the sheet control and shapes controls (label, text box, etc.) The sheet, rulers, and sheet items controls are all derived from System.Windows.Forms.Control. - Geming.Sisc.Data:
Business objects that would be sent to the data among database manager objects. This component references the Geming.Sisc.Infrastructure component. - Geming.Sisc.Driver:
The application interface that would be used to design sheets. It references the other two components.
Class Diagrams
Extensibility is one of the main goals of the system. A flexible class hierarchy should be considered as well as derivation (i.e. inheritance) of controls for other external objects.
The following is the class hierarchy for the sheet and the ruler controls.
Figure 4 – Sheet and Rulers Class Hierarchy
As we can see, the base class is the System.Windows.Forms.Control class. This allows the sheet and rulers controls to be inserted into a Windows form or a Windows control.
The following figure, figure 5, shows the class hierarchy of sheet items (technically called shapes.)
Figure 5 – Sheet Items (Shapes) Class Hierarchy
As we can see, the base class for all shapes is the abstract Geming.Sisc.Infrastructure.ShapeBase class which inherits from System.Windows.Forms.Control class. All other shapes are derived from ShapeBase.
Two edit shapes were created, TextBoxShape that has a look like a Windows Text Box, and LabelShape that has a look like a normal Windows Label. Both are derived from the abstract EditableShapeBase.
Other shapes are BoxShape, LineShape, ImageShape, and CheckBoxShape.
All classes are serializable (implement System.Runtime.Serialization.ISerializable interface,) so they can easily converted into XML and pushed to the database.
For simplicity, we have developed just the box, line, image, check box, and two edit shapes (or sheet items.) You can go further and create any other shapes you like. In addition, you can create more specific items like CurrencyField, DateField, etc.
For more detailed class diagrams like those shows class members, check the application code.
Database Diagram
In its simplicity, database is defined as the following diagram illustrates:
Figure 6 – Geming SISC Database Diagram
Notice that, all data operations are carried out through stored procedures in the database.
The Shape.Value column is of the type xml to allow easier manipulation of XML data in the future.
Characteristics
Here are some of the characteristics (i.e. attributes) of the sheet (some are represented by properties):
- Background color:
The user should be able change the background color. Notice that the background color is not printed. - Non-printable grid:
To help the user position sheet items. The user should be able to display them or not. In addition, the user can change the grid color. - Margin:
The application should set the page margin based on print settings. - Title:
Every sheet has a title, a description, and a category.
In addition, next is a list of some the characteristics of a shape (sheet item):
- Selected:
Is the shape currently selected or not. The user could select a shape by the mouse. A selection frame is drawn around the shape when selected. - Non-printable size grip:
Each shape should have a size grip to allow the user to resize the shape. - Cloning:
The shape should be able to be cloned; that is copied, to allow the copy and paste feature.
Background
Here are some refreshers of techniques we use in this system:
We will rely on custom painting in most situations. Therefore, well request help from System.Drawing classes specially the System.Drawing.Graphics class.
In some shapes like those mimic existing Windows controls (like the text box and the check box,) we will get help from classes in System.Windows.Forms.VisualStyles namespace to reflect the visual styles of Windows in our controls. In addition, System.Windows.Forms.ControlPaint class is used for drawing borders and selection rectangles.
Every control in our project (sheet, rulers, and shapes) has a paining quality property that determines the quality of the drawing (low, medium, and high.) For this to work we will make use of some properties of the System.Drawing.Graphics object like those related to smoothing and anti-aliasing feature.
All serialized objects should be marked with System.SerializableAttribute attribute. With help from System.Runtime.Serialization namespace we could customize the serialization process.
The core interface that would allow us to customize the serialization process is the System.Runtime.Serialization.ISerializable interface (implemented in all serializable classes.) Notice that, we should add the deserialization constructor to get correct deserialization.
The database is a SQL Server client database with all operations included as stored procedures.
The system uses two-tier architecture; means that it accesses the database directly using just three objects, a connection, a command, and a data reader.
For extending design-mode support we have created custom designer service for the Sheet class that inherits the System.Windows.Forms.Design.ParentControlDesigner class to allow nested controls in the Sheet object in the design-mode.
Code Highlights
In this section we will talk about significant blocks of code that would be of interest.
The following is the code for OnPaint() routine overridden by only the ShapeBase class.
Listing 1 – ShapeBase.OnPaint() Method Code Listing
protected override void OnPaint(PaintEventArgs e)
{
GraphicsManager.SetQuality(e.Graphics, PaintingQuality);
ControlPaint.DrawBorder(e.Graphics, this.ClientRectangle, this.ForeColor, ButtonBorderStyle.Dotted);
PaintShape(e.Graphics);
if (Selected)
DrawSelectionFrame(e.Graphics);
ControlPaint.DrawSizeGrip(e.Graphics, this.BackColor, GetResizeGripRect());
}
This function first calls the GraphicsManager.SetQuality() function that sets the quality attributes of the Graphics object. We will get back to this function in about a moment.
After that the function paints the control border using the System.Windows.Forms.ControlPaint class.
Next comes the interesting point. The function calls the virtual function PaintShape() that a derived class overrides to provide its own drawing routines.
For example, the TextBoxShape class has this PaintShape() override:
Listing 2 – TextBoxShape.PaintShape() Method Code Listing
public override void PaintShape(Graphics dc)
{
base.PaintShape(dc);
using (Brush b = new SolidBrush(this.BackColor))
dc.FillRectangle(b, this.ClientRectangle);
using (Pen p = new Pen(SystemColors.ActiveCaption, 1))
{
p.Alignment = System.Drawing.Drawing2D.PenAlignment.Inset;
Rectangle r = this.ClientRectangle;
dc.DrawRectangle(p, r);
}
Rectangle rect = this.ClientRectangle;
rect.Offset(2, 2);
rect.Width -= 4; rect.Height -= 4;
StringFormat format = new StringFormat();
format.LineAlignment = this.Alignment;
if (this.RightToLeft == RightToLeft.Yes)
format.FormatFlags = StringFormatFlags.DirectionRightToLeft;
using (Brush b = new SolidBrush(this.ForeColor))
dc.DrawString(this.Text, this.Font, b, rect, format);
}
After that the OnPaint() function draws selection frame if the shape is currently selected.
Just before the function closes, it calls the ControlPaint.DrawSizeGrip() function to draw the sizing grip that the user would resize the shape from.
In our library Geming.Sisc.Infrastructure, we have created a helper class, GraphicsManager, which contains only one function, SetQuality().
This function accepts two input parameters, the graphics object and the quality you wish to set to that object. The following is the code for the SetQuality() function.
Listing 3 – GraphicsManager.SetQuality() Method Code Listing
public static void SetQuality(System.Drawing.Graphics g, PaintingQuality quality)
{
if (g == null)
throw new ArgumentNullException("g");
if (quality == PaintingQuality.High)
{
g.CompositingQuality = CompositingQuality.AssumeLinear;
g.InterpolationMode = InterpolationMode.HighQualityBicubic;
g.PixelOffsetMode = PixelOffsetMode.Half;
g.SmoothingMode = SmoothingMode.AntiAlias;
g.TextRenderingHint =
System.Drawing.Text.TextRenderingHint.ClearTypeGridFit;
}
else if (quality == PaintingQuality.Medium)
{
g.CompositingQuality = CompositingQuality.HighQuality;
g.InterpolationMode = InterpolationMode.Bilinear;
g.PixelOffsetMode = PixelOffsetMode.HighQuality;
g.SmoothingMode = SmoothingMode.HighQuality;
g.TextRenderingHint =
System.Drawing.Text.TextRenderingHint.AntiAliasGridFit;
}
else
{
g.CompositingQuality = CompositingQuality.Default;
g.InterpolationMode = InterpolationMode.Default;
g.PixelOffsetMode = PixelOffsetMode.Default;
g.SmoothingMode = SmoothingMode.Default;
g.TextRenderingHint =
System.Drawing.Text.TextRenderingHint.SystemDefault;
}
}
Download
The application Geming.Sisc along with its code is available for download here.
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