I would love to see what you have done and your code.  I am trying to expand
my use of the modal box but not having much luck.  Looking forward to it.

Chad



On Tue, Jan 13, 2009 at 12:25 PM, WebbedIT <p...@webbedit.co.uk> wrote:

>
> Siegfried,
>
> I've used that very useful article to get my head around the basics
> and I have then move on some distance since then.
>
> That article only deals with opening a form and submitting it showing
> any error then having it close if no errors.  What I have created is a
> whole controller's worth of actions within a single modal window
> (Index, Add, Edit, Delete).
>
> In my opinion I have also implemented ModalBox much better by
> adjusting how links and forms are submitted within the window so that
> ModalBox does the hard work of displaying the spinner whilst the
> content is updated and then resizes the window to accommodate the new
> content (namely doing away with the ajax->form() and $ajax->link
> commands, which are shortcuts to prototype ajax calls, in favour of an
> onclick event calling Modalbox.show()).  This does away with the
> requirement for custom javascript functions such as the suggested
> closeModalbox().
>
> I plan to write an article about this myself and run it past the
> author of the above article when I have got my issues resolved.
>
> So back to the original question ... how is form data stored in
> between Ajax calls so that even after clearing $this->data it is
> reappears when next calling a form-type action (add or edit)?
>
> Regards,
>
> Paul.
> >
>

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