You can see how Sitecore does it in the Sitecore.Client
assembly, Sitecore.Shell.Applications.WebEdit.Commands.ChangeLanguage
and Sitecore.Shell.Applications.WebEdit.Commands.SetLanguage
.
You'll need to create two commands of your own for this. One command is associated with the button, one is executed when a subitem is selected. The example is based on a scenario of changing a country cookie.
ChangeCountry Command
First, the command to display the menu. You can see that it displays a Menu
with dynamic options. Overriding GetHeader
and GetIcon
allows the button itself to be dynamic based on the user's current selection.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using Sitecore.Shell.Applications.WebEdit.Commands;
using Sitecore.Diagnostics;
using Sitecore.Data.Items;
using Sitecore.Web.UI.Sheer;
using Sitecore.Web.UI.HtmlControls;
using Sitecore.StringExtensions;
using System.Web;
namespace Prototype.Commands
{
public class ChangeCountry : WebEditCommand
{
protected Dictionary<string, CountryOption> _countries = new Dictionary<string, CountryOption>
{
{"US", new CountryOption {
ID = "US",
Name = "United States",
Icon = "Flags/32x32/flag_usa.png"
}},
{"CA", new CountryOption {
ID = "CA",
Name = "Canada",
Icon = "Flags/32x32/flag_canada.png"
}},
{"MX", new CountryOption {
ID = "MX",
Name = "Mexico",
Icon = "Flags/32x32/flag_mexico.png"
}},
{"DE", new CountryOption {
ID = "DE",
Name = "Germany",
Icon = "Flags/32x32/flag_germany.png"
}}
};
public override void Execute(Sitecore.Shell.Framework.Commands.CommandContext context)
{
Assert.ArgumentNotNull(context, "context");
if (context.Items.Length == 1)
{
Item item = context.Items[0];
SheerResponse.DisableOutput();
Menu control = new Menu();
//replace with lookup and loop of available values
foreach (var key in _countries.Keys)
{
var country = _countries[key];
string id = country.ID;
string header = country.Name;
string icon = country.Icon;
string click = "prototype:setcountry(country={0})".FormatWith(key);
control.Add(id, header, icon, string.Empty, click, false, string.Empty, MenuItemType.Normal);
}
SheerResponse.EnableOutput();
SheerResponse.ShowPopup("ChangeCountryButton", "below", control);
}
}
public override string GetHeader(Sitecore.Shell.Framework.Commands.CommandContext context, string header)
{
HttpCookie country = HttpContext.Current.Request.Cookies["country"];
if (country != null && _countries.ContainsKey(country.Value))
{
return _countries[country.Value].Name;
}
return base.GetHeader(context, header);
}
public override string GetIcon(Sitecore.Shell.Framework.Commands.CommandContext context, string icon)
{
HttpCookie country = HttpContext.Current.Request.Cookies["country"];
if (country != null && _countries.ContainsKey(country.Value))
{
return _countries[country.Value].Icon;
}
return base.GetIcon(context, icon);
}
protected class CountryOption
{
public string ID { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
public string Icon { get; set; }
}
}
}
In either Commands.config or an include file, register the new command.
<command name="prototype:changecountry" type="Prototype.Commands.ChangeCountry,Prototype" />
Change Country Button
Create a new Chunk and Button under /sitecore/content/Applications/WebEdit/Ribbons/WebEdit/Experience
. This ribbon strip is referenced/replicated in Preview mode as well. The button will use the following properties:
The Click field must match the name of your command, and the ID field must match the element ID provided in the SheerResponse.ShowPopup
call above.
SetCountry Command
Next is the command that will be called when an item in your menu/dropdown is selected.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using Sitecore.Shell.Applications.WebEdit.Commands;
using System.Net;
using Sitecore.Diagnostics;
using Sitecore.Web.UI.Sheer;
using System.Web;
namespace Prototype.Commands
{
public class SetCountry : WebEditCommand
{
public override void Execute(Sitecore.Shell.Framework.Commands.CommandContext context)
{
Assert.ArgumentNotNull(context, "context");
var country = context.Parameters["country"];
Assert.IsNotNullOrEmpty(country, "Country not found");
HttpCookie cookie = new HttpCookie("country", country);
HttpContext.Current.Response.Cookies.Add(cookie);
WebEditCommand.Reload(WebEditCommand.GetUrl());
}
}
}
In our example, we're setting a cookie based on the selected value and reloading the page. The value passed in is based on the click event associated with the menu item in ChangeCountry
. Likewise, the name of the command when configured needs to match what was used in the ChangeCountry
click event.
<command name="prototype:setcountry" type="Prototype.Commands.SetCountry,Prototype" />