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Mastering ExtJS - Second Edition

You're reading from   Mastering ExtJS - Second Edition Learn how to develop advanced and efficient Internet applications with Ext JS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784390457
Length 400 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Loiane Avancini Loiane Avancini
Author Profile Icon Loiane Avancini
Loiane Avancini
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Sencha Ext JS Overview FREE CHAPTER 2. Getting Started 3. The Login Page 4. The Logout and Multilingual Capabilities 5. Advanced Dynamic Menu 6. User Management 7. Static Data Management 8. Content Management 9. Adding Extra Capabilities 10. Routing, Touch Support, and Debugging 11. Preparing for Production and Themes Index

Creating a Store


The next step is to create the stores for each Model. As we did with the Model, we will try to create a generic Store as well (in this chapter, will create a generic code for all screens, so creating a super Model, Store, and View is part of the capability). Although the common configurations are not in the Store, but in the Proxy (which we declared inside the schema in the Packt.model.Base class), having a super Store class can help us to listen to events that are common for all the static data stores.

We will create a super Store named Packt.store.staticData.Base.

As we need a Store for each Model, we will create the following stores:

  • Packt.store.staticData.Actors

  • Packt.store.staticData.Categories

  • Packt.store.staticData.Languages

  • Packt.store.staticData.Cities

  • Packt.store.staticData.Countries

At the end of this topic, we will have created all the previous classes. If we create a UML diagram for them, we will have something like the following diagram:

All the Store classes extend...

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