How DX Works
Building a DX application consists largely of dragging widgets
into place, then setting their resources.
By setting widget resources you can:
- control the connection to your database;
- manage the flow of information between the database and
your user interface;
- specify the way database information is validated,
displayed and updated;
- manage the instance hierarchy of your application.
There are four categories of DBPak widgets:
- Database
Access widgets
specify a connection to the database. You
can either require users to log in at runtime, or you can
specify login information in advance. Unless you are
connecting to multiple databases simultaneously, you need
only one Database Access widget per application.
- Data
Presentation widgets manage the display of database
information. By modifying Data Presentation widgets, you
control how fields are validated, formatted, and labeled.
You need one (or more) Data Presentation widgets for each
database column used in your application.
- Query
widgets
coordinate between the Database Access and
Data Presentation widgets. By modifying Query widget
resources (and adding callbacks), you control what data
is retrieved, how it is displayed and how it can be
updated. Query widget store data that has been retrieved
from the database. They also maintain a cursor into the
database for browsing from row to row. You can think of
them as holders for the result set of an SQL select
statement, with extra 'smarts' to edit and update the
retrieved data. You generally need one or more Query
widgets per application screen.
- Control
widgets
are push buttons that tell the Query to move between rows
of a table, i.e. "Next Record", "First
Record", "Search", etc. Control widgets
are commonly grouped together to form a Control Panel.
The following figure illustrates the relationshis between
DBPak widgets:

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