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Customize the Report Designer Toolbar

  • 4 minutes to read

This document describes how to customize commands in the Report Designer‘s toolbar. It also shows how to add a new toolbar command and hide an existing command.

Create a Web Application

Open an ASP.NET MVC application or create a new one from scratch to get started with this tutorial.

See Create a Report in Visual Studio for information on how to create a sample ASP.NET MVC application and add a report to it. Refer to the Quick Start with End-User Report Designer for ASP.NET MVC section for step-by-step tutorials about Report Designer integration.

Add and Remove Commands

Handle the client-side CustomizeMenuActions event to customize commands at runtime.

The event argument provides access to the Actions collection that contains all the available Report Designer commands. You can add new commands to the collection and modify the existing commands. To obtain an existing command, call the event argument’s GetById method and pass the corresponding DevExpress.Analytics.Tools.ActionId or DevExpress.Reporting.Designer.Actions.ActionId value as a parameter.

Each command exposes the properties listed in the table below.

Option

Description

Container

Specifies whether to display the command in the menu or on the main toolbar.

Disabled

Specifies whether the command is disabled.

HasSeparator

Specifies whether the command has a visual separator.

HotKey

Specifies the keyboard shortcut to invoke the command

ImageClassName

ImageTemplateName

Use one of these options to specify the command’s icon:

  • ImageClassName for an icon declared as a CSS class.
  • ImageTemplateName for an icon declared as an HTML template.

JSClickAction

Specifies the client-side action to perform when the command is invoked.

Text

Specifies the command’s tooltip.

Visible

Specifies whether the command is visible in the user interface.

The following example demonstrates how to hide the existing Validate Bindings toolbar command and add a new Refresh command that refreshes the current report tab.

<script type="text/html" id="refresh">
    <svg version="1.1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" x="0px" y="0px" viewBox="0 0 24 24" style="enable-background: new 0 0 24 24;" xml:space="preserve">
    <path class="dxd-icon-fill" d="M22,2v8h-0.2h-3.09H14l2.94-2.94C15.68,5.79,13.93,5,12,5c-3.87,0-7,3.13-7,7H2C2,6.48,6.48,2,12,2
    c2.76,0,5.26,1.12,7.07,2.93L22,2z M12,19c-1.93,0-3.68-0.79-4.94-2.06L10,14H5.29H2.2H2v8l2.93-2.93C6.74,20.88,9.24,22,12,22
    c5.52,0,10-4.48,10-10h-3C19,15.87,15.87,19,12,19z" />
        </svg>
</script>
<script type="text/javascript">
    function customizeActions(s, e) {

        // Get the "Validate Bindings" action and hide it.
        var validateBindingsAction = e.GetById(DevExpress.Reporting.Designer.Actions.ActionId.ValidateBindings);
        if (validateBindingsAction)
            validateBindingsAction.visible = false;

        // Add a new action.
        e.Actions.splice(15, 0, {
            text: "Refresh",
            imageTemplateName: "refresh",
            visible: true,
            disabled: false,
            hasSeparator: false,
            hotKey: { ctrlKey: true, keyCode: "Z".charCodeAt(0) },
            clickAction: function () {
                s.GetCurrentTab().refresh();
            }
        });
    }
</script>

@Html.DevExpress().ReportDesigner(settings => {
    settings.Name = "ReportDesigner1";
    settings.ClientSideEvents.CustomizeMenuActions = "customizeActions";
}).Bind(new DevExpress.XtraReports.UI.XtraReport()).GetHtml()

The image below shows the resulting toolbar.

web-report-designer-toolbar-customization-result

Declare a Custom Command’s Icon

You can use two ways to provide a command’s icon.

This approach allows you to apply a color scheme to SVG icons and make them consistent with the Report Designer control.

The following example demonstrates how to declare a sample HTML template. This template uses the predefined dxd-icon-fill CSS class to color the icon automatically according to the selected scheme.

<script type="text/html" id="refresh">
    <svg version="1.1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" 
        x="0px" y="0px" viewBox="0 0 24 24" style="enable-background: new 0 0 24 24;" xml:space="preserve">
        <path class="dxd-icon-fill" d="M22,2v8h-0.2h-3.09H14l2.94-2.94C15.68,5.79,13.93,5,12,5c-3.87,0-7,3.13-7,7H2C2,6.48,6.48,2,12,2
            c2.76,0,5.26,1.12,7.07,2.93L22,2z M12,19c-1.93,0-3.68-0.79-4.94-2.06L10,14H5.29H2.2H2v8l2.93-2.93C6.74,20.88,9.24,22,12,22
            c5.52,0,10-4.48,10-10h-3C19,15.87,15.87,19,12,19z" />
    </svg>
</script>

Assign the declared template to the command’s ImageTemplateName property.

CSS Classes

You can add icons (SVG and PNG) as CSS classes with background images.

Note

This approach does not allow you to apply color schemes to icons.

  1. Create an image file (24x24 pixels) and add it to the project (for instance, Refresh.png).

  2. Add a new CSS file (Refresh.css) and declare the CSS class to specify the custom command icon.

    .refresh {
    background-image: url(../Refresh.png);
    background-repeat: no-repeat;
    }
    
  3. Link the added CSS file in your View file.

    ...
    <link href="~/Refresh.css" rel="stylesheet" />
    
  4. Assign the declared CSS class to the command’s ImageClassName property.