How to create a running percentage of total

New to Report Builder 3.0
I Have a column of values with the total at the bottom.  I want to add a column with the percentage of the total alongside as below.  How do I achieve this)
value
weight
19,564
54%
12,394
34%
1,336
4%
1,114
3%
1,887
5%
36,294
100%

Hi cmcmac,
According to your description, you want to add a column to show the percentage value of the total values in the right of the value column. In this scenario, we can use division to get the result, and format the result to percentage format.
To achieve your requirement, we can refer to the following steps:
Right-click the value column to insert a column right of it.
Right-click the second cell to open the Text Box Properties dialog box in the new column.
Modify the expression of Value to like this:
=Fields!value.Value/Sum(Fields!value.Value,"DataSet_name")
Click the Number in the left pane, select Percentage format under Category, then type “0” as Decimal places.
Repeat from setp2 to step4 in the third cell in the new column, but modify the expression of Value as below:
=Sum(Fields!value.Value,"DataSet_name")/Sum(Fields!value.Value,"DataSet_name")
The following screenshot is for your reference:
If you have any more questions, please feel free to ask.
Thanks,
Katherine Xiong
Katherine Xiong
TechNet Community Support

Similar Messages

  • How to create a running total formula for different calendar years

    Hello everyone,
    I am looking for some help in creating a running total formula for different calendar years in Oracle. This is what I currently have organized in the crosstab report: vertically I have the cities from our database organized, then horizontially have the following information for each city:
    2006 /2007 /2008
    Amount /Amount Spent /Unspent Amount Amount Recieved/Amount Spent /Unspent Amount Amount Recieved/Amount Spent/Unspent Amount
    Recieved
    I am trying to create a formula that will specify each calendar year. For example, I'd like to have a formula in 2007 which would total the: 2007= {2006 unspent amount + the unspent amount in 2007} and same for 2008= {2007 unspent amount + the unspent amount in 2008}. I hope this is clear, I have simplified the report into a basic interpretation of what i've been trying to accomplish.
    Would anybody know if this is possible and how to approach this?
    Really appreciate it! Thanks.
    Alex

    Hi,
    you can try and define a running total as a calculation in the crosstab as:
    sum(Unspent Amount) over (partition by city order by year)
    i find the crosstab format comfusing sometime since the aggregation is auto applied.
    I would start with a flat table and then "duplicate is as a cross tab"
    for your running total you can sort the data by the city,year and get it to 3 lines for each city, for example:
    city year Unspent Amount all other amount...
    X 2007 10
    X 2008 20
    X 2009 30
    Y 2007 5
    Y 2008 15
    Y 2009 25
    then you can use a funtion to calculate the amount :
    sum(Unspent Amount) over (partition by city order by year)
    this is the sql i used just to check it:
    SELECT city,year,"Unspent Amount"
    ,SUM("Unspent Amount") over (PARTITION BY city ORDER BY YEAR)
    FROM (
    SELECT 'X' city, 2007 YEAR, 10 "Unspent Amount" FROM dual UNION ALL
    SELECT 'X', 2008 ,20 FROM dual UNION ALL
    SELECT 'X', 2009 , 30 FROM dual UNION ALL
    SELECT 'Y', 2007 , 5 FROM dual UNION ALL
    SELECT 'Y', 2008 , 15 FROM dual UNION ALL
    SELECT 'Y', 2009 , 25 FROM dual
    Tamir

  • Oracle Reports : How to Create Filtered Running Totals

    I need to create a column in a group to represent a running total. But I want that running total to only count rows that meet specific criteria, such as [Field_Value_1] = 'Yes'. How can I accomplish this?

    make a hidden (hidden) column in select like decode(Field_value_1, 'Yes', Val_to_Sum, 0) and make running total on that column ...
    Hope This Helps

  • How to create a "running total" by Quarter and Month

    I need a report that will display 3 columns of monthly summary data and then a total column for that quarter.  I need this to repeat for an entire year.  Here is what the final result should resemble:
    The fields I will bring into the crystal report are:
    Unit
    Code
    Month
    Quarter
    Sum (which is the summary value - let's pretend it's number of apples picked)
    I can probably find a way to get SQL to spit this result out or something similar, but I had hoped Crystal would be able to slice and dice this dataset into the end result above.  Would make my life easier!  Thanks.

    Hi Jack,
    If you're using CR 2008 or higher, you can easily do this with a Crosstab.
    You can add the 'Date' field in the Crosstab's column and the Unit and Code field in the Rows.
    The Date field can then be set to print 'For Each Quarter'.
    To show the summaries after each quarter, you can have a look at the example in this thread:
    Crosstab - column subreports
    and create a formula that inserts a column before a new quarter starts.
    The only complicated part is the insertion of the subtotal columns after each quarter and the formula that actually calculates the subtotals.
    If you think this is too complex or unmanageable, the SQL method of bringing each month (in a quarter) alongwith the totals would also be fine.
    -Abhilash

  • How to create report condition based on "total"

    Hello,
    I have a Discoverer report that shows revenue by city and sub-totals revenue by state.
    I need to modify this report so that only cities in states with revenue (sub-total) more than one million are pulled.
    Example:
    Pittsburgh - 100,000
    Harrisburg - 200,000
    Erie - 300,000
    ------State:PA 600,000
    Los Angeles 500,000
    San Fransisco 600,000
    Oakland 200,000
    -----State:CA 1,300,000
    In this example, the report should show only the cities in California, as the revenue sum is over 1 million:
    Los Angeles 500,000
    San Fransisco 600,000
    Oakland 200,000
    ---State:CA 1,300,000
    Is this possible?
    I'm using Discoverer version 10.1.2.2.
    Thank you.
    Edited by: [email protected] on Dec 11, 2009 3:03 PM

    Hello
    You need to do two things to solve this problem.
    1. You need to create an analytic calculation that returns 1 when the sum of the revenue in all of the cities in a state is one million or more
    2. You need to create a condition such that you only include states when the above is 1
    Let's call the calculation, OneMillionStates and I will assume your fields are called State, City and Revenue
    Here's the formula:
    CASE WHEN SUM(REVENUE) OVER(PARTITION BY STATE) > 1000000 THEN 1 ELSE 0 END
    Now your condition shoudl be: ONEMILLIONSTATE = 1
    You don't even need to display the calculation on screen and notice how the city does not even come into the calculation.
    Best wishes
    Michael
    URL: http://ascbi.com
    Blog: http://learndiscoverer.blogspot.com

  • How to create and run J2EE application client for Hello World EJB

    Hi
    I am new to NWDS EJB deployment.I have created a "Hello World" bean. But how to deploy it and run using a J2EE application client step by step.
    Also please help in the steps of the deploy tool.
    Thanks in Advance

    Hi Ananda
    Check this link,
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw04/helpdata/en/55/600e64a6793d419b82a3b7d59512a5/content.htm
    cheers
    Sameer

  • How to create and run Forms?

    Hi!
    I have install WebLogic server and Oracle Forms. WebLogic is running...
    What must I do now to be able to create some simple form and run it?

    Oracle Forms Builder is in Oracle Developer Suite 10g ( http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/developer-tools/developer-suite/downloads/index.html --> first in the "What's included")?
    -----EDIT----
    Ok. Now I know Oracle Forms Builder is in "Portal, Forms, Reports and Discoverer" package available from http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/middleware/downloads/fmw-11-download-092893.html
    I have already install that. May one tell me the name of the Oracle Forms Builder executable? (on Linux)

  • How to create a running jar-file

    I created a "Java Class Library" project including 20 class files in several packages and some libraries.
    Because I would like to start the project from the console, I added the main-class property (right-click project, Properties, Run). Then I cleaned and built the project and tried to start it with the following command:
    java -jar PROJECTNAME.jarBut it won't work, because the archive is not complete: MANIFEST.MF lacks the main-class and all involved libraries.
    I managed to add the main-class attribute manually, but adding all library references seems to be very error-prone.
    So does anyone know if I did something wrong or if this is a bug of Creator?
    Regards,
    Felix

    The main intent of this project type is to provide a libraray which normally wouldn't run with a "main". I suggest you use NetBeans to create a "Java Application" project. Here's what is in the README.txt file produced with the jar. This looks like what you're looking to do. So you can create the Jar in NetBeans then if you want to use it in Java Studio Creator, you can add it to the Creator project. Also, if you caught the news at JavaOne, we are providing Creator features for a pack that will run in NetBeans so you won't have to switch back and forth between the tools. Keep an eye on the NetBeans and Creator web sites for more info.
    Thanks!
    -David
    README.txt
    ========================
    BUILD OUTPUT DESCRIPTION
    ========================
    When you build an Java application project that has a main class, the IDE
    automatically copies all of the JAR
    files on the projects classpath to your projects dist/lib folder. The IDE
    also adds each of the JAR files to the Class-Path element in the application
    JAR files manifest file (MANIFEST.MF).
    To run the project from the command line, go to the dist folder and
    type the following:
    java -jar "JavaApplication3.jar"
    To distribute this project, zip up the dist folder (including the lib folder)
    and distribute the ZIP file.
    Notes:
    * If two JAR files on the project classpath have the same name, only the first
    JAR file is copied to the lib folder.
    * If the classpath contains a folder of classes or resources, none of the
    classpath elements are copied to the dist folder.
    * If a library on the projects classpath also has a Class-Path element
    specified in the manifest,the content of the Class-Path element has to be on
    the projects runtime path.
    * To set a main class in a standard Java project, right-click the project node
    in the Projects window and choose Properties. Then click Run and enter the
    class name in the Main Class field. Alternatively, you can manually type the
    class name in the manifest Main-Class element.

  • How to see statistics of percentages of total CPU time in ESXi 5.5 (using esxtop)?

    Hi everyone,
    I'm using ssh to connect to my ESXi server console. Using esxtop, I get the following result:
    You can see below the CORE UTIL line, the CCPU line is not present here.
    Is it missing? If not, how can I see percentages of CPU time (the "us", "sy", etc.)?
    The ESXi version is VMware ESXi 5.5.0 build-2068190.
    esxtop version is 5.5
    Thanks in advance.

    8 CPUs, load average 4, runqueue 0 and usage 30-35%
    Does this indicate any issue with system resourcesNO. Not at all.
    However a poor schema design or inefficient SQL execution can mean that a query that should do 100 'consistent gets' is doing 10,000 'consistent gets' -- in the buffer cache, consuming CPU and not waiting for I/O. This is a scenario where you have idle CPU but CPU usage is inefficient. (Thus, for example, adding more CPUs will not help your users at all).
    So you should look at the queries and see if queries can be improved.
    If, on the other hand, users are not complaining of performance and all response times are within expectations, than you have no issue at all.
    Hemant K Chitale

  • How to create shipment plz give me total information

    iwant to create SHIPPENT FOR DIFFERENT DELIVERY'S 
    plz give total information.

    Hello Munna SD,
    Refer this link
    https://wiki.sdn.sap.com/wiki/display/ERPLO/Transportation
    For Configuration point of view maintain
    1. Route Determination
    2. Forwarding Agent
    3. Routes and stages.
    4.Transportation planning Point
    5.Shipment type.
    Revert for further clarification.
    Regards
    Amit

  • How to create lock object  when the total length is more than 300bytes?

    Dears:
    I want to create lock object for a add-on table , and the total length of  table's fields is more than 300 bytes.
    When I acitve this object, it will show "Total length of lock argument for table ZTEST_XXX longer than 300" error message in log.
    Is there any way  which can create  lock object when total length > 300bytes? 
    Thanks in advance.
    Best regards
    Lily

    Hi, Sudhi Karkada Sandeep Kumar 
    Thank you very much for your help.
    When the total length of  keys is more than 150bytes, lock object can't be created.
    Best regards,
    Lily

  • HOW TO: Create a GUI "Hello World"

     </p>
    This document describes how to create and run a very simple &quot;Hello World&quot;
    Java GUI app using JDeveloper. The application will have one button and one
    text field. Clicking the button will populate the text field with the message,
    &quot;Hello World!&quot;</p>
    Creating The New Application
    In this section, we will create an application with an empty frame.</p>
    <ol>
    [*]Choose File | New Workspace.
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | Save Workspace.
    </li>
    [*]Enter <TT>HelloGui.jws</tt> as the name for the workspace.
    This creates a Workspace called HelloGui. A workspace organizes all the projects
    you need to work on at one time.
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | New Project.
    The Project Wizard opens. This wizard will help you create a new project called
    HelloGui. A project contains all the files that go together in one &quot;tier&quot;--for
    example, all the files belonging to a single Java Application client, or all
    the files belonging to an Enterprise Java Bean. Because we are working on
    a simple, one-tier application, we will only need one project in our workspace.
    </li>
    [*]If the Welcome page appears, click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Project Type page, in the What is the Project's Filename?
    field, change the filename to <TT>HelloGui.jpr</tt>. Leave the rest of the
    path the same.
    </li>
    [*]Select A Project containing a new... and choose Application
    from the dropdown list.
    </li>
    [*]Click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Project Options page, in the What is the name of the project's
    default package field, enter <TT>helloGui</tt>.
    </li>
    [*]Click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Project Information page, you can enter any information about your
    project that you wish.
    </li>
    [*]Click Finish.
    The Application Wizard opens.
    </li>
    [*]In the Class field, enter <TT>HelloApp</tt>.
    </li>
    [*]Select the New Empty Frame radio button.
    </li>
    [*]Click OK.
    The Frame Wizard opens.
    </li>
    [*]In the Class field, enter <TT>HelloFrame</tt>.
    </li>
    [*]Click OK.
    JDeveloper creates an application, <TT>HelloApp</tt>, containing an empty
    frame, <TT>HelloFrame</tt>. The source code for these classes appears in the
    Navigator, which is the upper left-hand pane in the JDeveloper IDE.
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | Save All.</li>
    </ol>
    Adding a Panel to the Frame
    In this section, we will now add a panel to the frame. In the next section,
    we will add all the other components to this panel.</p>
    <ol>
    [*]In the Navigator, double-click <TT>HelloFrame.java</tt>.
    A viewer opens. This viewer has four tabs at the bottom:
    <ul>
    [*]Source, the currently active tab, which displays the source code
    of the selected class</li>
    [*]Design, which invokes a visual layout designer</li>
    [*]Class, which invokes an editor for the class' attributes, and
    can help you stay JavaBean complient</li>
    [*]Doc, which displays the class' JavaDoc
    </li>
    </ul>
    </li>
    [*]Click the Design tab.
    The viewer now displays a grey square, a graphical mock-up of your frame.
    Also, on the right-hand side of your screen, the Property Inspector opens.
    This allows you to quickly set attributes and define events for components.
    </li>
    [*]In the component palette (the tabbed toolbar near the top of your screen),
    select the Swing Containers tab.
    </li>
    [*]Click the blue square (described in rollover text as <TT>JPanel</tt>) and
    click on your frame to add the panel.
    The Property Inspector now displays attributes of the JPanel.
    </li>
    [*]In the Property Inspector, click twice inside the box beside the name
    field.
    </li>
    [*]Change the name to mainPanel.
    </li>
    [*]Click the box beside the layout field.
    </li>
    [*]Choose XYLayout.
    XYLayout is an easy-to-use Layout for prototyping. Later, we will change the
    layout to a more portable one.</li>
    </ol>
    Adding Components to the Panel
    In this section, we finish laying out a prototype UI. We will add polish and
    portability to the UI later.</p>
    <ol>
    [*]In the Component Palette, select the Swing tab.
    </li>
    [*]Select the <TT>JTextField</tt> component, which looks like a text field
    with a cursor.
    </li>
    [*]In your panel, click and drag the cursor to outline the text field.
    Don't worry if the text field doesn't have exactly the right size or position.
    We will adjust these later.
    The Property Inspector now displays attributes of the JTextField.
    </li>
    [*]In the Property Inspector, change the name (just as you did for the
    JPanel) to <TT>displayField</tt>.
    </li>
    [*]Change the text to nothing (erase the value that is already there).
    </li>
    [*]In the Component Palette, select the <TT>JButton</tt> component, which looks
    like a button being clicked.
    </li>
    [*]In your panel, click and drag the cursor to outline the button.
    The Property Inspector now displays attributes of the JButton.
    </li>
    [*]In the Property Inspector, change the name and action command
    to helloButton.
    </li>
    [*]Change the text to <TT>Say Hello!</tt>.
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | Save All.</li>
    </ol>
    Wiring Up the UI
    In this section, we wire the UI so that clicking the button causes &quot;Hello
    World!&quot; to display in the text field.</p>
    <ol>
    [*]In the Property Inspector, select the Events tab.
    </li>
    [*]Click the box next to the Action Performed field and press the Enter
    key.
    This creates a method, <TT>helloButton_actionPerformed()</tt>, which will
    be invoked when the button is clicked, and displays the source code for the
    method stub in the viewer.
    </li>
    [*]In the viewer, add the following command to the body of the method:
    <TT>displayField.setText(&quot;Hello World!&quot;);</tt>
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | Save All.</li>
    </ol>
    Testing the Prototype Application
    <ol>
    [*]Choose Run | Run &quot;HelloApp&quot;.
    Your application appears, with a blank text field and a button labeled &quot;Say
    Hello!&quot;
    </li>
    [*]Click the button.
    The text &quot;Hello World!&quot; appears in the text field.
    </li>
    [*]Close your application.</li>
    </ol>
    Refining the UI
    In this section, we polish the UI so that the components have the right size
    and alignment, the text in the text field shows up red, and the panel uses the
    portable GridBag layout instead of the JDeveloper-specific XYLayout.</p>
    <ol>
    [*]In the viewer, select the Design tab.
    </li>
    [*]Select your text field.
    </li>
    [*]Drag the edges of your text field until it is the size you want.
    </li>
    [*]Drag the center of the text field until it is the vertical position you
    want.
    </li>
    [*]Right-click the text field and choose Align Center.
    This centers your text field horizontally in the frame.
    </li>
    [*]In the property inspector, click the box next to the foreground field.
    </li>
    [*]Click the ellipses (...).
    A color editor appears.
    </li>
    [*]Select Red from the dropdown list.
    </li>
    [*]Click OK.
    </li>
    [*]On your frame, select your button.
    </li>
    [*]Drag the right edge of your button until it is the horizontal size you want.
    </li>
    [*]Select your text field, and multi-select your button by control-clicking
    it.
    </li>
    [*]Right-click your button or text field.
    </li>
    [*]Choose Same Size Vertical.
    This sets the height of all selected components to that of the first selected
    component (the text field).
    </li>
    [*]Right-click your button or text field.
    </li>
    [*]Choose Align Center.
    This aligns the center of all selected components to that of the first selected
    component (the text field).
    </li>
    [*]Select your panel by clicking anywhere on the grey background in the visual
    designer.
    </li>
    [*]In the Property Inspector, click the box beside the layout field.
    </li>
    [*]Select GridBagLayout from the dropdown list.
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | Save All.</li>
    </ol>
    Running the Finished Application From Within JDeveloper
    <ol>
    [*]Choose Run | Run &quot;HelloApp&quot;.
    Your application appears, with a blank text field and a button labeled &quot;Say
    Hello!&quot;
    </li>
    [*]Click the button.
    The text &quot;Hello World!&quot; appears in the text field, in red.
    </li>
    [*]Close your application.</li>
    </ol>
    Deploying the Application to Your File System
    <ol>
    [*] In the Navigator, right-click <tt>HelloGui.jpr</tt> and choose New Deployment
    Profile.
    The Deployment Profile Wizard opens.
    </li>
    [*]If the Welcome page appears, click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Delivery page, select Web Application or Command-Line Application
    from the dropdown list, and click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Staging Area page, in the Deployment Destination field, enter
    <tt><JDeveloper>/HelloGui</tt>, where <tt><JDeveloper></tt>
    is your JDeveloper root directory. Click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Project page, select all the <tt>.java</tt> files and click Next.
    </li>
    [*]Skip the Archive page and Applet Tags page by clicking Next on each.
    </li>
    [*]On the Libraries page, shuttle all libraries from the Project Libraries
    list to the Deployed Libraries list, and click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Finish page, name the profile <tt>HelloGui.prf</tt>, and click Finish.
    </li>
    [*]When JDeveloper asks you if you want to deploy now, click Yes.</li>
    </ol>
    JDeveloper will archive your application files and copy this archive and all
    other required libraries to <tt><JDeveloper>/HelloGui</tt>.</p>
    Running the Application from the Command Line
    <ol>
    [*]Open a command-line prompt.
    </li>
    [*]Enter the following script.
    Note: You may want to create a batch file containing this script. Be
    sure to replace JDeveloper_Home with your JDeveloper home directory.
    <pre>set __CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__=JDeveloper_Home\HelloGui
    set CLASSPATH=&quot;%__CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__%\HelloGui.jar&quot;
    set CLASSPATH=%CLASSPATH%;&quot;%__CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__%\xmlparserv2.jar&quot;
    set CLASSPATH=%CLASSPATH%;&quot;%__CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__%\classes12.zip&quot;
    set CLASSPATH=%CLASSPATH%;&quot;%__CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__%\jdev-rt.zip&quot;
    set CLASSPATH=%CLASSPATH%;&quot;%__CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__%\swingall.jar&quot;
    cd JDeveloper_Home\HelloGui
    jre -cp %CLASSPATH% helloGui.HelloApp</pre>
    </li>
    [*]Your application appears, with a blank text field and a button labeled &quot;Say
    Hello!&quot;
    </li>
    [*]Click the button.
    The text &quot;Hello World!&quot; appears in the text field, in red.
    </li>
    [*]Close your application.</li>
    </ol>
    </p>
     </p>
    null

    Hello,
    I followed your instruction step by step to make this "Hello World", but when I run it, I got message "cannot find the runable node". What do I miss here? Thanks.
    <BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by Avrom Faderman ([email protected]):
    </p>
    This document describes how to create and run a very simple "Hello World"
    Java GUI app using JDeveloper. The application will have one button and one
    text field. Clicking the button will populate the text field with the message,
    "Hello World!"</p>
    [b]Creating The New Application
    In this section, we will create an application with an empty frame.</p>
    <ol>
    [*]Choose File | New Workspace.
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | Save Workspace.
    </li>
    [*]Enter <TT>HelloGui.jws</tt> as the name for the workspace.
    This creates a Workspace called HelloGui. A workspace organizes all the projects
    you need to work on at one time.
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | New Project.
    The Project Wizard opens. This wizard will help you create a new project called
    HelloGui. A project contains all the files that go together in one "tier"--for
    example, all the files belonging to a single Java Application client, or all
    the files belonging to an Enterprise Java Bean. Because we are working on
    a simple, one-tier application, we will only need one project in our workspace.
    </li>
    [*]If the Welcome page appears, click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Project Type page, in the What is the Project's Filename?
    field, change the filename to <TT>HelloGui.jpr</tt>. Leave the rest of the
    path the same.
    </li>
    [*]Select A Project containing a new... and choose Application
    from the dropdown list.
    </li>
    [*]Click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Project Options page, in the What is the name of the project's
    default package field, enter <TT>helloGui</tt>.
    </li>
    [*]Click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Project Information page, you can enter any information about your
    project that you wish.
    </li>
    [*]Click Finish.
    The Application Wizard opens.
    </li>
    [*]In the Class field, enter <TT>HelloApp</tt>.
    </li>
    [*]Select the New Empty Frame radio button.
    </li>
    [*]Click OK.
    The Frame Wizard opens.
    </li>
    [*]In the Class field, enter <TT>HelloFrame</tt>.
    </li>
    [*]Click OK.
    JDeveloper creates an application, <TT>HelloApp</tt>, containing an empty
    frame, <TT>HelloFrame</tt>. The source code for these classes appears in the
    Navigator, which is the upper left-hand pane in the JDeveloper IDE.
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | Save All.</li>
    </ol>
    Adding a Panel to the Frame
    In this section, we will now add a panel to the frame. In the next section,
    we will add all the other components to this panel.</p>
    <ol>
    [*]In the Navigator, double-click <TT>HelloFrame.java</tt>.
    A viewer opens. This viewer has four tabs at the bottom:
    <ul>
    [*]Source, the currently active tab, which displays the source code
    of the selected class</li>
    [*]Design, which invokes a visual layout designer</li>
    [*]Class, which invokes an editor for the class' attributes, and
    can help you stay JavaBean complient</li>
    [*]Doc, which displays the class' JavaDoc
    </li>
    </ul>
    </li>
    [*]Click the Design tab.
    The viewer now displays a grey square, a graphical mock-up of your frame.
    Also, on the right-hand side of your screen, the Property Inspector opens.
    This allows you to quickly set attributes and define events for components.
    </li>
    [*]In the component palette (the tabbed toolbar near the top of your screen),
    select the Swing Containers tab.
    </li>
    [*]Click the blue square (described in rollover text as <TT>JPanel</tt>) and
    click on your frame to add the panel.
    The Property Inspector now displays attributes of the JPanel.
    </li>
    [*]In the Property Inspector, click twice inside the box beside the name
    field.
    </li>
    [*]Change the name to mainPanel.
    </li>
    [*]Click the box beside the layout field.
    </li>
    [*]Choose XYLayout.
    XYLayout is an easy-to-use Layout for prototyping. Later, we will change the
    layout to a more portable one.</li>
    </ol>
    Adding Components to the Panel
    In this section, we finish laying out a prototype UI. We will add polish and
    portability to the UI later.</p>
    <ol>
    [*]In the Component Palette, select the Swing tab.
    </li>
    [*]Select the <TT>JTextField</tt> component, which looks like a text field
    with a cursor.
    </li>
    [*]In your panel, click and drag the cursor to outline the text field.
    Don't worry if the text field doesn't have exactly the right size or position.
    We will adjust these later.
    The Property Inspector now displays attributes of the JTextField.
    </li>
    [*]In the Property Inspector, change the name (just as you did for the
    JPanel) to <TT>displayField</tt>.
    </li>
    [*]Change the text to nothing (erase the value that is already there).
    </li>
    [*]In the Component Palette, select the <TT>JButton</tt> component, which looks
    like a button being clicked.
    </li>
    [*]In your panel, click and drag the cursor to outline the button.
    The Property Inspector now displays attributes of the JButton.
    </li>
    [*]In the Property Inspector, change the name and action command
    to helloButton.
    </li>
    [*]Change the text to <TT>Say Hello!</tt>.
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | Save All.</li>
    </ol>
    Wiring Up the UI
    In this section, we wire the UI so that clicking the button causes "Hello
    World!" to display in the text field.</p>
    <ol>
    [*]In the Property Inspector, select the Events tab.
    </li>
    [*]Click the box next to the Action Performed field and press the Enter
    key.
    This creates a method, <TT>helloButton_actionPerformed()</tt>, which will
    be invoked when the button is clicked, and displays the source code for the
    method stub in the viewer.
    </li>
    [*]In the viewer, add the following command to the body of the method:
    <TT>displayField.setText("Hello World!");</tt>
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | Save All.</li>
    </ol>
    Testing the Prototype Application
    <ol>
    [*]Choose Run | Run "HelloApp".
    Your application appears, with a blank text field and a button labeled "Say
    Hello!"
    </li>
    [*]Click the button.
    The text "Hello World!" appears in the text field.
    </li>
    [*]Close your application.</li>
    </ol>
    Refining the UI
    In this section, we polish the UI so that the components have the right size
    and alignment, the text in the text field shows up red, and the panel uses the
    portable GridBag layout instead of the JDeveloper-specific XYLayout.</p>
    <ol>
    [*]In the viewer, select the Design tab.
    </li>
    [*]Select your text field.
    </li>
    [*]Drag the edges of your text field until it is the size you want.
    </li>
    [*]Drag the center of the text field until it is the vertical position you
    want.
    </li>
    [*]Right-click the text field and choose Align Center.
    This centers your text field horizontally in the frame.
    </li>
    [*]In the property inspector, click the box next to the foreground field.
    </li>
    [*]Click the ellipses (...).
    A color editor appears.
    </li>
    [*]Select Red from the dropdown list.
    </li>
    [*]Click OK.
    </li>
    [*]On your frame, select your button.
    </li>
    [*]Drag the right edge of your button until it is the horizontal size you want.
    </li>
    [*]Select your text field, and multi-select your button by control-clicking
    it.
    </li>
    [*]Right-click your button or text field.
    </li>
    [*]Choose Same Size Vertical.
    This sets the height of all selected components to that of the first selected
    component (the text field).
    </li>
    [*]Right-click your button or text field.
    </li>
    [*]Choose Align Center.
    This aligns the center of all selected components to that of the first selected
    component (the text field).
    </li>
    [*]Select your panel by clicking anywhere on the grey background in the visual
    designer.
    </li>
    [*]In the Property Inspector, click the box beside the layout field.
    </li>
    [*]Select GridBagLayout from the dropdown list.
    </li>
    [*]Choose File | Save All.</li>
    </ol>
    Running the Finished Application From Within JDeveloper
    <ol>
    [*]Choose Run | Run "HelloApp".
    Your application appears, with a blank text field and a button labeled "Say
    Hello!"
    </li>
    [*]Click the button.
    The text "Hello World!" appears in the text field, in red.
    </li>
    [*]Close your application.</li>
    </ol>
    Deploying the Application to Your File System
    <ol>
    [*] In the Navigator, right-click <tt>HelloGui.jpr</tt> and choose New Deployment
    Profile.
    The Deployment Profile Wizard opens.
    </li>
    [*]If the Welcome page appears, click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Delivery page, select Web Application or Command-Line Application
    from the dropdown list, and click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Staging Area page, in the Deployment Destination field, enter
    <tt><JDeveloper>/HelloGui</tt>, where <tt><JDeveloper></tt>
    is your JDeveloper root directory. Click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Project page, select all the <tt>.java</tt> files and click Next.
    </li>
    [*]Skip the Archive page and Applet Tags page by clicking Next on each.
    </li>
    [*]On the Libraries page, shuttle all libraries from the Project Libraries
    list to the Deployed Libraries list, and click Next.
    </li>
    [*]On the Finish page, name the profile <tt>HelloGui.prf</tt>, and click Finish.
    </li>
    [*]When JDeveloper asks you if you want to deploy now, click Yes.</li>
    </ol>
    JDeveloper will archive your application files and copy this archive and all
    other required libraries to <tt><JDeveloper>/HelloGui</tt>.</p>
    Running the Application from the Command Line
    <ol>
    [*]Open a command-line prompt.
    </li>
    [*]Enter the following script.
    Note: You may want to create a batch file containing this script. Be
    sure to replace JDeveloper_Home with your JDeveloper home directory.
    <pre>set __CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__=JDeveloper_Home\HelloGui
    set CLASSPATH="%__CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__%\HelloGui.jar"
    set CLASSPATH=%CLASSPATH%;"%__CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__%\xmlparserv2.jar"
    set CLASSPATH=%CLASSPATH%;"%__CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__%\classes12.zip"
    set CLASSPATH=%CLASSPATH%;"%__CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__%\jdev-rt.zip"
    set CLASSPATH=%CLASSPATH%;"%__CLASSPATH_ROOT_DIR__%\swingall.jar"
    cd JDeveloper_Home\HelloGui
    jre -cp %CLASSPATH% helloGui.HelloApp</pre>
    </li>
    [*]Your application appears, with a blank text field and a button labeled "Say
    Hello!"
    </li>
    [*]Click the button.
    The text "Hello World!" appears in the text field, in red.
    </li>
    [*]Close your application.</li>
    </ol>
    </p>
    </p><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
    null

  • How to create scripts that perform these functions?

    Hi Apple people
    I got Mach Desktop because I saw this screenshot:
    But it turns out that you have to create scripts/Shell scripts yourself. Googled it, and all that shows up is their website with "sample" Desklets that are tiny grey windows with words in them.
    So can somebody please tell me how to create the battery percentage script, the weather, & the date?
    Thanks so much!

    Battery Percentage:
    pmset -g batt
    Weather, replace the following POSTALCODE&u=f with your postal code in the example on Mach Desktop wed site. Hmm, if you want to know if it's raining of the President then:
    curl --silent "http://xml.weather.yahoo.com/forecastrss?p=20500" | \
    grep -E '(Current Conditions:|F<BR)' | \
    sed -e 's/Current Conditions://' -e 's/<br \/>//' -e 's/<b>//' -e 's/<\/b>//' -e 's/<BR \/>//' -e 's/<description>//' -e 's/<\/description>//'
    The date is very easy:
    date

  • How to create running total in Analysis

    Hi Experts,
    How can I create a running total in Analysis?
    below is the scenario:
    Account - - - - Quantity
    ACCT1 2
    ACCT2 4
    ACCT3 6
    ACCT4 8
    I need to get the total count for Quantity Column and the total count should be display in the Analysis (20 should be display)
    Thanks,

    HI,
    We have a option in the pivot view properties to display the sum/total at the end/first....You can Use that.Else you can aslso use the Running aggregate functions in the fx tab.
    Edit--->pivot view properties-->columns--->summation symbol is there--->Place the total as you like.
    mark if helpful/correct...
    thanks,
    prassu

  • How to create crystal report 2008 with running totals?

    i want to create a report with running totals as follows:
    Balance B/F 1000.00
    Invoices     Receipts    Running B/ce
    100                            1100
                     500             600
                     500             100
    300                              400
                     400                0
    The B/F field is passed as a Parameter.

    Hi  panayiotis,
    In order to create a running total you need to have absolute clarity on the following:
    (i)Whether the running total be set on change of field/record/group.
    (ii)Whether the running total be set on change of record/group OR never.
    Make the appropriate choice.
    Apply this to the field to summarize and type of summary in Running Total Pane.
    Thanks,
    Amogh.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Error copying from one external drive to another

    Hi - I am trying to transfer three large iMovie files from an external Firewire hard drive to an external USB 2.0 hard drive. I have the USB drive connected to my 1GHz TiBook through a PCMCIA card. I have the Firewire drive connected at the TiBook's

  • WORD doc missing text from yesterday and goes missing on backup drive

    Another mystery from the WORD kingdom. I just opened the WORD doc I work on each day (it's a blog) and noticed that last night's entry is completely GONE. I do saves as I go along and know that when I put it to bed for the night it was intact. So, I

  • How to split one scene in two in iMovie HD 06

    Hi there, is iMovie HD 06 able to split one scene in two? I am trying to insert slow motion for part of the scene but not the whole. Can I do that? Are there alternatives?

  • Forum problem - anybody else see this?

    For the last week or so, I've been having a problem with this forum. I can view pages and threads, I can create and reply to messages, but the "new message" indicators (the red dot, the white dot, and the half-red/half-white dot) are not updating as

  • How to install forms cartridge

    we have install OAS for linux. we want to install forms cartridge. thanks in advance