User Defined Formula Functions
When you create formulas in a catalog, if the built-in functions do not satisfy your requirements, you can design your own formula functions by using the User Defined Function Editor Logi Report provides or importing them from Java files.
Note that, the user defined functions saved in a catalog cannot be called by dynamic formulas. If you want to use user defined functions in dynamic formulas, you need to create them via the dynamic resource list.
This topic includes the following sections:
- Creating User Defined Functions in a Catalog
- Importing User Defined Functions from Java Files
- Using User Defined Functions
Creating User Defined Functions in a Catalog
- Open the required catalog.
- In the Catalog Manager, expand the data source in which to create the function, then:
- Select the User Defined Functions node or any existing function in the data source and select New Function on the toolbar.
- Right-click the User Defined Functions node in the data source and select New Function on the shortcut menu.
- In the Enter Function Name dialog, provide a name for the function and select OK. The User Defined Function Editor appears.
- Compose the function by selecting the required fields from the Fields panel (including DBFields, formulas, summaries and parameters in the current catalog data source and some special fields), functions from the Functions panel (including built-in functions and other user defined functions), and operators from the Operators panel. When the predefined user defined functions, summaries and parameters cannot meet you requirement, you can create new function, summary and parameter to be referenced by the function using the New XXX option on the toolbar. The newly created objects are saved into the same catalog data source as the function. You can also write the function by yourself in the editing panel.
The function syntax is as follows:
arguments: VariableType1 VariableName1, VariableType2 VariableName2, ...;
For example,
arguments: integer age, string name;
An argument works the same as a local variable except that it is not allowed to assign any value to it, like
arguments: integer age=10;
. You can refer to Formula Syntax for more information about the syntax. - Make use of the buttons on the toolbar above the editing panel to edit the function. To comment a line, select the Comment/Uncomment button on the toolbar. If you want to bookmark a line so that it can be searched easily later, select the Add Bookmark button . To check whether or not the syntax of your function is correct, select the Check button .
- Select OK to add the function.
Notes:
- If you refer to any field in the function, the reference name for that field will be prefixed with an @ sign. If the field name contains spaces, the reference name will be quoted with double-quotation marks (""). For example, if the field name is Customer Name, then the reference name will be @"Customer Name".
- When functions reference display names or mapping names, the names should not contain any of following characters if the names are not quoted by double-quotation marks "":
"~", "`", "!", "@", "#", "$", "%", "^", "&", "*", "(", ")", "-", "+", "=", "{", "}", "[", "]", "|", "\\", ":", ";", "\", " ' ", "<", ",", ">", ".", "?", "/"
Examples:
- Expression
@Customer#;
will cause a syntax error. But@"Customer#"
is ok. - If a field has the display name Category.Measure, when adding it to a function, quote it as "Category.Measure" or "Category"."Measure".
- Expression
- The number of the "if-else" statements in a function is limited to 190. When this number is reached, you should use the "select-case" statement instead.
Importing User Defined Functions from Java Files
To import a UDF, you need first develop a Java file to implement a function, and then import it as a class. The following data types can be used for interacting with Logi Report products (pass parameters and return parameters): DbBigInt, DbDouble, fCurrency, DbBit (using for boolean type), DbChar (using for String), DbDate, DbTime, DbTimestamp, DbBinary, fText (using for Long VarChar), fImage (using for long VarBinary), fIntArray, fNumArray, fCurArray, fBoolArray, fStrArray, fDateArray, fTimeArray, fDateTimeArray, fBinaryArray, fTextArray, fImageArray, fIntRange, fNumRange, fCurRange, fBoolRange, fStrRange, fDateRange, fTimeRange, fDateTimeRange. All the data types that start with 'f' belong to the package jet.formula.*. The other data types belong to the package jet.connect.*. For details, refer to the jet.formula and jet.connect packages in the Logi Report Javadoc.
- Develop your own Java program that implements the functions you need.
- Compile the Java program and add it to the ADDCLASSPATH variable of the batch file setenv.bat/setenv.sh in
<install_root>\bin
on both Logi Report Designer and Logi Report Server. - Start Logi Report Designer and open the Formula Editor or User Defined Function Editor.
- Import your class file in either of the following two ways:
- Using the "import" statement:
import instName from "ClassName";
Where,
- instName is the instance name that you give when you load the class. It is a global variable, you can use it in your formulas or user defined functions in the current data source.
- ClassName is the class name defined in your class file. If the class file is put in the package jet.formula.javaformula, only the class name is required. However, if it is in your own package, you must specify the qualify name of the class.
For example, the following declaration assumes the class MyFunctions is in package jet.formula.javaformula:
import myfunc from "MyFunctions";
And the following declaration allows user defined UDF class in any package, supposing the class is com.mycom.MyFunctions:
import myfunc from "com.mycom.MyFunctions";
Notes:
- You should write the import statement only without anything else in a separate formula or user defined function so as to avoid importing unwanted things.
- You should avoid giving the same instance name when importing the same UDF.
- Using dialog:
- In the Formula Editor or User Defined Function Editor, select Menu > File > Import UDF Classes. The UDF Classes dialog appears.
- Select , then in the Import UDF Class dialog, type in the class name with full package path and select OK.
- The class with package path is displayed in the UDF Classes dialog. Select OK.
- Using the "import" statement:
Using User Defined Functions
In the Functions panel of the Formula Editor and User Defined Function Editor, you can find the user defined functions created using the UDF editor Logi Report provides under the User Defined Functions node and those imported from Java files under the UDF node. You can then call the functions when creating formulas or user defined functions by double-clicking them.
In the case a user defined function named function1 is arguments: integer age, string name;
, you can call it as follows:
@function1(25, "John Smith");
@'function1'(25, "John Smith");
@"function1"(25, "John Smith");
For imported UDFs, you can also call them using the following statement:
instName.MethodName(parameters);
Where, MethodName is the method name in your class. You can call methods in your class as many times as you want by loading this class only once.
The following shows an example. First a user defined function named function2 calls an imported UDF:
Import a from jet.formula.javaformula.UDF;
arguments: string countries;
return a.getvalue(@country, @amount, countries);
Then a formula calls function2:
@function2("USA, China")
You can view the formula references of an imported UDF in the Formula Editor. Select the function and select Menu > Formula > Formula References on the toolbar, or right-click the function and select Formula References on the shortcut menu, then the UDF References dialog will be displayed, showing all the formulas that reference the imported UDF if there are.
Example of Using Imported UDF
In this example, a demo Java program MyFunctions.java which is put in the package jet.formula.javaformula will be used to illustrate how to write record data to a file using UDF functions. You can get the Java source file from <install_root>\help\samples\APIUDFormula\jet\formula\javaformula
.
Take the following steps:
- Compile this Java file to generate the class file (make sure that the path of the file JREngine.jar is before that of the file report.jar).
javac -classpath "<install_root>\lib\JREngine.jar;<install_root>\lib\report.jar;" MyFunctions.java
- Edit the batch file setenv.bat in
<install_root>\bin
.When you add class path, just add the root path. For example, suppose that the class file is located in
C:\LogiReport\Designer\help\samples\APIUDFormula\jet\formula\javaformula
, you can appendC:\LogiReport\Designer\help\samples\APIUDFormula
into the ADDCLASSPATH variable in the batch file. - Start Logi Report Designer with the modified batch file.
- Create a new formula to load this class and open a file on disk by calling the methods in MyFunctions.java. Here we define the formula (fmlA) to load the class and call the method to open a temp file:
pagenumber;
import myfunc from "MyFunctions";
global integer filehandle = myfunc.openfile("e:\\test\\data.txt", false);Note: If the class file is in your own package com.mycom other than jet.formula.javaformula, import the class in a formula as follows:
import myfunc from "com.mycom.MyFunctions";
- Compose a formula (fmlB) to call the method to write data into the temp file:
string contents ="";
contents = @"Customer Name"+"\t"+ @Country+"\t"+ @Phone + "\t"+ PageNumber + "\n";
myfunc.write(filehandle, contents);The return value of the last statement is the formula result.
- Compose another formula (fmlC) to close the temp file:
PageNumber;
myfunc.closefile(filehandle);If the statement PageNumber is added to the formula, the formula will be calculated after the page break, which means that the calculation point is controlled. For more information, see Formula Levels.
- We have now defined three formulas (fmlA, fmlB, fmlC) in the above three steps. You can use it in a report as with a normal one.
Note: Now in Logi Report, the '8859-1' encoding is not required anymore and the UDF functions you define should be able to return the correct unicode strings. Thus, if you have UDF functions created in previous Logi Report versions which still return '8859-1' encoded strings, you may need to modify them to make them return unicode strings.