APL Standard Commands (APL 1.1)
(This is not the most recent version of APL. Use the Other Versions option to see the documentation for the most recent version of APL)
- Common Properties
- AnimateItem Command
- AutoPage command
- Idle command
- OpenURL Command
- Parallel command
- Scroll command
- ScrollToComponent Command
- ScrollToIndex command
- SendEvent command
- Sequential command
- SetFocus Command
- ClearFocus Command
- SetPage command
- SetValue Command
- SpeakItem command
- SpeakList Command
- Related topics
See also: APL Commands.
Common Properties
A single command is encoded as a JSON object. All commands contain the following properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
String | REQUIRED | Type of the command |
|
String | "" | Optional documentation for this command |
|
Integer | 0 | Delay time in milliseconds before this command runs. Must be non-negative. Defaults to 0. |
|
Boolean |
|
Conditional expression. If this evaluates to false , the command is skipped. Defaults to true . |
type
Specifies the particular command to run. This may be a pre-defined primitive command types or a user-defined command.
delay
The delay
value is the amount of time in milliseconds inserted before starting this command. The delay
value must be a non-negative integer, which if not specified, defaults to 0. The delay
value is ignored if the when
property resolves to false
, or if the command runs from within an event handler.
screenLock
If true, the interaction timer is disabled while this command runs. When a command with screenLock=true
finishes running, the interaction timer resets to 0.
The screenLock applies to the entire extent of the command including
any defined delay
. For
example, the following command holds the screen lock for 30 seconds:
{
"type": "Idle",
"delay": 30000,
"screenLock": true,
}
when
If when
is set to true
, run the command. If false
, ignore the command. Commands
that are ignored also ignore the screenLock
property.
AnimateItem Command
AnimateItem
requires APL 1.1 or later. Provide an alternate experience for devices running older versions of APL.
Runs a fixed-duration animation sequence on one or more properties of a single component. For example:
{
"type": "AnimateItem",
"easing": "ease-in-out",
"duration": 600,
"componentId": "myFlyingComponent",
"value": [
{
"property": "opacity",
"to": 1
},
{
"property": "transform",
"from": [
{
"translateX": 200
},
{
"rotate": 90
}
],
"to": [
{
"translateX": 0
},
{
"rotate": 0
}
]
}
]
}
Components support animating
opacity
and
transform
properties.
The from
value does not need to be specified for opacity, but it does
need to be specified for transforms.
To define a custom easing curve, you can write:
{
"type": "AnimateItem",
"easing": "path(0.25, 0.6, 0.5, 0.8, 0.75, 0.9)",
"duration": 1000,
"value": {
"property": "opacity",
"to": 1
}
}
AnimateItem
defines the following properties in addition to normal
command properties:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
componentId |
String | SELF | The id of the component. |
duration |
Integer | REQUIRED | The duration of the animation (in milliseconds) |
easing |
linear, ease-in, … | linear | Specify an easing curve. |
repeatCount |
Integer | 0 | Number of times to repeat. |
repeatMode |
restart, reverse | restart | How repeated animations will play. |
value |
Array of animated properties | REQUIRED | An array of animated component properties. |
In fast mode, the AnimateItem
command jumps ahead to the end state of
the animation. When an AnimateItem
command stops, the animation jumps ahead to the
end state; refer to repeatMode for a discussion of how to calculate the end state.
componentId
The ID of the component. If omitted, the component issuing the
AnimateItem
command is used.
duration
The duration in milliseconds of a single pass of the animation. If the
repeatCount
property is set to greater than 0, the total duration of the
animation will be the product of the duration and one more than the
repeat count. For example, the following animation will have a total
duration of 10 seconds:
{
"type": "AnimateItem",
"duration": 1000,
"repeatCount": 9,
"repeatMode": "reverse",
"value": {
"property": "opacity",
"from": 0,
"to": 1
}
}
easing
An easing curve specifies how the value of the parameter changes over time. The curve must be a function starting at (0,0) and ending at (1,1). Two standard general ways of writing an easing curve are defined:
cubic-bezier(x1,y1,x2,y2)
: Following the CSS standard, this defines a cubic Bézier curve with starting point (0,0) and ending point (1,0). The parameterized values (x1, y1) and (x2, y2) defined the interior control points of the curve and are normally between 0 and 1.path(x1,y1,...,xN,yN)
: A linear-piecewise function from (0,0) to (1,1). The x values must be in ascending order and between 0 and 1; the y values may be arbitrary. The end values of (0,0) and (1,1) are implicit.
The following easing curves are pre-defined:
Name | Equal to |
---|---|
linear | path() |
ease | cubic-bezier(0.25, 0.10, 0.25, 1.00) |
ease-in | cubic-bezier(0.42, 0.00, 1.00, 1.00) |
ease-out | cubic-bezier(0.00, 0.00, 0.58, 1.00) |
ease-in-out | cubic-bezier(0.42, 0.00, 0.58, 1.00) |
repeatCount
The repeatCount defines how many times an animation will repeat before the command stops. By default, the repeatCount is set to 0; the animation will play through once and stop.
repeatMode
The repeateMode
defines whether animations will be played from start to
finish each time or if the animation will play backwards to the start
each alternative time. The following repeat modes are defined:
Name | Description |
---|---|
restart | The animation starts over from the original value on each repeat. |
reverse | The animation reverses direction each time. |
The end state of an animation is a function of the repeatCount
and
repeatMode
. If the repeatMode
is reverse and the repeatCount
is an odd
number, the animation end state will be the same as its starting state.
In all other cases the end state will be the "natural" end state
assigned as the to value.
A prematurely stopped animation always "jumps" to its end state.
value
The array of animated properties. Each element in the array has the following form:
Property | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
from |
Number | No | The starting value of the property |
property |
String | Yes | The name of the property to animate |
to |
Number | Yes | The ending value of the property |
A property animation is defined by the to/from properties or the inputRange/outputRange properties. If you don't specify a "from" value, the current value of the property is used.
There are a few special cases to consider with the
transform
property.
First, the transform
property
does not implicitly define a from property; both the from and to
properties must be set.
Second, interpolating between smoothly between transformations requires that the same series of transformation operations appear in the from list and the to list and in the same order. For example:
"from": [ { "translateX": 30 }, { "rotate": 90 }],
"to": [ { "translateY": 30 }, { "rotate": 45 }]
is a valid from/to transformation because each array contains a translation followed by a rotation. A non-working example:
"from": [ { "translateX": 30 }, { "scale": 1 }, { "rotate": 90 }],
"to": [ { "scale": 2 }, { "rotate": 45 }]
In this case the arrays don't match; they have different lengths and
the first element differs between the arrays. The APL author may expect
the system to automatically fill in the "missing"
{ "translateX": 0 }
transformation at the start of the to array, but
the APL runtime is not clever enough to automatically find and fix the
difference.
AutoPage command
The AutoPage
command automatically progresses through a series of pages displayed in a Pager component. The AutoPage
command finishes after the last page has been displayed for the requested time period.
The AutoPage
command has the following properties in addition to the regular command properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
componentId | String | SELF | The id of the `Pager` to page through. |
count | Integer | All pages in the pager | The number of pages to display. |
duration | Integer | 0 |
The amount of time (in milliseconds) to wait after advancing to the next page. |
For example, to auto-page through a Pager
called mySportsPager
:
{
"type": "AutoPage",
"componentId": "mySportsPager",
"duration": 1000,
"delay": 500
}
The above example first pauses for 500 milliseconds (the delay
property),
then advances to the next page, pauses for 1000 milliseconds (the duration
property), and continues advancing and pausing until the final pause has
completed. For example, if mySportsPager
has three pages and initially displays page 1, then AutoPage
does the following:
- Displays page 1 for 500ms while waiting to start.
- Changes to page 2 and pauses for 1000ms.
- Changes to page 3 and pauses for 1000ms.
At this point the command is complete, so the Pager
continues to display page 3 until another command or event causes a change.
The AutoPage
command has no effect if the count
is non-positive.
When stopped, the AutoPage
command:
- Moves the display ahead to the target page if the AutoPage command sequence is at least 50% complete.
- Returns the display to the previous page if it is not at least 50% complete.
The onPageChanged
command is run once with the new page if the page has changed
The AutoPage
command is ignored in fast mode.
componentId
The identifier of the Pager component. If omitted, the component issuing the AutoPage
command is used.
count
The number of pages to display. If not specified, this defaults to the number of pages remaining. Wrapping is not supported; the count is internally clipped to fall in the range [0, pager.children.length - pager.currentIndex - 1].
duration
The amount of time to wait after advancing to the next page. Any animated transition between pages is not included in the duration and therefore increases the overall command run time.
Since the duration is applied after advancing to the next page, it does not apply to the first page of the pager. To delay the start of paging, use the standard command delay
property.
Idle command
The Idle
command does nothing. Use as a placeholder or to insert a calculated delay in a longer series of commands. For example, consider this command.
{
"type": "Parallel",
"commands": [
{
"type": "Idle",
"delay": 3000
},
{
"type": "SpeakItem",
"componentId": "item7"
}
]
}
This command sequence speaks "item7". The use of the Idle
command guarantees that the overall command will last at least 3000 milliseconds even if the speech ends earlier.
The type
of the Idle
command is Idle
.
The idle command is ignored in fast mode
OpenURL Command
OpenURL
requires APL 1.1 or later. Provide an alternate experience for devices running older versions of APL.
Open a URL. The OpenURL
command, if successful, opens the specified URL in a web browser or other application on the device. You must provide a suitable URL that works on the current device. The OpenURL
command has the following properties in addition to the regular command properties:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
source | String | REQUIRED | The URL to open. |
onFail | Array of command | [ ] | Command to run if the URL fails to open. |
For example, to open the Amazon home page in the browser on the device:
{
"type": "OpenURL",
"source": "https://www.amazon.com/",
"onFail": {
"type": "SetValue",
"componentId": "errorText",
"property": "text",
"value": "Unable to open Amazon.com (${event.source.value})"
}
}
Not all devices support opening a URL. If the device does not support opening URLs, the command is ignored and it does not run onFail
commands. Check the value of the allowOpenURL
in the data-binding context to determine if OpenURL
is supported on the device.
The OpenURL
command is ignored in fast mode.
source
The source property is a URL/URI suitable for launching an application on the local device. It may also be used with the http or https schema to open a web page in the local web browser.
onFail
The onFail property contains one or more commands to run if the URL cannot be opened. There is no guarantee that the onFail command will run within a time limit or that it will appear to be successful to the end user; for example, a URL could open a blank or error web page. However, the APL runtime should try to report failure within three seconds. The event generated for the onFail command has the following form:
"event": {
"source": {
"source": "OpenURL",
"handler": "Fail",
"value": NUMBER // Platform-defined numerical error
}
}
The event.source.value field passed to the onFail command will be set to a platform-defined numerical error code. This error code is not suitable for showing to the user (despite the example provided above), but may be used to send failure information back to the cloud skill through a SendEvent command.
Parallel command
Run a series of commands in parallel. The Parallel
command starts running all child commands simultaneously. The Parallel
command is considered finished when all of its child commands have finished. When the Parallel
command stops early, all currently running commands stop.
The type of the Parallel
command is Parallel
. The Parallel
command has the following properties in addition to the common command properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
commands | Array of commands | REQUIRED | An unordered list of command to run in parallel |
In fast mode, the parallel command runs all of the sub-commands in parallel, but without delays (giving a net zero duration)
commands
An un-ordered array of commands to run in parallel. Once all commands have finished running, the Parallel
command finishes. The delay
value set for the Parallel
command is added to the delay
value set for each of the commands in the array. In the following example, the first SendEvent
command runs at 1500 milliseconds, and the second SendEvent
command at 750 milliseconds, which means the second SendEvent
command begins to run before the first.
{
"type": "Parallel",
"delay": 500,
"commands": [
{
"type": "SendEvent",
"delay": 1000
},
{
"type": "SendEvent",
"delay": 250
}
]
}
Scroll command
The Scroll
command scrolls a ScrollView or Sequence forward or backward by a set number of pages. The Scroll
command has the following properties in addition to the regular command properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
componentId | String | SELF | The id of the component to read. |
distance | Number | 1 | The number of pages to scroll. Defaults to 1. |
The distance sets how far to scroll, in pages. For example, to scroll a list forward a single page:
{
"type": "Scroll",
"componentId": "myScrollingList",
"distance": 1
}
Scrolling stops when:
- The destination is reached.
- The end of the scrollable content is reached.
- The user touches the screen.
- Alexa sends a new command. Starting a new command ends the
Scroll
command, which stops scrolling immediately.
To smoothly scroll through all available content, set the distance to a large number. For example, to smoothly scroll back to the beginning of a list:
{
"type": "Scroll",
"componentId": "myScrollingList",
"distance": -10000
}
The Scroll
command is ignored in fast mode.
componentId
The ID of the ScrollView or Sequence. If omitted, the component issuing the ScrollPage
command is used.
distance
The scrolling distance, measured in pages. One "page" is the width or height
of the ScrollView
or Sequence
, less any applied padding. Negative numbers
scroll backwards. Setting distance to 0 does not scroll.
For example consider a ScrollView
with a height of 400dp and 50dp of padding
on the top and bottom. A "page" of the ScrollView
is 300dp. Specifying
a distance of 0.5 will scroll forward by 50% of the page, or 150dp.
The distance may also be expressed as a relative or absolute dimension with a suitable suffix; for example, "50%", "33dp", or "25vh". Note that setting the distance to a relative number (e.g. "50%") is exactly equal to using a simple number (in this case, 0.5). Because APL documents are commonly written to adjust to the size of the screen it is preferable to use relative scrolling dimensions such as "50%" or 0.5 over using absolute dimensions such as "100dp". This ensures that the content will scroll a sensible distance for the user no matter what device it is displayed on.
ScrollToComponent Command
Scroll forward or backward through a ScrollView
or Sequence
to
ensure that a particular component is in view. The ScrollToComponent
command has the following properties in addition to the regular command
properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
align |
first , center , last , visible |
visible |
The alignment of the item after scrolling |
componentId |
String | SELF | The id of the component. |
For example, to scroll to ensure a particular item is in view:
{
"type": "ScrollToComponent",
"componentId": "recipeSteps",
"align": "center"
}
The ScrollToComponent
command looks for the first Sequence
or
ScrollView
at or above the componentId
and scrolls that one.
Scrolling stops if the user touches the screen. Stopping the command stops scrolling immediately.
The ScrollToComponent
command is ignored in fast mode.
align
The alignment of the item on the screen after scrolling and before speech. Alignment is an enumerated value with the following options:
Alignment | Description |
---|---|
first |
The top/left side of the item will be placed at the top/left side of the scrolling container. |
center |
The center of the item will be placed in the center of the container. |
last |
The bottom/right side of the item will be placed at the bottom/right side of the scrolling container. |
visible |
The item will be moved the minimal distance necessary to bring it fully into view. |
componentId
The ID of component. If omitted, the component issuing the
ScrollToComponent
command is used.
ScrollToIndex command
Scroll forward or backward through a ScrollView or Sequence to ensure that a particular child component is in view. The ScrollToIndex
command has the following properties in addition to the regular command properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
align |
first , last , center , visible |
visible |
The alignment of the item after scrolling. |
componentId |
String | SELF | The id of the component to read. |
index |
Integer | REQUIRED | The 0-based index of the child to display. |
For example, to scroll to show the fifth step in a recipe displayed in a
list, set index
to 4.
{
"type": "ScrollToIndex",
"componentId": "recipeSteps",
"index": 4,
"align": "center"
}
The componentId
does not have to be a Sequence
or ScrollView
component. The ScrollToIndex
command looks for the first Sequence
or ScrollView
at or above the componentId
and scrolls that one.
Scrolling stops if the user touches the screen. Stopping the command stops scrolling immediately.
The ScrollToIndex command is ignored in fast mode.
align
The alignment of the item on the screen after scrolling and before speech. Alignment is an enumerated value with the following options.
Alignment | Description |
---|---|
first | The top/left side of the item will be placed at the top/left side of the scrolling container. |
center | The center of the item will be placed in the center of the container. |
last | The bottom/right side of the item will be placed at the bottom/right side of the scrolling container. |
visible | The item will be moved the minimal distance necessary to bring it fully into view. |
componentId
The identifier of the parent container. If omitted, the component issuing the ScrollToIndex
command is used.
index
The 0-based index of the child item in the parent container to scroll into view. Negative values are measured from the end of the parent container. For example, to show the second-to-last item in a list:
{
"type": "ScrollToIndex",
"index": -2,
}
The algorithm for finding the item to display can be described loosely as follows:
let itemIndex = index < 0 ? index + children.length : index;
if (itemIndex >= 0 && itemIndex < children.length) {
let child = children[itemIndex];
scrollIntoView(child);
}
SendEvent command
Use the SendEvent
command to generate and send an event to Alexa. This generates a UserEvent
sent to your skill.
Here is an example of a SendEvent
command:
{
"type": "TouchWrapper",
"id": "buyButton",
"onPress": {
"type": "SendEvent",
"arguments": [
"he bought it"
]
},
"item": {
"type": "Text",
"text": "Buy it now!"
}
}
SendEvent
has the following properties in addition to the regular command properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
arguments | Array of arguments | [ ] | An array of argument data to pass to Alexa. |
components | Array of strings | [ ] | An array of components to extract value data from and provide to Alexa. |
The SendEvent
command is ignored in fast mode.
arguments
An array of data to send to the skill in the UserEvent
request. Data binding applies to each element in the array when SendEvent
runs. This allows an argument to contain data about the event itself, such as ${event.source.value}
. Use this to send arbitrary data to your skill.
components
The components
property is an array of selector strings. The UserEvent
request includes the value
of each component. For example, you can use the components
property to construct a form that sends the contents of each component to your skill.
The value for a given component depends on the type of component:
- A component with a basic press interaction, such as a
TouchWrapper
, reports thechecked
state of the component. - A rich component that supports interaction, such as a
Pager
,Sequence
, orScrollView
, reports component-specific values. For example, aPager
reports the index of the displayed page. Refer to component documentation for what they report. - Other components report
null
, unless stated otherwise the component documentation.
Access the component values in the components
property of the request.
UserEvent
The SendEvent
command sends the skill an Alexa.Presentation.APL.UserEvent
request.
For example, the SendEvent
defined in the TouchWrapper
shown earlier generates the following UserEvent
request.
{
"type": "Alexa.Presentation.APL.UserEvent",
"requestId": "amzn1.echo-api.request.1",
"timestamp": "2019-06-29T01:14:24Z",
"locale": "en-US",
"arguments": [
"ARGUMENT1",
"ARGUMENT2"
],
"components": {
"ID1": "VALUE1",
"ID2": "VALUE2",
},
"source": {
"type": "TouchWrapper",
"handler": "onPress",
"id": "buyButton",
"value": false
},
"token": "token-provided-with-the-document"
}
For more details about the UserEvent
request, see UserEvent
request.
For an example of a UserEvent
handler, see Handle a UserEvent request.
Sequential command
The Sequential
command runs a series of commands in order, waiting for the previous command to finish before starting the next. The Sequential
command finishes when all of its child commands have finished.
The type
of the Sequential
command is Sequential
. The Sequential
command has the following properties in addition to the common command properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
catch |
Array of Commands | [] | An ordered list of commands to run if this sequence stops early. |
commands |
Array of Commands | REQUIRED | An ordered list of command to run in series. |
repeatCount |
Integer | 0 | Additional number of times to run these commands. |
finally |
Array of Commands | [] | An ordered list of commands to run after the normal commands and the catch commands |
- In normal mode the
commands
run in order, followed by thefinally
commands. TherepeatCount
only applies to the regular commands. - In fast mode the
commands
run in order without repeating, followed by thefinally
commands. - If one of the commands stops early (in normal mode), the
catch
commands andfinally
commands run in fast mode. - If one of the
finally
commands stops while running in normal mode, the remainingfinally
commands run in fast mode.
catch
catch
requires APL 1.1 or later. Provide an alternate experience for devices running older versions of APL.
The catch commands run if the Sequential
command stops due to another command running. The catch commands run in "fast" mode – that is, all durations are ignored and commands jump to their final values. The catch commands run before any finally
commands.
The catch
commands run one time. The repeatCount
property doesn't apply to catch
commands.
commands
An array of commands to run. The array of commands run in order, and each command must finish before the next one can begin. The delay
value of the Sequential
command and the delay
value of the first command in the sequence are additive. In the following example, the first SendEvent
command runs after 3000 milliseconds.
{
"type": "Sequential",
"delay": 1000,
"repeatCount": 2,
"commands": [
{
"type": "SendEvent",
"delay": 2000
},
{
"type": "SendEvent",
"delay": 2000
}
]
}
finally
finally
requires APL 1.1 or later. Provide an alternate experience for devices running older versions of APL.
The finally
commands run after the normal sequential commands finish or after the catch
commands run due to the command stopping early. The finally
commands run in normal mode unless (a) the entire Sequential command ran in fast mode or (b) the sequential command stopped early.
The finally
commands run one time. The repeatCount
property doesn't apply to finally
commands.
repeatCount
The number of times to repeat this series of commands. Defaults to 0. Negative values will be ignored.
SetFocus Command
SetFocus
requires APL 1.1 or later. Provide an alternate experience for devices running older versions of APL.
Changes the actionable component that is in focus. See Focused for the actionable components that can receive and lose focus.
Only one component has focus at a time. Setting the focus on a component automatically clears it from other components.
When SetFocus
runs, the command does the following:
- Places the targeted component into focus and sets that
focused
state to true. - Removes focus from any component that had it before and sets that component's
focused
state to false.
The SetFocus
command is ignored if the targeted component is disabled, not actionable, or has the inheritParentState
property set to true.
The SetFocus
command has the following properties in addition to the
standard command properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
componentId | String | SELF | The id of the component which will receive focus. |
For example, to focus a specific component with the id
myButton
:
{
"type": "SetFocus",
"componentId": "myButton"
}
The SetFocus
command runs in fast mode, but without any delay.
componentId
The ID of the component which will receive focus. If this property is
omitted, the component issuing the SetFocus
command is the recipient.
To open a document with a component in focus, set the document
onMount
property to SetFocus
.
For example, to focus a specific component on document mount:
{
"onMount": {
"type": "SetFocus",
"componentId": "myButton"
}
}
ClearFocus Command
ClearFocus
requires APL 1.1 or later. Provide an alternate experience for devices running older versions of APL.
Removes focus from the actionable component that is currently in focus. See Focused for the actionable components that can receive and lose focus.
Only one component may have focus at a time, so ClearFocus
only ever
affects one component.
When ClearFocus
runs, the command removes focus from the
component that has it, and sets that component's
focused
state to false
.
The ClearFocus
command has no additional properties to the regular
command properties.
For example, to clear focus from any component that has it:
{
"type": "ClearFocus"
}
The ClearFocus
command runs in fast mode, but without any delay.
SetPage command
The SetPage
command changes the page displayed in a Pager
component. The SetPage
command finishes when the item is fully in view. The SetPage
command has the following properties in addition to the regular command properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
componentId |
String | SELF | The id of the component to read. |
position |
relative, absolute | absolute |
Whether the value is a relative or absolute offset. Defaults to absolute . |
value |
Integer | REQUIRED | The distance to move. May be an absolute or relative value. |
When there are N pages in the Pager component, the first is index 0
and the last has index N-1
. A relative position offsets from the current page. For example, to move one page forward:
{
"type": "SetPage",
"componentId": "myWeatherPager",
"position": "relative",
"value": 1
}
An absolute position sets the index of the current page. A negative absolute position is an offset from the end of the list. For example, to go to the last page:
{
"type": "SetPage",
"componentId": "myWeatherPager",
"position": "absolute",
"value": -1
}
No intermediate pages display when switching between two pages (unlike a Sequence
). For example, if the current page is 13 and SetPage
runs with "position"="relative","value": 2
, the current page will transition out and page 11 will transition in without showing page 12.
The SetPage
command can set any page for display. It does not respect the allowed navigation direction in the Pager
component. However, wrapping behavior affects page switch calculations, as shown in approximate algorithm.
Stopping a SetPage
command jumps ahead to the target page if the SetPage
command sequence is at least 50% complete, and it returns to the previous page if it is not at least 50% complete. The onPageChanged
command runs one time when the command stops if the page has changed from the last page.
The SetPage
command is ignored in fast mode.
componentId
The identifier of the Pager component. If omitted, the component issuing the
SetPage
command is used.
position
If the position
is relative
, the value
is a relative distance to move from the current page. If the position
is absolute
, the value
is the absolute page number to which the display will move.
value
The value
is either the distance to move or the absolute page number to move to.
The algorithm to calculate final position and direction can be approximated with this pseudo-code.
if (command.position == 'absolute') { // Absolute motion
let index = command.value < 0 ? pager.children.length + command.value : command.value;
index = Math.max(0, Math.min(pager.children.length - 1, index)); // Clamp range
// Return the final index and the direction of motion
if (index == pager.currentIndex)
return NO_MOVE
return (index, index < pager.currentIndex ? "LEFT" : "RIGHT");
}
else { // Relative motion
let index = pager.currentIndex + command.value;
// If relative motion goes out of bounds and we don't support wrapping, ignore the command
if (pager.navigation != "wrap" && (index < 0 || index >= pager.children.length))
return NO_MOVE;
// Wrap appropriately
index = ((index % pager.children.length) + pager.children.length) % pager.children.length;
if (index == pager.currentIndex)
return NO_MOVE;
return (index, command.value < 0 ? "LEFT" : "RIGHT");
}
The pager animation is driven by the returned direction.
This algorithm has these characteristics:
-
Absolute values clamp within the valid range of pages. The direction is relative to the current page.
-
Relative values on a wrapping pager will wrap arbitrarily. The direction is based on the commanded value, and wrapping doesn't change the direction.
-
Relative values on a non-wrapping pager that go out of range are ignored.
SetValue Command
The SetValue
command changes a dynamic property of a component. Refer to the specifies of each component for the values that may be set. With SetValue
, the specified property of the component changes, but the screen is not redrawn. See Command evaluation.
The SetValue
command has the following properties in addition to the regular command properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
componentId | String | SELF | The id of the component whose value should be set. |
property | String | REQUIRED | The name of the property to set. |
value | String | REQUIRED | The value to set on the property. |
This example sets a value so that the punchline for a joke appears, because an opacity
value of 1 means the component is fully visible.
{
"type": "SetValue",
"componentId": "jokePunchline",
"property": "opacity",
"value": 1
}
The SetValue command can change the value of various properties, on a per-component basis. The specific properties that are mutable are documented for each component.
The SetValue
command runs in fast mode, but without any delay.
componentId
The identifier of the component whose value will change. If this property is omitted, then the component that issues the SetValue
command is the recipient.
property
The name of the property to change.
value
The value
evaluates when the command runs, so it can take advantage of existing component properties. In this example, the SetValue
command sets the opacity of the target component to 50% of its actual value.
{
"type": "SetValue"
"property": "opacity",
"value": "${event.target.opacity * 0.5}"
}
SpeakItem command
The SpeakItem
command reads the contents of a single item on the screen. The item will scroll into view if it is not currently visible. The item should have a speech
property, but it is not required. Any type of component
can be the recipient of SpeakItem.
The SpeakItem
command has the following properties in addition to the regular command properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
align |
first , last , center , visible |
visible |
The alignment of the item after scrolling. Defaults to "visible". |
componentId |
String | SELF | The id of the component to read. |
highlightMode |
line , block |
block | How karaoke is applied: on a line-by-line basis, or to the entire block. Defaults to "block". |
minimumDwellTime |
Integer | 0 | The minimum number of milliseconds that an item will be highlighted. |
For example, to read the contents of a single text component and ensure it is aligned in the center of the screen:
{
"type": "SpeakItem",
"componentId": "myJokeSetup",
"highlightMode": "line",
"align": "center"
}
The karaoke
state of the component is set to true
during the speech and reset to false
after the speech completes. The highlightMode
only applies to Text components. When a Text
component is read in "highlightMode": "line"
mode, individual lines of text are set to the karaoke
state during speech and reset to false
after speech completes.
Note these restrictions:
-
The
SpeakItem
command does not scroll the content during speech inblock
mode. For example, if the component is larger than the scrolling container of the component, those parts of the component that are not visible after scrolling will remain hidden. -
Components on round screens should use center alignment, or much of the content will not be visible.
-
SpeakItem
does not highlight individual words or lines of text during speech whenhighlightMode
isblock
. -
The algorithm used to scroll the item into view assumes there is only a single scrolling component. Nested scrolling components are not supported.
-
Components without a
speech
property will still scroll into view.
When a SpeakItem
command stops early, it clears any visual changes and stops speech immediately.
The SpeakItem command is ignored in fast mode.
align
The alignment of the item on the screen after scrolling and before speech. Alignment is an enumerated value with the following options.
Alignment | Description |
---|---|
first | The top/left side of the item will be placed at the top/left side of the scrolling container. |
center | The center of the item will be placed in the center of the container. |
last | The bottom/right side of the item will be placed at the bottom/right side of the scrolling container. |
visible | The item will be moved the minimal distance necessary to bring it fully into view. |
componentId
The ID of the spoken component. If omitted, the component issuing the SpeakItem command is used.
highlightMode
Controls how contents of a Text
component are styled during speech. If set to "block
", the entire Text
component has the karaoke
state set to true during speech. If highlightMode
is set to "line", the individual lines of the Text component are treated separately. Each line will scroll to match the align
property and be styled separately.
In line-by-line karaoke mode, the only styling change accepted is the color property; other properties are ignored.
When a component other than a Text
component is the recipient of SpeakItem
,
the highlightMode
is ignored.
minimumDwellTime
The minimum amount of time in milliseconds to highlight an item.
SpeakList Command
Read the contents of a range of items inside a common container. Each item will scroll into view before speech. Each item should have a speech
property, but it is not required.
The SpeakList
command has the following properties in addition to the regular command properties.
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
align |
first , center , last , visible |
visible |
The alignment of the item. Defaults to visible . |
componentId |
String | SELF | The id of the Sequence or Container (or any other hosting component). |
count |
integer | REQUIRED | The number of children to read. |
minimumDwellTime |
number | 0 | The minimum number of milliseconds that an item will be highlighted for. Defaults to 0. |
start |
integer | REQUIRED | The index of the item to start reading. |
The minimumDwellTime
prevents items with short titles from being read too quickly. For example, a series of movie titles like "Venom", "Fences", and "Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father" needs some dwell time for the first two items.
This example reads three components out of the middle of a list and ensures that each aligns in the center of the screen:
{
"type": "SpeakList",
"componentId": "movieList",
"start": 3,
"count": 3,
"minimumDwellTime": 700,
"align": "center"
}
The karaoke
state of the component is set to true
during the speech of each component and reset to false
after that speech completes.
Note these characteristics of the SpeakList
command:
- The
SpeakList
command does not scroll the content during speech. For example, if the component is larger than the scrolling container of the component, those parts of the component that are not visible after scrolling will remain hidden. - Components on round screens should use
center
alignment, or much of the content will not be visible. SpeakList
does not highlight individual words or lines of text during speech.- To scroll the item into view, the component hierarchy is searched upwards to find the first ancestor that can be scrolled.
- The algorithm that used to scroll the item into view assumes there is only a single scrolling component. SpeakList does not support nested scrolling components.
- Components without a speech property will still scroll into view.
- Components without a speech property, but with a positive
minimumDwellTime
, will have karaoke set for that time. - Components without a speech property and no
minimumDwellTime
will not have karaoke set.
The SpeakList
command is ignored in fast mode.
align
The alignment of the item on the screen after scrolling and before speech. Alignment is an enumerated value with the following options:
Alignment | Description |
---|---|
first |
The top/left side of the item will be placed at the top/left side of the scrolling container. |
center |
The center of the item will be placed in the center of the container. |
last |
The bottom/right side of the item will be placed at the bottom/right side of the scrolling container. |
visible |
The item will be moved the minimal distance necessary to bring it fully into view. |
componentId
The ID of the parent component. If omitted, the component issuing the SpeakList
command is used.
count
The number of items to speak. The command does not run if the count is less than 1 (no scrolling, no speech). If the count is larger than the number of remaining items in the container, it is trimmed to the maximum number of items that can be spoken from the starting point.
minimumDwellTime
The minimum amount of time in milliseconds that an item will be highlighted (that is, have the karaoke
state set to true
). This defaults to 0.
start
The 0-based index of the first child item in the parent container to scroll into view and speak. Negative values are measured from the end of the parent container. This example the last three items in a list:
{
"type": "SpeakList",
"start": -3,
"count": 3
}
The following algorithm approximates how the reading is done.
let first = start < 0 ? start + children.length : start;
let last = Math.min(first + count, children.length – 1);
first = Math.max(0, first);
for (let index = first ; index <= last ; index++) {
let child = children[index];
scrollIntoView(child);
if (child.speech) {
child.setState("karaoke", true);
speakChildWithMinimumDwell(child, minimumDwellTime);
child.setState("karaoke", false);
}
else if (minimumDwellTime > 0) {
child.setState("karaoke", true);
waitForTimeout(minimumDwellTime);
child.setState("karaoke", false);
}
}
Related topics
Last updated: Nov 28, 2023