First of you will need to assign custom (user defined) value editor for some attribute or operator in your data model.
To process this value editor on client-side you will need to create a new ValueEditor widget. Place it in a separate .js file and include that file to the same view where other EasyQuery widgets are used. To create new value editor widget you will need to inherit it from eqjs.ValueEditor widget and override several methods. The name of new widget must correspond to the name of your custom value editor with “eqjs.ValueEditor_” prefix. In our example it will be “eqjs.ValueEditor_MyValueEditor”.
Here is an example of very simple value editor which just shows OK alert when user click on the value element in condition.
(function ($, undefined) { $.widget("eqjs.ValueEditor_MyValueEditor", $.eqjs.ValueEditor, { _renderEditor: function () { var self = this; //do widget rendering here }, _showEditor: function () { alert("OK"); } }) })(jQuery);
Now try to run your application, add a new condition with selected attribute and click on the last element in this condition. If everything was done right - the you should see “OK” alert message.