About window styles
Window styles allow you to specify how a new window behaves in your solution. Each layout and task should be designed with a particular window style in mind.
Document window
Document windows allow users to start a new process or view additional information.
Use document windows for typical user-input tasks or tasks that can take place in any order. For example, open a document window to review an invoice while looking at a customer’s purchase history.
Floating document window
Floating document windows remain on top of other windows even when the floating window becomes inactive.
Use floating document windows to display information or tasks that should be visible at all times. For example, open a floating document window to display an interactive table of contents.
Dialog window
Dialog windows appear in the foreground. Users must close all open dialog windows before they can activate open document or floating document windows.
Use dialog windows to collect required information or alert users to situations while blocking access to other windows. For example, open a dialog window to display an alert when a user attempts to modify sensitive data.
When you use dialog windows, keep the following points in mind:
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Any operations that attempt to open a non-dialog window will fail when a dialog window is open (for example, using a script trigger to run a script from another file). OnTimer scripts do not execute when a dialog window is open unless the script launches from the dialog window itself.
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