💾Saved Rows Overview
Last updated
Last updated
© Bee Content Design, Inc. San Francisco, CA | Part of Growens
This feature is available on Beefree SDK Core plan and above. If you're on the Essentials plan, upgrade a development application for free to try this and other Core-level features.
Saved Rows allows users to select a row in a message and save it for later use. More specifically, it allows users to submit a request to the host application to save a piece of content and turn it into a reusable element. The host application, using the Custom Rows feature, can feed these saved elements back to the builder as rows that can be dragged into other messages.
When the feature is enabled, a new Save icon is added to the action icons when a row is selected:
The same action is also available in the row properties panel when a row is selected:
By clicking on this icon, users trigger a request to the host application to store the row’s JSON document, which includes:
row structure and settings;
contents and their settings;
all style settings.
It is entirely up to the host application:
where to store the JSON documents that describe these saved rows;
if and how to display them to users of the application;
whether to allow users to edit them individually
when and how to feed them back to the builder, using the Custom Rows feature.
Saved Rows – as most Beefree SDK features – is made available to users in an off state and must be activated in the Beefree SDK Console.
To do so:
Login into the Beefree SDK Console.
Click Details next to the application you want to configure.
Click the view more link under the Application configuration heading.
Toggle Enable saving rows on and click the Save button to save the new setting.
Once the feature has been turned on at the global level, in Beefree SDK Console, you may want to disable Saved Rows on a per-user basis. This can be accomplished via the client-side configuration document that you feed to an application when initializing the builder for a certain user.
Why? Because you may decide to make the feature available to different users of your application:
depending on the subscription plan that they are on (you could push users to a higher plan based on the ability to save a row for later);
depending on the purchase of an optional feature (same);
to allow “beta” users to see it while keeping it hidden from the rest of your users;
etc.
Here’s how to do so:
Enable Saved Rows in the Beefree SDK Console. as mentioned above.
Add the configuration parameter saveRows to the beeConfig document:
Set it to false for all users that cannot saved rows.
Here is a simple example:
How does Saved Rows work from the end-user point of view? It’s in part based on the changes to the builder mentioned above, and in part affected by how you decide to implement the feature within your application.
Let’s review the various steps in the workflow to better understand what we mean.
Saving a row:
Activate the feature as described above.
Load a Beefree SDK template.
Select the row you want to save.
Click on the Save icon.
Your application will need to open some sort of a dialog that allows for some user input.
Users will enter various metadata, such as the name of the row, a category, tags, etc.
The user closes the dialog
Using a previously saved row:
Users click on the Rows tab.
Users select a category of rows from the Rows tab’s drop-down menu. For example:
A user created a “Footers” category when saving a row
You saved the row and that category name
You fed an array of custom rows called “Footers” back to the builder
The same user finds “Footers” in the Rows drop-down menu.
The user drags the row into the editing stage.
Here is a visual example using our demo application:
When the saved row action is triggered by the user, the builder starts the following sequence:
Metadata Content dialog Used to collect data from the host application and add it to the row object. Metadata helps your application to identify a row, overwrite a previously saved version, etc.
Saved Rows Callback. Function that returns the row to the host application.
The following describes the recommended workflow to implement saved rows in a host SaaS application.
Enable Saved Rows in the Beefree SDK Console as described above.
Load a Beefree SDK template.
Select the row you want to save and make note of the new save icon.
Click the save icon to trigger a Metadata Content Dialog. To successfully handle this step, you must complete these tasks:
Add a Metadata Content Dialog object to your beeConfig. This configures your handler.
Implement the handler method to open a dialog (e.g., modal window) to collect any metadata you wish your users to input when saving a row.
The dialog should contain a form and complete the following specs:
Save the row returned in the Metadata Content Dialog’s args object.
Collect metadata from the end-user, such as row name.
Merge the metadata with the row, so it can be immediately returned to the application.
Return a metadata object to the application so the stage can immediately use the data.
The application will update the selected row on the stage with the returned metadata.
The application will trigger the onSaveRow callback with the following details:
JSON of the selected row
HTML preview of the selected row
Page Partial of the selected row contained in a page. Use this JSON document to allow users to edit a saved row independently of any message or landing page that might use it.
The application will refresh the Rows panel to reload the selected rows data feed.
Host app will listen for onSaveRows callback and update the previously saved records with the HTML preview.
To display saved rows in the Rows tab, add them to the list of rows available to users by leveraging the Custom Rows feature.
The rows are organized in lists that are displayed based on your rows configuration. Use the metadata submitted by your users to categorize them, creating multiple lists of rows: this can significantly improve the user experience.
Here is an example of a rows configuration that displays saved rows organized by category:
In this example, the Rows tab will show:
Empty rows
Default rows
Headers
Footers
Product grids
Main article
… retrieving the arrays of JSON documents for custom rows (externalContentURLs) from the URLs specified.
These custom rows names (Headers, Footers, Product grids, etc.) could be the result of a “Category” metadata entered by the user at the time the row was saved. The input could be the result of:
The user writing a new category name for the selected row.
The user selecting from a list of existing categories, previously created by the user, or set up by you.
Here is another example that shows saved rows organized in the Rows tab based on the campaign type:
The maxRowsDisplayed
parameter enables you to define the number of rows displayed under each user-created category in the application's sidebar, without affecting the "Empty" and "Default" categories. It directly influences the number of saved rows an end user sees when they click on a category in the sidebar.
You can set the maxRowsDisplayed
parameter in the rowsConfiguration
object in the Beefree SDK Configuration as follows:
Accessing, and organizing saved rows is now easier than ever with Saved Rows Management. With this feature, we’ve introduced a new action in the list of saved rows that your application can intercept to handle changes in this list itself. This means you can now delete, rename, or re-organize your saved rows, right inside the builder.
Implementing this new feature requires some development effort from the host application.
Here is what you need to know for each action.
In the section below you can learn how to configure the Saved Rows Management categories, and allow users to perform such actions straight from the builder.
To get started, you will need to create a content dialog in your application configuration parameters. The content dialog method should be named onDeleteRow
and be nested under the contentDialog
object, as follows:
Following that, amend your rowsConfiguration
object with the additional parameters:
The handle
parameter to utilize in your onDeleteRow
handler from the previous step
The optional behaviors
parameter to set management permissions
Here’s an example:
When the onDeleteRow
method is called, utilize the 3rd parameter to obtain an argument containing the handle value of the row being requested, as well as the row metadata. Use the handle and the row’s metadata to determine which row should be deleted.
Finally, we can call the resolve
method, passing the value true
if you want to refresh the rows, or false
if you want to keep the side panel’s current listing.
To get started, much like with deleting rows, you will need to create a content dialog in your application configuration parameters. The content dialog method should be named onEditRow
and be nested under the contentDialog
object, as follows:
Following that, amend your rowsConfiguration
object with the additional parameters:
The handle
parameter to utilize in your onEditRow
handler from the previous step
The optional behaviors
parameter to set management permissions
Here’s an example:
When the onEditRow
method is called, utilize the 3rd parameter to obtain an argument containing the handle value of the row being requested, as well as the row metadata. Use the handle and the row’s metadata to determine which row should be edited.
Finally, we can call the resolve
method, passing the value true
if you want to refresh the rows, or false
if you want to keep the side panel’s current listing.
Saved Rows Management also provides errors and warnings for your application, so you can handle all cases gracefully.
Sample warning:
You can call the reject
method, passing the message you want to display.
Saved Rows Management also comes with the ability to load any external rows via an instance method instead of an external URL. In addition, since you can now access rows through your application, you don’t need to perform authentication.
To start, define a hook in your application configuration. The hook method should be named getRows
and will be nested under the hooks
object, as follows:
Following that, amend your rowsConfiguration
object with the additional parameters:
The handle
parameter to utilize in your getRows
handler from the previous step
The isLocal
parameter to let the application know to use the hook handler
When the getRows method is invoked, utilize the 3rd parameter to obtain an argument containing the handle value of the row being requested. Use the handle to determine which set of rows should be returned.
Finally, we can call the resolve method, passing in an array of savedRows.
If you are using a React application, be sure to pass a new rows array and not a reference to a row state. Otherwise, the rows state may be “stale” and won’t update in the side panel.
The following is the basic structure of the row’s JSON schema. Simply put, the schema is the structure of your saved rows data feed.
NOTE: The row schema is complex and we do not recommend creating rows programmatically. Therefore, there is no schema reference of the row itself. However, you can add your own parameters to the row’s metadata or use our Simplified Row Schema to generate them programmatically from existing content.
The metadata section of the rows schema allows you to keep track of row-specific information.
A string of plain text that identifies the row.
Displayed in the row card when the row is shown in the Rows panel.
Used for text searches within the Rows panel
category A category can be useful for organizing your feeds on the Rows tab.
id A handle that identifies the row in the host application’s data storage.
idParent Useful to track rows that were saved from previously saved rows. Keeping track of where a row came from allows you to implement additional editing features.
dateCreated The date the row was created: useful for filtering/sorting rows for content management purposes in your application. It can also help with technical support tasks.
dateModified The date a saved row was updated: useful for filtering/sorting rows for content management purposes in your application. It can also help with technical support tasks.
userId To let your application decide whom can edit or saved rows.
tags Useful to create filters, management, search, and in general to organize the content in your application.
The metadata content dialog is triggered by the save icon in Beefree SDK. This step is required to provide Beefree SDK with information about the row, such as its name and/or id. The Metadata Content Dialog is added in the same manner as other Content Dialogs, such as Merge Tags. Please review the Content Dialog section for more details about how to use Beefree SDK’s Content Dialog feature.
An example Metadata Content Dialog configuration can be found below.
The metadata resolve function now accepts an options
object in which you can pass the property synced
to determine if the row needs to be saved and treated by the builder as synced.
When the Metadata Content Dialog is completed, the application triggers the Saved Rows callback. The callback returns the following details:
rowJSON JSON of the selected row.
rowHTML HTML preview of the selected row
pageJSON Page Partial of the selected row contained in a page (for editing a row as an independent piece of content).
With Edit Single Row mode you can offer an easy way for your users to edit saved rows individually, using a tailored UI built to modify the row structure, content, and style settings without worrying about messing up with the overall design of the email campaign, landing page, or pop-up.
Enabling a more modular approach to saved rows simplifies how users can design and act on content: updating small details in a saved row, saving it, then deploying it to existing templates becomes a matter of minutes. If you want to learn more about how to leverage Edit Single Row mode to safely modify a Saved Row, take a look at the dedicated technical documentation.