I’m executing some javascript from a ribbon button and what I want to do is save the record that I am creating and then immediately use its GUID for some code a bit further on. Each time I try it the GUID is coming back null even though I’m requesting it after the record has been saved. If I try the button again after I’ve saved it then it works, but not as I’m saving it.
Is there a way to do this?
function RibbonButton_AddProduct()
{
//Save the Record
Xrm.Page.data.entity.save();
LoadProductCreate();
}
function LoadProductCreate()
{
var serverUrl;
var errorMessage = "Context to retrieve the Server URL is not available.";
if (typeof GetGlobalContext != "undefined"){
serverUrl = GetGlobalContext().getServerUrl();
} else {
if (typeof Xrm != "undefined"){
serverUrl = Xrm.Page.context.getServerUrl();
} else {
alert(errorMessage);
return;
}
}
if (serverUrl.match(/\/$/)){
serverUrl = serverUrl.substring(0, serverUrl.length - 1);
}
var recordId = Xrm.Page.data.entity.getId();
alert(recordId);
var url = serverUrl + "/main.aspx?etc=10030&extraqs=%3f_CreateFromId%3d%"+recordId
+"%257d%26_CreateFromType%3d10029%26etc%3d10030%26"
+"pagemode%3diframe%26preloadcache%3d1345465354543&pagetype=entityrecord";
window.open(url);
}
Here’s a different approach to solving this problem.
What you are trying to do is ‘working against the system’ – you are effectively making two save buttons. In the rest of Crm when the Id is required for a ribbon button the record must first be saved. E.g. you can’t use the dialog or workflow buttons on an unsaved record, you also can’t ‘add new/existing’ to an unsaved record.
So my solution would be to disable the button on unsaved forms, force the user to save the record manually and then allow them to use your button – this is the way Crm is meant to be used, and is the way the rest of Crm will work.
You should not work against the system, you should work with it, you have a product to customise and extend – not change.
If this doesn’t meet your requirement I would suggest uses Greg’s suggestion (1) of having flags, though it sounds a bit messy – but then this is a requirement that inherently is.