Reference documentation and code samples for the Google Chat V1 API class Google::Apps::Card::V1::Button.
A text, icon, or text and icon button that users can click. For an example in Google Chat apps, see Add a button.
To make an image a clickable button, specify an
Image
(not an
ImageComponent
) and set an
onClick
action.
Inherits
- Object
Extended By
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts::ClassMethods
Includes
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts
Methods
#alt_text
def alt_text() -> ::String
-
(::String) — The alternative text that's used for accessibility.
Set descriptive text that lets users know what the button does. For example, if a button opens a hyperlink, you might write: "Opens a new browser tab and navigates to the Google Chat developer documentation at https://developers.google.com/workspace/chat".
#alt_text=
def alt_text=(value) -> ::String
-
value (::String) — The alternative text that's used for accessibility.
Set descriptive text that lets users know what the button does. For example, if a button opens a hyperlink, you might write: "Opens a new browser tab and navigates to the Google Chat developer documentation at https://developers.google.com/workspace/chat".
-
(::String) — The alternative text that's used for accessibility.
Set descriptive text that lets users know what the button does. For example, if a button opens a hyperlink, you might write: "Opens a new browser tab and navigates to the Google Chat developer documentation at https://developers.google.com/workspace/chat".
#color
def color() -> ::Google::Type::Color
-
(::Google::Type::Color) — If set, the button is filled with a solid background color and the font
color changes to maintain contrast with the background color. For example,
setting a blue background likely results in white text.
If unset, the image background is white and the font color is blue.
For red, green, and blue, the value of each field is a
float
number that you can express in either of two ways: as a number between 0 and 255 divided by 255 (153/255), or as a value between 0 and 1 (0.6). 0 represents the absence of a color and 1 or 255/255 represent the full presence of that color on the RGB scale.Optionally set
alpha
, which sets a level of transparency using this equation:pixel color = alpha * (this color) + (1.0 - alpha) * (background color)
For
alpha
, a value of1
corresponds with a solid color, and a value of0
corresponds with a completely transparent color.For example, the following color represents a half transparent red:
"color": { "red": 1, "green": 0, "blue": 0, "alpha": 0.5 }
#color=
def color=(value) -> ::Google::Type::Color
-
value (::Google::Type::Color) — If set, the button is filled with a solid background color and the font
color changes to maintain contrast with the background color. For example,
setting a blue background likely results in white text.
If unset, the image background is white and the font color is blue.
For red, green, and blue, the value of each field is a
float
number that you can express in either of two ways: as a number between 0 and 255 divided by 255 (153/255), or as a value between 0 and 1 (0.6). 0 represents the absence of a color and 1 or 255/255 represent the full presence of that color on the RGB scale.Optionally set
alpha
, which sets a level of transparency using this equation:pixel color = alpha * (this color) + (1.0 - alpha) * (background color)
For
alpha
, a value of1
corresponds with a solid color, and a value of0
corresponds with a completely transparent color.For example, the following color represents a half transparent red:
"color": { "red": 1, "green": 0, "blue": 0, "alpha": 0.5 }
-
(::Google::Type::Color) — If set, the button is filled with a solid background color and the font
color changes to maintain contrast with the background color. For example,
setting a blue background likely results in white text.
If unset, the image background is white and the font color is blue.
For red, green, and blue, the value of each field is a
float
number that you can express in either of two ways: as a number between 0 and 255 divided by 255 (153/255), or as a value between 0 and 1 (0.6). 0 represents the absence of a color and 1 or 255/255 represent the full presence of that color on the RGB scale.Optionally set
alpha
, which sets a level of transparency using this equation:pixel color = alpha * (this color) + (1.0 - alpha) * (background color)
For
alpha
, a value of1
corresponds with a solid color, and a value of0
corresponds with a completely transparent color.For example, the following color represents a half transparent red:
"color": { "red": 1, "green": 0, "blue": 0, "alpha": 0.5 }
#disabled
def disabled() -> ::Boolean
-
(::Boolean) — If
true
, the button is displayed in an inactive state and doesn't respond to user actions.
#disabled=
def disabled=(value) -> ::Boolean
-
value (::Boolean) — If
true
, the button is displayed in an inactive state and doesn't respond to user actions.
-
(::Boolean) — If
true
, the button is displayed in an inactive state and doesn't respond to user actions.
#icon
def icon() -> ::Google::Apps::Card::V1::Icon
-
(::Google::Apps::Card::V1::Icon) — The icon image. If both
icon
andtext
are set, then the icon appears before the text.
#icon=
def icon=(value) -> ::Google::Apps::Card::V1::Icon
-
value (::Google::Apps::Card::V1::Icon) — The icon image. If both
icon
andtext
are set, then the icon appears before the text.
-
(::Google::Apps::Card::V1::Icon) — The icon image. If both
icon
andtext
are set, then the icon appears before the text.
#on_click
def on_click() -> ::Google::Apps::Card::V1::OnClick
- (::Google::Apps::Card::V1::OnClick) — Required. The action to perform when a user clicks the button, such as opening a hyperlink or running a custom function.
#on_click=
def on_click=(value) -> ::Google::Apps::Card::V1::OnClick
- value (::Google::Apps::Card::V1::OnClick) — Required. The action to perform when a user clicks the button, such as opening a hyperlink or running a custom function.
- (::Google::Apps::Card::V1::OnClick) — Required. The action to perform when a user clicks the button, such as opening a hyperlink or running a custom function.
#text
def text() -> ::String
- (::String) — The text displayed inside the button.
#text=
def text=(value) -> ::String
- value (::String) — The text displayed inside the button.
- (::String) — The text displayed inside the button.