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I have this code and it runs just fine. The problem is that when I try to display it using showMessageDialog it shows everything in a messy way. Any advice on how to display it properly? Thanks.

String tablaColeccion;
tablaColeccion ="";
for (int i = 0; i < informeMatrices.getVector().length; i++){
    if (informeMatrices.getVector()[i] != null){
        tablaColeccion += informeMatrices.getVector()[i] + " ";
    }
}
tablaColeccion += "\n";

for (int i = 0; i < informeMatrices.getMatriz().length; i++) {
    for(int u = 0; u < informeMatrices.getMatriz().length; u++){
        if (informeMatrices.getMatriz()[i][u] != null){
            tablaColeccion += informeMatrices.getMatriz()[i][u] + " ";
        }
    }
    tablaColeccion += "\n"; 
}
tablaColeccion += "\n\n";

JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null,tablaColeccion,"Coleccion Completa", JOptionPane.INFORMATION_MESSAGE);

I would like to display it as separated columns. Any help would be awesome.

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  • "Any advice on how to display it properly?" Show a list (1D array) or table (2D array) in the option pane. Oct 7, 2014 at 5:12

1 Answer 1

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I found this way to do it. It is pretty simple and easy to implement. This will accomodate everything into columns and rows just by simply using HTML.

StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder( 128);

        sb.append("<html><table><tr>");

        for (int i = 0; i < informeMatrices.getVector().length; i++)
        {
            if (informeMatrices.getVector()[i] != null)
            {

                sb.append("<td>" + informeMatrices.getVector()[i] + "</td>");
            }
        }

        for (int i = 0; i < informeMatrices.getMatriz().length; i++) 
        {
            sb.append("<tr>");

            for(int u = 0; u < informeMatrices.getMatriz().length; u++)
            {
                if (informeMatrices.getMatriz()[i][u] != null)
                {                       
                    sb.append("<td>").append(informeMatrices.getMatriz()[i][u]).append("</td>");
                }

            }

            sb.append("</tr>");

        }

        sb.append("</table></html>");

        JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null,sb.toString(),"Coleccion Completa",
                JOptionPane.INFORMATION_MESSAGE);
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  • HTML is fine (especially for tabular data) if the user will never need to copy the data. If they do, that's where a JList or JTable comes in handy, but the table can easily also do sorting and filtering as well. Oct 7, 2014 at 7:24

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