0

Okay I'm not really familiar with java, so the main deal here is that I'm trying to get contacts(friends if you'd like) from a database and listing them all as JLabels into a JPanel. I'm guessing this is a bad practice but I just want to try giving it a shot.

String query = "SELECT * FROM tblcontacts WHERE user_ID =\""+global.get_username()+"\"";
//Just calling contacts from database with the account logged in
JPanel contactlist = new JPanel();
getContentPane().add(contactlist);
    try{
        Statement stmnt = conn.conn.createStatement();
        ResultSet rs = stmnt.executeQuery(query);
        while(rs.next()){
            //create JLabels here with the contact names and insert it into a JPanel
        }
    }catch(Exception e){
        System.out.println(e);
    }

Im quite stuck with it and I'm not sure how to add the labels in. Really sorry.

*P.s. assume that the panels are working and everything has been set in a nice little window.

3 Answers 3

0

Something like this should work

while(rs.next()){
    //create JLabels here with the contact names and insert it into a JPanel
    JLabel contact = new JLabel(rs.getString(0) + " " + rs.getString(1));
    contactlist.add(contact);
}

Depending on fields you return with * in the query, index used in rs.getString(<column index>) should be adjusted.

0
String query = "SELECT * FROM tblcontacts WHERE user_ID =\""+global.get_username()+"\"";
//Just calling contacts from database with the account logged in
JPanel contactlist = new JPanel();
getContentPane().add(contactlist);
    try{
        Statement stmnt = conn.conn.createStatement();
        ResultSet rs = stmnt.executeQuery(query);
        while(rs.next()){
            //Instantiates a new instance of JLabel for each record
            JLabel label = new Label( "Pass your contact names here as variables );

            //then adds the instance to the panel
            contactList.add( label );
        }
    }catch(Exception e){
        System.out.println(e);
    }
0
0

"...almost all code that creates or interacts with Swing components must run on the event dispatch thread."

while(rs.next()){
    EventQueue.invokeLater(() -> {
        JLabel contact = new JLabel(rs.getString(columnIndex) + " " + rs.getString(columnIndex2));
        contactlist.add(contact);
    });
}

As per Predrag Maric's answer but with the Swing portion on the EDT. Which prevents thread interference and memory consistency errors.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.