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I'm creating a graphical timeline out of an excel document and I need to have small tags of the name of the event next to the marker for that event. Some of these are easy and are right justified but others are left justified and I need to figure out their width so that I can properly offset them.

window.drawString("7/4-Fourth of July",horizontalIndex-Offset,verticalIndex);

Currently I'm averaging the pixel width using an average of both font sizes 10 and 32, but this doesn't really cut it. Can someone help me get the exact offset?enter image description here

5 Answers 5

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This thread explains how to do it: Calculate the display width of a string in Java

You should first get the font metrics, and then ask the metrics how wide a certain string is.

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from a java.awt.Graphics object, you can call getFontMetrics. the FontMetrics object has a getStringBounds method that does what you need.

here's the documentation

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and another good alternative is SwingUtilities#computeStringWidth(FontMetrics fm, String str)

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As a (read: my ;-) general rule, never use the Graphics-level drawString methods. Instead, use a JLabel/CellRendererPane pair to "stamp" the text onto whatever component.

The advantages

  • anti-alias is handled automagically
  • size calculations are done in the labels' bowels, so positioning calculations dont require any low-level methods but simply based on the labels' prefSize
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  • kleopatra +1 :-) welcome back and I hope that this long time was trip around the world :-), thanks for your inputs,
    – mKorbel
    Jun 13, 2011 at 10:54
  • @mKorbel thanks :-) the "world" was just a small Danish island :-)
    – kleopatra
    Jun 13, 2011 at 11:01
  • For an example of using a JLabel for rendering, see the LabelRenderTest.java source. Jun 13, 2011 at 11:45
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TextLayout, shown here, is another alternative.

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  • From your linked example, it seems TextLayout is able to accurately calculate the ascent of the text string provided, whereas FontMetrics seems to want to account for umlauts & other matters that might not be present. Jun 4, 2011 at 8:57
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    @Andrew Thompson: Good point. TextLayout seems to give tighter bounds and works with styled text. Here's a head-to-head comparison.
    – trashgod
    Jun 4, 2011 at 9:10
  • Nothing like a 'shoot it' to help sort the cruft. ;) Jun 4, 2011 at 9:34

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