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I need a JFileChooser which acts like notepad.exe or mspaint.exe in save mode. As you may know when you type wildcard (* or ?) characters in the File name field the file view will show only those files which are matching for the users input. This is OK, but my problem is with the Files of type combobox:

In JFileChooser: the Files of type combo box is updated as well when the user enters a wildcard in the File name field. See the screenshot here!

But if you try this with notepad.exe you will realize that the File name field remains as it was before, so the search pattern is not updated. See the notepad's screenshot here!

So my question is: Does anybody know a solution how to achieve that the Files of type combo box should NOT be updated by the entered filter?

I need a cross-platform solution, so it should work both on XP and Linux.

Thanks in advance!

Sorry for the links, but I am not allowed to attach it directly!

2 Answers 2

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Finally I've found a solution: Using a custom file chooser UI derived from BasicFileChooserUI will solve my issue in the following way: I've overriden the getApproveSelectionAction() method with my custom action:

protected class CustomApproveSelectionAction extends BasicFileChooserUI.ApproveSelectionAction {

    @Override
    public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
        String filename = getFileName();
        // using a custom pattern to accept valid charachters only:
        Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(filename);

        if (matcher.matches()) { 
            // this is the good case, just let the super implementation do what have to do.
            super.actionPerformed(e);
        } else {
            // this is the bad case, we must warn the user and don't let the super implementation take effect.
            // display an error message similar like notepad does it.
        }
    }
}

If the filename is ok, then I allow what super implementation does, otherwise I will display a message.

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The glob pattern recognition feature is implemented in the FileChooserUI delegate for each Look & Feel. For example, MetalFileChooserUI contains a nested ApproveSelectionAction, inherited from BasicFileChooserUI, that invokes setFileFilter(). This adds the new pattern, via a PropertyChangeEvent, to the listening MetalFileChooserUI.FilterComboBoxModel. You may be able to intercept the added filter somewhere along the chain.

You may also be able to leverage the file pattern matching capability introduced in Java 7 and discussed here.

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  • This related example can be used to examine the sequence of events described above.
    – trashgod
    Sep 13, 2012 at 16:52

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