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I'm learning to JTrees and Java.
Constructive suggestions and feedback are very welcome.

I think I am missing some understanding of JTrees and after 5 hours Googling, and testing I'm stuck. I've simplified the code as much as possible.

        public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent event) {
            MyNode selNode = (MyNode) m_tree.getLastSelectedPathComponent();
            if (selNode != null) {
                MyNode newNode = new MyNode("New Node");
                model.insertNodeInto(newNode, selNode,
                        selNode.getChildCount());
                MyNode[] nodes = model.getPathToRoot(newNode);
                TreePath path = new TreePath(nodes);
                m_tree.scrollPathToVisible(path);
                m_tree.setSelectionPath(path);
                // *******   The next line throws the exception shown below.  ****
                m_tree.startEditingAtPath(path);
            }


Exception in thread "AWT-EventQueue-0" java.lang.NullPointerException
at javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicTreeUI.startEditing(BasicTreeUI.java:2059)
at javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicTreeUI.startEditingAtPath(BasicTreeUI.java:601)
at javax.swing.JTree.startEditingAtPath(JTree.java:2349)
at ItemCreator.ItemCreator$1.actionPerformed(ItemCreator.java:74)

Code - My Simple Mutable JTree

1) When adding a new node into the JTree the code throws Exception in thread "AWT-EventQueue-0" java.lang.NullPointerException

2) Any general constructive feedback very welcome.

Kind regards

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  • 2
    Please include relevant in your question (not just linked to). For more info see: codereview.stackexchange.com/… Nov 11, 2012 at 4:58
  • Done. If I can do anything else, just ask. Thanks for your comment.
    – null
    Nov 11, 2012 at 8:48
  • 2
    Welcome, @nslntmnx. Please post your question on Stack Overflow, it is off-topic here because Code Review is for working code only. Your question is well-structured, so I have no doubt you'll get a good answer there. When you have fixed your exception, feel free to come back here and edit your question to get feedback about the structure of your code.
    – Adam
    Nov 11, 2012 at 14:43

1 Answer 1

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The problem is not the startEditingPath, but the incorrect model implementation. Basically its fails to notify its listeners on changes, consequently the ui has no chance to update its internals to include the added node.

The model fails in

  1. not accepting listeners (empty implementation of addTreeModelListener)
  2. not even trying to fire after changing (on inserts, updates ...)
  3. incorrect getPathToRoot implementation

It's not entirely trivial and the java doc slightly (to put it mildly) confusing - that's why SwingX has a well-tested utility class TreeModelSupport which takes over the burden. It can be used standalone, or as a blue-print of how-to do it.

In your custom model, some relevant changes (incomplete, the other modification methods must be fixed accordingly, as must the remove listener):

// prepare fix issue 1: instantiate the notification support    
private TreeModelSupport support;

public ItemTreeModel(MyNode root) {
    this.root = root;
    support = new TreeModelSupport(this);
    // remove the following: a model never listens to itself
    // this.addTreeModelListener(new MyTreeModelListener());
}

// fix issue 1: accept listener
public void addTreeModelListener(TreeModelListener l) {
    support.addTreeModelListener(l);
}

// fix issue 2: notify the listeners on inserts
public void insertNodeInto(final MyNode newNode, final MyNode selNode,
        final int childCount) {
    selNode.add(childCount, newNode);
    newNode.setLocation(selNode);
    support.fireChildAdded(new TreePath(getPathToRoot(selNode)),
            childCount, newNode);
}

// fix issue 3: pathToRoot as needed in TreePath 
public MyNode[] getPathToRoot(MyNode node) {
    ArrayList<MyNode> itemArrayList = new ArrayList<MyNode>();
    // TODO - Add root node ?
    // yes, certainly - please read the java doc for TreePath
    while ((node != null)) { // && (node != root)) {
        itemArrayList.add(0, node);
        node = node.getLocation();
    }
    return itemArrayList
            .toArray(new MyNode[itemArrayList.size()]);
}
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