This is my jTable

private JTable getJTable() {
    String[] colName = { "Name", "Email", "Contact No. 1", "Contact No. 2",
            "Group", "" };
    if (jTable == null) {
        jTable = new JTable() {
            public boolean isCellEditable(int nRow, int nCol) {
                return false;
            }
        };
    }
    DefaultTableModel contactTableModel = (DefaultTableModel) jTable
            .getModel();
    contactTableModel.setColumnIdentifiers(colName);
    jTable.setSelectionMode(ListSelectionModel.SINGLE_SELECTION);
    return jTable;
}

I will call this method to retrieve the data from database and put it into table model

public void setUpTableData() {
    DefaultTableModel tableModel = (DefaultTableModel) jTable.getModel();
    ArrayList<Contact> list = new ArrayList<Contact>();
    if (!con.equals(""))
        list = sql.getContactListsByGroup(con);
    else
        list = sql.getContactLists();
    for (int i = 0; i < list.size(); i++) {
        String[] data = new String[7];

            data[0] = list.get(i).getName();
            data[1] = list.get(i).getEmail();
            data[2] = list.get(i).getPhone1();
            data[3] = list.get(i).getPhone2();
            data[4] = list.get(i).getGroup();
            data[5] = list.get(i).getId();

        tableModel.addRow(data);
    }
    jTable.setModel(tableModel);
}

Currently I was using this method to refresh the table after updating the table data. I will frist clear the table

DefaultTableModel tableModel = (DefaultTableModel) jTable.getModel();
tableModel.setRowCount(0);

and then restructure the table model again so it will refresh the jTable. But I was thinking is there any best practices or better way to do that?

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4 Answers

up vote 11 down vote accepted

If you want to notify your JTable about changes of your data, use
tableModel.fireTableDataChanged()

From the documentation:

Notifies all listeners that all cell values in the table's rows may have changed. The number of rows may also have changed and the JTable should redraw the table from scratch. The structure of the table (as in the order of the columns) is assumed to be the same.

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do you mean i call this tableModel.fireTableDataChanged() everytime when i doing updating ? – user236501 Jul 5 '10 at 11:57
@newbie123: If you only insert new lines, you can use fireTableRowsInserted instead. On the other hand, the implementation of DefaultTableModel.addRow should already handle that... Isn't your table refreshed by addRow? – Peter Lang Jul 5 '10 at 11:59
I am using addRow it works but how about update? – user236501 Jul 5 '10 at 12:24
using setValue? – user236501 Jul 5 '10 at 12:28
Use setValueAt, DefaultTableModel fires the event. – Peter Lang Jul 5 '10 at 12:40
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The faster way for your case is:

    jTable.repaint(); // Repaint all the component (all Cells).

The optimized way when one or few cell change:

    ((AbstractTableModel) jTable.getModel()).fireTableCellUpdated(x, 0); // Repaint one cell.
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I did it like this in my Jtable its autorefreshing after 300 ms;

DefaultTableModel tableModel = new DefaultTableModel(){
public boolean isCellEditable(int nRow, int nCol) {
                return false;
            }
};
JTable table = new JTable();

Timer t = new Timer(300, new ActionListener() {

            @Override
            public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
                addColumns();
                remakeData(set);
                table.setModel(model);
            }
        });
        t.start();

private void addColumns() {
        model.setColumnCount(0);
        model.addColumn("NAME");
            model.addColumn("EMAIL");} 

 private void remakeData(CollectionType< Objects > name) {
    model.setRowCount(0);
    for (CollectionType Objects : name){
    String n = Object.getName();
    String e = Object.getEmail();
    model.insertRow(model.getRowCount(),new Object[] { n,e });
    }}

I doubt it will do good with large number of objects like over 500, only other way is to implement TableModelListener in your class, but i did not understand how to use it well. look at http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/uiswing/components/table.html#modelchange

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Would it not be better to use java.util.Observable and java.util.Observer that will cause the table to update?

kind regards.

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1  
not, sure not, don't do that, why simulated JTable's built-in option and out from EDT – mKorbel Oct 16 '11 at 12:10
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