If all the hard work is already done and you just have a result set to print, then it could be as simple as a succession of calls to System.out.print() for each result and then finish the line with a \n. It can be nested in a FOR loop, so if you have an int with the number of fields to print, just iterate through them.
In a more complicated case when you have a full list where some fields are chosen and others not, then you could use a (slightly) crude method like this:
...
String[] chosenFields = {"Field 1", "Field 2" /*, (et cetera) */};
for (int i = 0; i < numberOfFields; i++)
{
for (int j = 0; j < chosenFields.length; j++)
{
if (fieldsName[i].equals(chosenFields[j]))
System.out.print(fields[i] + " ");
break;
}
}
System.out.println();
...
Sorry about bad indentation; not sure how to sort it on here!
If field names are indeterminate at runtime and you're using Java to execute queries, consider using class ResultSetMetaData to get them.
EDIT:
As an example, here's some of my code which gets all the field names from a table, then creates a tickbox for each, which the user can select or deselect. All the JFrame GUI stuff I've omitted. When the user presses a submit button, the application check each tickbox and constructs an SQL statement to suit the users request.
...
JCheckBox[] jcb;
ResultSetMetaData rsmd;
private void makeCheckBoxes()
{
initConnection(); // Establish connection to MySQL server
try
{
Statement query = connection.createStatement();
ResultSet rs = query.executeQuery("SELECT * FROM client_db;");
rsmd = rs.getMetaData();
noOfColumns = rsmd.getColumnCount();
jcb = new JCheckBox[noOfColumns];
for (int i = 0; i < noOfColumns; i++)
{
jcb[i] = new JCheckBox(rsmd.getColumnName(i + 1));
jpCheckBoxes.add(jcb[i]);
jcb[i].setEnabled(false);
jcbComboBox.addItem(rsmd.getColumnName(i + 1));
}
jcb[0].setSelected(true);
rs.close();
query.close();
connection.close();
}
catch (SQLException e)
{
System.err.println("!> Caught SQLException:\n" + e.getMessage());
System.exit(1);
}
}
...
if (e.getSource() == jbSubmit)
{
String query = "";
initConnection();
if (jtfSearch.getText().isEmpty() == true) // JTextField
{
jtaResults.setText(null); // JTextArea
jtaResults.append("Please enter some search text in the text box above!\n");
return;
}
else
{
int selectedFields;
if (jrbAll.isSelected() == true) // JRadioButton
{
query = "SELECT *";
selectedFields = -1;
}
else
{
query = "SELECT";
selectedFields = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < noOfColumns; i++)
if (jcb[i].isSelected() == true)
{
try
{
if (selectedFields > 0)
query += ",";
query += " " + rsmd.getColumnName(i + 1);
}
catch (SQLException err)
{
System.err.println("!> Caught SQLException:\n" + err.getMessage());
System.exit(1);
}
selectedFields++;
}
}
if (selectedFields == 0)
{
jtaResults.setText(null);
jtaResults.append("No fields were selected!!\n");
return;
}
else
{
query += " FROM client_db WHERE " + jcbComboBox.getSelectedItem() + " LIKE '%" + jtfSearch.getText() + "%'";
if (jcbCurrentClients.isSelected() == true)
query += " AND currentClient LIKE 'y'";
query += ";";
}
}
System.out.println("Query = \"" + query + "\"");
/* Now, print it out in the text area!! */
try
{
Statement stmt = connection.createStatement();
ResultSet rs = stmt.executeQuery(query);
ResultSetMetaData rsMetaData = rs.getMetaData();
int columnCount = rsMetaData.getColumnCount();
jtaResults.append("--------------------------------\n");
int noOfResults = 0;
jtaResults.setText(null);
while (rs.next() == true)
{
if (noOfResults > 0)
jtaResults.append("\n");
jtaResults.append("* Search match " + (noOfResults + 1) + ":\n");
for (int i = 0; i < columnCount; i++)
{
jtaResults.append("-> " + rsMetaData.getColumnName(i + 1) + ": " +
rs.getString(i + 1) + "\n");
}
noOfResults++;
}
if (noOfResults == 0)
{
jtaResults.append("No results were returned; please try again with more ambiguous search terms.\n\n");
}
//scroller.setScrollPosition(0, 1048576);
rs.close();
stmt.close();
connection.close();
}
catch (SQLException err)
{
System.err.println("!> Caught SQLException:\n" + err.getMessage());
System.exit(1);
}
}
}
Hopefully this helps. The sustained concatenation to query forms a valid SQL statement based on the fields the user chose. Hopefully a few modifications to this to just print certain fields will help you. The System.out.println() call to print query about two-thirds down is a good place to work from.