Okay, this is most probably not exactly the solution you are looking for, because my solution is targetted at the standard flash core TextField class, not some specific Flex compontent. But I guess by looking at the code you should be able to understand what happens and transfer that to the component as well.
Basically what I did is that I always check where the current cursor is using the selection, then I get the responding lines and draw some kind of highlight in the background that highlights the current rows. Note that I did it rather easy by simply basing on a single font, so the line height will always be the same. You could however make that work for different fonts within a single text field, by using the TextLineMetrics class and calculating the actual offsets more accurately. As this is a lot more work, and the highlight probably only makes sense for a single font environment, I left it out. My example below uses Courier, but it should automatically work with any font at any size.
package
{
import flash.display.Shape;
import flash.display.Sprite;
import flash.events.Event;
import flash.text.TextField;
import flash.text.TextFieldType;
import flash.text.TextFormat;
import flash.text.TextLineMetrics;
public class HighlightedTextField extends Sprite
{
private var textField:TextField;
private var highlighter:Shape;
private var metrics:TextLineMetrics;
private var selectionBegin:int = -1;
private var selectionEnd:int = -1;
private var lineBegin:int = -1;
private var lineEnd: int = -1;
public function HighlightedTextField()
{
this.graphics.beginFill( 0xEEEEEE );
this.graphics.drawRect( 5, 5, 290, 290 );
this.graphics.endFill();
// construct text field
textField = new TextField();
textField.width = 280;
textField.height = 280;
textField.x = 10;
textField.y = 10;
textField.background = false;
textField.selectable = true;
textField.multiline = true;
textField.defaultTextFormat = new TextFormat( 'Courier', 12 );
textField.type = TextFieldType.INPUT;
// construct line highlighter
highlighter = new Shape();
highlighter.graphics.beginFill( 0xCCCCCC );
highlighter.graphics.drawRect( 0, 0, textField.width, 1 );
highlighter.x = textField.x;
highlighter.y = textField.y;
this.addChild( highlighter );
this.addChild( textField );
this.addEventListener( Event.ENTER_FRAME, setHighlighter );
// get line metrics and initialize highlight
metrics = textField.getLineMetrics( 0 );
setHighlighter( null );
}
private function setHighlighter ( event:Event ):void
{
var changed:Boolean = false;
// cache checks to make sure that the selection has changed
if ( selectionBegin != textField.selectionBeginIndex )
{
selectionBegin = textField.selectionBeginIndex;
lineBegin = textField.getLineIndexOfChar( selectionBegin );
// when the caret is at the end of the text, getLineIndexOfChar will return -1
lineBegin = lineBegin != -1 ? lineBegin : textField.numLines - 1;
changed = true;
}
// same as above
if ( selectionEnd != textField.selectionEndIndex )
{
selectionEnd = textField.selectionEndIndex;
lineEnd = textField.getLineIndexOfChar( selectionEnd );
lineEnd = lineEnd != -1 ? lineEnd : textField.numLines - 1;
changed = true;
}
// only move the highlight when something has changed
if ( changed )
{
highlighter.y = textField.y + metrics.height * lineBegin + 2;
highlighter.height = textField.y + metrics.height * ( lineEnd + 1 ) + 2 - highlighter.y;
}
}
}
}
You can also see this solution on Wonderfl, along with a working demo.
TextAreado you use? Spark or MX? – Constantiner May 20 '11 at 17:47