If I take a JTable and specify a column's classtype on it's model as follows:

   DefaultTableModel model = new DefaultTableModel(columnNames, 100) {
       @Override
        public Class<?> getColumnClass(int columnIndex) {
            return Integer.class;
        }};

Then whenever a user tries to enter a double value into the table, Swing automatically rejects the input and sets the cell's outline to red.

I want the same effect to occur when someone enters a 'negative or 0' input to the cell. I've got this:

    @Override
    public void setValueAt(Object val, int rowIndex, int columnIndex) {
       if (val instanceof Number && ((Number) val).doubleValue() > 0) {
              super.setValueAt(val, rowIndex, columnIndex);
            } 
       }
   }

This prevents the cell from accepting any non-positive values, but it doens't set the color to red and leave the cell as editable.

I tried looking into how JTable's doing the rejection by default, but I can't seem to find it.

How can I make it reject the non-positive input the same way it rejects the non-Integer input?

Thanks

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2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

The private static class JTable.GenericEditor uses introspection to catch exceptions raised by constructing specific Number subclasses with invalid String values. If you don't need such generic behavior, consider creating PositiveIntegerCellEditor as a subclass of DefaultCellEditor. Your stopCellEditing() method would be correspondingly simpler.

Addendum: Updated to use RIGHT alignment and common error code.

Addendum: See also Using an Editor to Validate User-Entered Text.

enter image description here

    private static class PositiveIntegerCellEditor extends DefaultCellEditor {

    private static final Border red = new LineBorder(Color.red);
    private static final Border black = new LineBorder(Color.black);
    private JTextField textField;

    public PositiveIntegerCellEditor(JTextField textField) {
        super(textField);
        this.textField = textField;
        this.textField.setHorizontalAlignment(JTextField.RIGHT);
    }

    @Override
    public boolean stopCellEditing() {
        try {
            int v = Integer.valueOf(textField.getText());
            if (v < 0) {
                throw new NumberFormatException();
            }
        } catch (NumberFormatException e) {
            textField.setBorder(red);
            return false;
        }
        return super.stopCellEditing();
    }

    @Override
    public Component getTableCellEditorComponent(JTable table,
        Object value, boolean isSelected, int row, int column) {
        textField.setBorder(black);
        return super.getTableCellEditorComponent(
            table, value, isSelected, row, column);
    }
}
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Thanks this is much cleaner. I did go back and update my code to be less generic, since I was only seeking to use it in a specific place where I could control its use. – Cuga Oct 4 '11 at 2:24
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I figured it out. Override the DefaultCellEditor and return false / set the border to red if the number given is not positive.

Unfortunately, since JTable.GenericEditor is static w/ default scope, I'm unable to override the GenericEditor to provide this functionality and have to re-implement it w/ a few tweaks, unless someone has a better way of doing this, which I'd like to hear.

    @SuppressWarnings("serial")
    class PositiveNumericCellEditor extends DefaultCellEditor {

        Class[] argTypes = new Class[]{String.class};
        java.lang.reflect.Constructor constructor;
        Object value;

        public PositiveNumericCellEditor() {
            super(new JTextField());
            getComponent().setName("Table.editor");
            ((JTextField)getComponent()).setHorizontalAlignment(JTextField.RIGHT);
        }

        public boolean stopCellEditing() {
            String s = (String)super.getCellEditorValue();
            if ("".equals(s)) {
                if (constructor.getDeclaringClass() == String.class) {
                    value = s;
                }
                super.stopCellEditing();
            }

            try {
                value = constructor.newInstance(new Object[]{s});
                if (value instanceof Number && ((Number) value).doubleValue() > 0)
                {
                    return super.stopCellEditing();
                } else {
                    throw new RuntimeException("Input must be a positive number."); 
                }
            }
            catch (Exception e) {
                ((JComponent)getComponent()).setBorder(new LineBorder(Color.red));
                return false;
            }
        }

        public Component getTableCellEditorComponent(JTable table, Object value,
                                                 boolean isSelected,
                                                 int row, int column) {
            this.value = null;
            ((JComponent)getComponent()).setBorder(new LineBorder(Color.black));
            try {
                Class type = table.getColumnClass(column);
                if (type == Object.class) {
                    type = String.class;
                }
                constructor = type.getConstructor(argTypes);
            }
            catch (Exception e) {
                return null;
            }
            return super.getTableCellEditorComponent(table, value, isSelected, row, column);
        }

        public Object getCellEditorValue() {
            return value;
        }
    }
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+1 for genericity. You could try passing a Class Literal as Runtime-Type Token to the constructor, but it's not especially simpler. – trashgod Sep 24 '11 at 20:55
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