vote up 1 vote down star

This is driving me absolutely insane.

I know that, to change the formatting of table cells with JTable, I have to use my own renderer. But I cannot seem to implement this properly.

This is my current setup:

public class MyClass
{
    public static void main(String args[])
    {
    	JTable myTable = new JTable(10, 10);
    	myTable.setDefaultRenderer ([I dont know what to put here], new CustomRenderer());
    }
}

class CustomRenderer extends DefaultTableCellRenderer 
{
    public Component getTableCellRendererComponent(JTable table, Object value, boolean isSelected, boolean hasFocus, int row, int column)
    {
    	Component c = super.getTableCellRendererComponent(table, value, isSelected, hasFocus, row, column);

    	// Formatting
    	return c;
    }
}

What do I need to use for the first parameter of setDefaultRenderer? The API just says 'class'. I have no idea what to put there.

Could someone just explain, in the simplest of terms, how I go about implementing this? Please provide an example of how I can change the formatting from within the main() method as well.

flag

1 Answer

vote up 5 vote down check

In the first parameter for setDefaultRenderer, put the class literal for the Class that you want to override rendering. I.e., if your data consist all of strings, you can put

myTable.setDefaultRenderer(String.class, new CustomRenderer());

If your data also consists of values with BigDecimal or Integer as classes, you have to invoke that method several times for each class type (BigDecimal.class or Integer.class in each case).

And finally, to change the background color you do this in your renderer:

class CustomRenderer extends DefaultTableCellRenderer 
{
    public Component getTableCellRendererComponent(JTable table, Object value, boolean isSelected, boolean hasFocus, int row, int column)
    {
        Component c = super.getTableCellRendererComponent(table, value, isSelected, hasFocus, row, column);
        c.setBackground(new java.awt.Color(255, 72, 72));
        return c;
    }
}
link|flag
This doesn't seem to work for me. The only thing I've done is invoke the setDefaultRenderer method and created the CustomRenderer class. Is there something else I need to be doing to get this to work? – Josh Leitzel May 3 at 23:41
Can you post your entire code here: rafb.net/paste ? – Camilo Díaz May 3 at 23:46
I got it working by using Object.class instead of String.class. Not sure why this was necessary, though, because all of my data were strings. Thank you for your help! – Josh Leitzel May 3 at 23:55
Am I not allowed to change the renderer inside a listener? I want to re-format the table when a button is pressed. – Josh Leitzel May 4 at 0:03
1  
You need to use Object.class because you created a JTable w/o passing in a TableModel. The default table model created returns Object.class for each columns type. See: TableModel::getColumnClass(int col) – kts May 4 at 12:57

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.