28

I'm writing a simple console application (80x24) in Java.

Is there a gotoxy(x,y) equivalent for the console?

5 Answers 5

42

If by gotoxy(x,y), you want to reposition your cursor somewhere specific on the console, you can usually use VT100 control codes to do this. See http://www.termsys.demon.co.uk/vtansi.htm.

Do something like

char escCode = 0x1B;
int row = 10; int column = 10;
System.out.print(String.format("%c[%d;%df",escCode,row,column));

Which should move the cursor to position 10,10 on the console.

6
  • 2
    These are ANSI control codes. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code ANSI's even in the end of the link, but I don't blame you for not recognizing it.
    – Riking
    Nov 24, 2012 at 6:26
  • I think actually this can work even in Windows! Simply run your program in PowerShell instead of the in the regular command prompt. Either start PowerShell and then from there run your program or in the regular command prompt type powershell to start PowerShell and then in PowerShell start your program. This might require Windows 10 with the Anniversary Update.
    – Tmr
    Oct 10, 2016 at 8:30
  • @bmdelacruz doesn't work in my Windows 7 PowerShell :( Did you run it with any option?
    – Matthieu
    Mar 9, 2018 at 9:36
  • I used Windows 10 Powershell to try it out. I'm sorry, i don't know if i tried to run it with any options. I can't even remember where I used this. 😂
    – bmdelacruz
    Mar 9, 2018 at 9:47
  • For me it doesn't work on Windows 10 (neither powershell, nor cmd), but it does work on cygwin.
    – maraswrona
    Sep 28, 2018 at 15:40
8

I don't think there's a built-in function to do that in Java. There's a Java curses library called JCurses that you can use though.

4

Not without pulling in a console curses style library...

You can try javacurses and see if that helps you.

4

I found Lanterna to be a very good library. It does not dependend on any native library but runs 100% in pure Java.

It offers a Screen class which allows text output based on a coordinate system. For OS with a graphical environment it uses a Swing based terminal emulator. Unfortunately, you are not able to force terminal mode on Windows, so if you really need the terminal, use one of the solutions in the other answers.

2
  • I only found laterna could do the one, very basic thing I neded: write(char, x, y, foreground, background). do you know of a more recent replacement or any alternatives? i'll probably go with laterna but found this topic difficult to research.
    – oberhamsi
    Aug 18, 2013 at 19:16
  • 1
    @oberhamsi: Use screen.putString(). Example: screen.putString(0, 0, "foo", Color.WHITE, Color.BLACK);
    – CodeZombie
    Aug 27, 2013 at 9:17
0

The easiest way to do that in my opinion is using ANSI escape sequences.

For this specific operation we'll use the escape sequence H, to move to the point x,y we'll print to the screen ESC x;yH.

In java that will be System.out.print("\u001B" + x + ";" + y + "H");

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