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I have a question about implementing a Swing control which uses a custom class as one of its properties. My goal is to use this control within the netbeans IDE and configure it in design-time like any other component. I already implemented a custom property editor for my ConnectionInfo object which works fine.

However - when I configure my IntLEDs ConnectionInfo property in Netbeans and save it, I can see, in the generated code by Netbeans, that it had troubles to init my ConnectionInfo class.

This is actually what the Netbeans IDE generated:

intLED1.setConnection(???);

So I guess that Netbeans doesn't know how to instantiate my ConnectionInfo class. But how to tell Netbeans how to do it? :)

This code is basicly a stripped version of my component

public class IntLED extends JPanel {

  private ConnectionInfo connection = new ConnectionInfo("", 11159, "", "", Variable.VARIABLE_TYPE.INT);

  public IntLED() {
      initComponents();

      PropertyEditorManager.registerEditor(ConnectionInfo.class, PviCpuPropertyEditor.class);
  }

  public ConnectionInfo getConnection() {
      return connection;
  }

  public void setConnection(ConnectionInfo connection) {
      this.connection = connection;
  }
}

Here the ConnectionInfo code. Just some members and Getters/Setters.

public class ConnectionInfo {
  private String pviHost = "";
  private int    pviPort = 11159;
  private String pviTask = "";
  private String pviVarname = "";
  private Variable.VARIABLE_TYPE pviType;

  public ConnectionInfo() {
  }

  public ConnectionInfo(String pviHost, int pviPort, String pviTask, String pviVarname, Variable.VARIABLE_TYPE type) {
      this.pviHost = pviHost;
      this.pviPort = pviPort;
      this.pviTask = pviTask;
      this.pviVarname = pviVarname;
      this.pviType = type;
  }



  public String getPviHost() {
      return pviHost;
  }

  public void setPviHost(String pviHost) {
      this.pviHost = pviHost;
  }

  public int getPviPort() {
      return pviPort;
  }

  public void setPviPort(int pviPort) {
      this.pviPort = pviPort;
  }

  public String getPviTask() {
      return pviTask;
  }

  public void setPviTask(String pviTask) {
      this.pviTask = pviTask;
  }

  public String getPviVarname() {
      return pviVarname;
  }

  public void setPviVarname(String pviVarname) {
      this.pviVarname = pviVarname;
  }

  public Variable.VARIABLE_TYPE getPviType() {
      return pviType;
  }

  public void setPviVarname(Variable.VARIABLE_TYPE pviType) {
      this.pviType = pviType;
  }
}

I also tried to put the members of the ConnectionInfo-Class directly into my IntLED-Class which works fine! But I really need to let the user configure those Members directly in one editor since the editor also provides a tester to test those settings et cetera.

I hope someone can point me to the right direction :)

Thank you very much in advance!

2 Answers 2

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I found the 'missing link' between my Custom Property and the Matisse Code generator!

In my Custom Property Editor (which extends PropertyEditorSupport) I did not override the method getJavaInitializationString(). Apperently when this method is not overwritten, it returns '???' which is exactly what I saw.

Here is how I fixed it:

@Override
public String getJavaInitializationString() {
    return String.format("new ConnectionInfo(\"%s\", %d, \"%s\", \"%s\", Variable.VariableType.BOOLEAN)", getValue().getHost(), getValue().getPort(), getValue().getTask(), getValue().getVarname()); 
}

Surely there should be some Nullpointer checks and so on. But this is basicly how to tell Matisse how to init your Custom Class!

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  • That's handy to know.
    – ryvantage
    Dec 26, 2013 at 14:29
0

I hope I'm understanding your question, but as I see it you want to be able to add your custom JPanel (IntLED) as a component that you can use in the GUI Editor (Matisse) like every other component?

There is an answer here (https://stackoverflow.com/a/18409887/963076) that explains how to add custom components to the GUI Editor.

EDIT:

Ok, I see. To change the code that Netbeans is generating, you should look for that parameter in the Properties dialog for that component. Right click the component and click "Properties." Then find connection in the list of properties. connection should appear because Netbeans looks for all get() and set() methods and adds them as properties that you can edit. Once you find connection press the ... button to the right. It'll bring up a dialog allowing you to set that component's property. You'll probably need to select "custom code".

(In the pictures below, I used the columnModel property as an illustration).

enter image description here

From the screen below, select "custom code".

enter image description here

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  • Hi ryvantage. Thank you alot for your response. Unfortunately my problem is not the custom component (IntLED) itself, but the ConnectionInfo-Member of my IntLED. Whenever I configure the ConnectionInfo-Member using Matisse and then save the form, Netbeans generates invalid Java code within the initComponents() method. intLED1.setConnection(???);. And this is the Problem I encouter. The three Questionmarks should be something like intLED1.setConnection(new ConnectionInfo("host", 12345, "task", "type", Types.Boolean); depending on how I configured the Member in Matisse. Happy xmas :)
    – superm4n
    Dec 25, 2013 at 18:48
  • Dear ryvantage. At first let me thank you again for taking your time to answer me. I am aware of the fact that I can use custom code to init my controls. However my want to know how to 'teach' netbeans how to construct my Connection class with the settings I configured in the Property editor. I sadly cannot post images bacause lack of rep. Instead I uploaded what I have done so far at imgur.com/XuXXSce . I hope this helps to understand my actual issue. I am sorry if my question was not clear enough.
    – superm4n
    Dec 26, 2013 at 7:51
  • I found the problem :) See my answer below. I cannot accept it yet. But this is exactly how to solve it! Thank you very much for your time ryvantage!
    – superm4n
    Dec 26, 2013 at 9:34

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