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Using Swing Components
How to Use Text Fields
A text field is a basic text control
that enables the user to type a small amount of text.
When the user indicates that text entry is complete
(usually by pressing Enter),
the text field fires an
action event.
If you need to obtain more than one line of input from the user,
use a
text area.
The Swing API provides several classes for
components that are either varieties of text fields
or that include text fields.
JTextField |
What this section covers:
basic text fields.
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JFormattedTextField
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A JTextField subclass
that allows you to specify the legal set of characters
that the user can enter.
See
How to Use Formatted Text Fields.
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JPasswordField
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A JTextField subclass
that does not show the characters that the user types.
See
How to Use Password Fields.
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JComboBox
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Can be edited,
and provides a menu of strings to choose from.
See
How to Use Combo Boxes.
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JSpinner
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Combines a formatted text field
with a couple of small buttons
that enables the user
to choose the previous or next available value.
See
How to Use Spinners.
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The following example displays a basic text field and a text area.
The text field is editable. The text area is not editable.
When the user presses Enter
in the text field,
the program copies the text field's
contents to the text area,
and then selects all the text in the text field.
Click the Launch button
to run TextDemo using
Java™ Web Start
(download JDK 6).
Alternatively, to compile and run the example yourself,
consult the
example index.
You can find the entire code for this program in
TextDemo.java.
The following code
creates and sets up the text field:
textField = new JTextField(20);
The integer argument passed
to the JTextField constructor,
20 in the example,
indicates the number of columns in the field.
This number is used along with metrics provided by
the field's current font
to calculate the field's preferred width.
It does not limit the number of characters the user
can enter.
To do that, you can either use a
formatted text field
or a
document listener,
as described in
Text Component Features.
Note: We encourage you to specify the number of columns
for each text field.
If you do not specify the number of columns or a preferred size,
then the field's preferred size changes whenever the text changes,
which can result in unwanted layout updates.
The next line of code
registers a TextDemo object
as an action listener for the text field.
textField.addActionListener(this);
The actionPerformed method
handles action events from the text field:
private final static String newline = "\n";
...
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent evt) {
String text = textField.getText();
textArea.append(text + newline);
textField.selectAll();
}
Notice the use of JTextField's getText
method to retrieve the text currently contained by the text field.
The text returned by this method
does not include a newline character
for the Enter key that fired the action event.
You have seen how a basic text field can be used.
Because the JTextField class inherits from
the JTextComponent class,
text fields are very flexible and can be customized almost
any way you like.
For example, you can add a document listener
or a document filter
to be notified when the text changes, and
in the filter case you can
modify the text field accordingly.
Information on text components can be found in
Text Component Features.
Before customizing a JTextField,
however,
make sure that one of the other
components based on text fields
will not do the job for you.
Often text fields are paired with
labels that describe the text fields.
See Examples That Use Text Fields
for pointers on creating these pairs.
The TextFieldDemo example
introduces a text field and a text area.
You can find the entire code for this program in
TextFieldDemo.java.
As you type characters in the text field the program searches for the typed text
in the text area. If the entry is found it gets highlighted.
If the program fails to find the entry then
the text field's background becomes pink.
A status bar below the text area displays a message
whether text is found or not.
The Escape key is used to start a new search or to finish the current one.
Here is a picture of the TextFieldDemo application.
Click the Launch button
ro run TextFieldDemo using
Java™ Web Start
(download JDK 6).
Alternatively, to compile and run the example yourself,
consult the example index.
To highlight text, this example uses
a highlighter and a painter.
The code below creates and sets up the highlighter and the painter
for the text area.
final Highlighter hilit;
final Highlighter.HighlightPainter painter;
...
hilit = new DefaultHighlighter();
painter = new DefaultHighlighter.DefaultHighlightPainter(HILIT_COLOR);
textArea.setHighlighter(hilit);
This code adds a document listener to the text field's document.
entry.getDocument().addDocumentListener(this);
Document listener's insertUpdate
and removeUpdate methods call the search method,
which not only performs a search in the text area
but also handles highlighting.
The following code highlights the found text,
sets the caret to the end of the found match,
sets the default background for the text field,
and displays a message in the status bar.
hilit.addHighlight(index, end, painter);
textArea.setCaretPosition(end);
entry.setBackground(entryBg);
message("'" + s + "' found. Press ESC to end search");
The status bar is a JLabel object.
The code below shows how the message method is implemented.
private JLabel status;
...
void message(String msg) {
status.setText(msg);
}
If there is no match in the text area, the following code
changes the text field's background to pink
and displays a proper information message.
entry.setBackground(ERROR_COLOR);
message("'" + s + "' not found. Press ESC to start a new search");
The CancelAction class is responsible
for handling the Escape key as follows.
class CancelAction extends AbstractAction {
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent ev) {
hilit.removeAllHighlights();
entry.setText("");
entry.setBackground(entryBg);
}
}
The following tables list the commonly used
JTextField
constructors and methods.
Other methods you are likely to call
are defined in the JTextComponent class.
Refer to
The Text Component API.
You might also invoke methods on a
text field
inherited from the text field's other ancestors,
such as setPreferredSize,
setForeground,
setBackground,
setFont, and so on.
See
The JComponent Class
for tables of commonly used inherited methods.
The API for using text fields
falls into these categories:
This table shows a few of the examples that use text fields
and points to where those examples are described.
For examples of code that are similar among all varieties of text fields
such as dealing with layout,
look at the example lists for related components such as
formatted text fields and
spinners.
| Example
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Where Described
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Notes
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| TextDemo
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This section
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An application that uses a basic text field with an action listener.
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| TextFieldDemo
|
This section
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An application that uses a text field and a text area.
A search is made in the text area to find an entry from the text field.
|
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DialogDemo
|
How to Make Dialogs
|
CustomDialog.java includes a text field
whose value is checked.
You can bring up the dialog by clicking the More Dialogs tab,
selecting the Input-validating dialog option,
and then clicking the Show it! button.
|
|
TextSamplerDemo
|
Using Text Components
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Lays out label-text field pairs using a GridBagLayout
and a convenience method:
addLabelTextRows(JLabel[] labels,
JTextField[] textFields,
GridBagLayout gridbag,
Container container)
|
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TextInputDemo
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How to Use Formatted Text Fields
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Lays out label-text field pairs using a SpringLayout
and a SpringUtilities convenience method:
makeCompactGrid(Container parent,
int rows, int cols,
int initialX, int initialY,
int xPad, int yPad)
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