I\'m aware of JList
and JComboBox
. I need the combo box drop down functionality with multiple selection functionality that JList
provi
If your data has a hierarchical character, consider NetBeans' Outline
component, discussed in Announcing the new Swing Tree Table and in this answer. Here's the Current Development Version of the API.
To achieve the described functionality, I finally decided to "abuse" the JMenuBar
and add to it several JCheckBoxMenuItems
. The GUI then perfectly fits the purpose (at least for me), it is just the handling of the ItemEvent that risks to become a bit annoying.
(finally there, I defined some bit logic over the items, and then may restrict myself to handling only one type of event)
You can make a custom cell renderer for the combobox and add checkboxes to that components, so you can check and uncheck them. You have to make something like this:
public class MyComboBoxRenderer implements ListCellRenderer {
private String[] items;
private boolean[] selected;
public MyComboBoxRenderer(String[] items){
this.items = items;
this.selected = new boolean[items.lenght];
}
public Component getListCellRendererComponent(JTable table, Object value,
boolean isSelected, boolean hasFocus, int index) {
// Create here a JLabel with the text
// Create here a JCheckBox
// Add them to a layoutmanager
return this;
}
public void setSelected(int i, boolean flag)
{
this.selected[i] = flag;
}
}
When using multi-select, it's better to use a list than a combo box. As GUI metaphors go, people expect a combo box to be single select, whereas lists can be either.
the contents of the list are too huge to be displayed using a simple list
Place the JList
in a JScrollPane
. You can call setVisibleRowCount(int) on the JList
to specify how many rows at a time should be shown.