The sample CoffeesFrame.java
demonstrates how to integrate JDBC with a GUI API, in particular, the Swing API. It displays the contents of the COFFEES
database table in a table and contains fields and buttons that enable you to add rows to the table. The following is a screenshot of this sample:
The sample contains five text fields that correspond to each of the columns in the COFFEES
table. It also contains three buttons:
COFFEES
based on the data in the sample's table.COFFEES
table, replacing the existing data in the sample's table.This sample (which requires CoffeesTableModel
) demonstrates the following general steps to integrate JDBC with the Swing API:
TableModel
interfaceRowSetListener
interfaceThe TableModel
interface enables a Java Swing application to manage data in a JTable
object. The sample, CoffeesTableModel.java
, implements this interface. It specifies how a JTable
object should retrieve data from a RowSet
object and display it in a table.
Note: Although this sample displays the contents of the COFFEES
table in a Swing application, the class CoffeesTableModel
should work for any SQL table provided that its data can be represented with String
objects. (However, the fields that enable users to add rows to COFFEES
, which are specified in the class CoffeesFrame
, would have to be modified for other SQL tables.)
Before implementing the methods of the interface TableModel
, the constructor of the class CoffeeTableModel
initializes various member variables required for these implemented methods as follows:
public CoffeesTableModel( CachedRowSet rowSetArg) throws SQLException { this.coffeesRowSet = rowSetArg; this.metadata = this.coffeesRowSet.getMetaData(); numcols = metadata.getColumnCount(); // Retrieve the number of rows. this.coffeesRowSet.beforeFirst(); this.numrows = 0; while (this.coffeesRowSet.next()) { this.numrows++; } this.coffeesRowSet.beforeFirst(); }
The following describes the member variables initialized in this constructor:
CachedRowSet coffeesRowSet
: Stores the contents of the table COFFEES
.
This sample uses a RowSet
object, in particular, a CachedRowSet
object, rather than a ResultSet
object for two reasons. A CachedRowSet
object enables the user of the application to make changes to the data contained in it without being connected to the database. In addition, because a CachedRowSet
object is a JavaBeans component, it can notify other components when certain things happen to it. In this sample, when a new row is added to the CachedRowSet
object, it notifies the Swing component that is rendering its data in a table to refresh itself and display the new row.
ResultSetMetaData metadata
: Retrieves the number of columns in the table COFFEES
as well as the names of each of them.
int numcols, numrows
: Stores the number of columns and rows, respectively, in the table COFFEES
.
The CoffeesTableModel.java
sample implements the following methods from TableModel
interface:
Class<?> getColumnClass(int columnIndex)
: Returns the most specific superclass for all the cell values in the column.int getColumnCount()
: Returns the number of columns in the model.String getColumnName(int columnIndex)
: Returns the name of the column specified by the parameter columnIndex
.int getRowCount()
: Returns the number of rows in the model.Object getValueAt(int rowIndex, int columnIndex)
: Returns the value for the cell at intersection of the column columnIndex
and the row rowIndex
.boolean isCellEditable(int rowIndex, int columnIndex)
: Returns true if the cell at the intersection of the column rowIndex
and the row columnIndex
can be edited.The following methods have not been implemented because this sample does not allow users to directly edit the contents of the table:
void addTableModelListener(TableModelListener l)
: Adds a listener to the list that is notified each time a change to the data model occurs.void removeTableModelListener(TableModelListener l)
: Removes a listener from the list that is notified each time a change to the data model occurs.void setValueAt(Object aValue, int rowIndex, int columnIndex)
: Sets the value in the cell at the intersection of the column columnIndex
and the row rowIndex
to the object aValue
.The methods getColumnCount
and getRowCount
return the value of the member variables numcols
and numrows
, respectively:
public int getColumnCount() { return numcols; } public int getRowCount() { return numrows; }
The getColumnClass
method returns the data type of the specified column. To keep things simple, this method returns the String
class, thereby converting all data in the table into String
objects. The JTable
class uses this method to determine how to render data in the GUI application.
public Class getColumnClass(int column) { return String.class; }
The getColumnName
method returns the name of the specified column. The JTable
class uses this method to label each of its columns.
public String getColumnName(int column) { try { return this.metadata.getColumnLabel( column + 1); } catch (SQLException e) { return e.toString(); } }
The getColumnAt
method retrieves the value at the specified row and column in the row set coffeesRowSet
. The JTable
class uses this method to populate its table. Note that SQL starts numbering its rows and columns at 1, but the TableModel
interface starts at 0; this is the reason why the rowIndex
and columnIndex
values are incremented by 1.
public Object getValueAt( int rowIndex, int columnIndex) { try { this.coffeesRowSet.absolute(rowIndex + 1); Object o = this.coffeesRowSet. getObject(columnIndex + 1); if (o == null) return null; else return o.toString(); } catch (SQLException e) { return e.toString(); } }
Because this sample does not allow users to directly edit the contents of the table (rows are added by another window control), this method returns false
regardless of the values of rowIndex
and columnIndex
:
public boolean isCellEditable( int rowIndex, int columnIndex) { return false; }
The class CoffeesFrame
implements only one method from the interface RowSetListener
, rowChanged
. This method is called when a user adds a row to the table.
public void rowChanged(RowSetEvent event) { CachedRowSet currentRowSet = this.myCoffeesTableModel.coffeesRowSet; try { currentRowSet.moveToCurrentRow(); myCoffeesTableModel = new CoffeesTableModel( myCoffeesTableModel.getCoffeesRowSet()); table.setModel(myCoffeesTableModel); } catch (SQLException ex) { JDBCTutorialUtilities.printSQLException(ex); // Display the error in a dialog box. JOptionPane.showMessageDialog( CoffeesFrame.this, new String[] { // Display a 2-line message ex.getClass().getName() + ": ", ex.getMessage() } ); } }
This method updates the table in the GUI application.
The constructor of the class CoffeesFrame
initializes and lays out the Swing components. The following statement retrieves the contents of the COFFEES
table, stores the contents in the CachedRowSet
object myCachedRowSet
, and initializes the JTable
Swing component:
CachedRowSet myCachedRowSet = getContentsOfCoffeesTable(); myCoffeesTableModel = new CoffeesTableModel(myCachedRowSet); myCoffeesTableModel.addEventHandlersToRowSet(this); // Displays the table table = new JTable(); table.setModel(myCoffeesTableModel);
As mentioned previously, instead of a ResultSet
object to represent the contents of the COFFEES
table, this sample uses a RowSet
object, notably a CachedRowSet
object.
The method CoffeesFrame.getContentsOfCoffeesTable
retrieves the contents of the table COFFEES
.
The method CoffeesTableModel.addEventHandlersToRowSet
adds the event handler defined in the CoffeesFrame
class, which is the method rowChanged
, to the row set member variable CoffeesTableModel.coffeesRowSet
. This enables the class CoffeesFrame
to notify the row set coffeesRowSet
of any events, in particular, when a user clicks the button Add row to table, Update database, or Discard changes. When the row set coffeesRowSet
is notified of one of these changes, the method CoffeesFrame.rowChanged
is called.
The statement table.setModel(myCoffeesTableModel)
specifies that it use the CoffeesTableModel
object myCoffeesTableModel
to populate the JTable
Swing component table
.
The following statements specify that the CoffeesFrame
class use the layout GridBagLayout
to lay out its Swing components:
Container contentPane = getContentPane(); contentPane.setComponentOrientation( ComponentOrientation.LEFT_TO_RIGHT); contentPane.setLayout(new GridBagLayout()); GridBagConstraints c = new GridBagConstraints();
See
How to Use GridBagLayout in the
Creating a GUI With JFC/Swing for more information about using the layout GridBagLayout
.
See the source code for CoffeesFrame.java
to see how the Swing components of this sample are added to the layout GridBagLayout
.
The following statement adds a listener to the button Add row to table:
button_ADD_ROW.addActionListener( new ActionListener() { public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { JOptionPane.showMessageDialog( CoffeesFrame.this, new String[] { "Adding the following row:", "Coffee name: [" + textField_COF_NAME.getText() + "]", "Supplier ID: [" + textField_SUP_ID.getText() + "]", "Price: [" + textField_PRICE.getText() + "]", "Sales: [" + textField_SALES.getText() + "]", "Total: [" + textField_TOTAL.getText() + "]" } ); try { myCoffeesTableModel.insertRow( textField_COF_NAME.getText(), Integer.parseInt(textField_SUP_ID. getText().trim()), Float.parseFloat(textField_PRICE. getText().trim()), Integer.parseInt(textField_SALES. getText().trim()), Integer.parseInt(textField_TOTAL. getText().trim()) ); } catch (SQLException sqle) { displaySQLExceptionDialog(sqle); } } });
When a user clicks this button, it performs the following:
CoffeesTableModel.insertRow
, which adds the row to the member variable CoffeesTableModel.coffeesRowSet
.If an SQLException
is thrown, then the method CoffeesFrame.displaySQLExceptionDialog
creates a message dialog box that displays the content of the SQLException
.
The following statement adds a listener to the button Update database:
button_UPDATE_DATABASE.addActionListener( new ActionListener() { public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { try { myCoffeesTableModel. coffeesRowSet.acceptChanges(); msgline.setText("Updated database"); } catch (SQLException sqle) { displaySQLExceptionDialog(sqle); // Now revert back changes try { createNewTableModel(); msgline.setText( "Discarded changes"); } catch (SQLException sqle2) { displaySQLExceptionDialog(sqle2); } } } } );
When a user clicks this button, the table COFFEES
is updated with the contents of the row set myCoffeesTableModel.coffeesRowSet
.
The following statement adds a listener to the button Discard changes:
button_DISCARD_CHANGES.addActionListener( new ActionListener() { public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { try { createNewTableModel(); } catch (SQLException sqle) { displaySQLExceptionDialog(sqle); } } } );
When a user clicks this button, the method CoffeesFrame.createNewTableModel
is called, which repopulates the JTable
component with the contents of the COFFEES
table.