Reputation: 25096
I have a custom JTree
and a custom JModel
; I would for the JTree to "auto-expand" when I give it a new model. At the moment, it simply collapse all the nodes to the root.
Here is an example:
private class CustomTree extends JTree {
@Override
public boolean isExpanded(TreePath path) {
return ((Person) path.getLastPathComponent).hasChildren();
}
private class CustomTreeModel extends TreeModel {
// ... omitting various implementation details
@Override
public boolean isLeaf(Object object) {
return !((Person) object).hasChildren();
}
}
Model model = new Model();
Person bob = new Person();
Person alice = new Person();
bob.addChild(alice);
model.setRoot(bob);
JTree tree = new CustomTree(new CustomTreeModel(model));
At this point, the tree correctly displays:
- BOB
- ALICE
where Alice is a child of Bob (both in the data and in the visual tree)
However, if I call:
tree.setModel(new CustomTreeModel(model));
everything is collapsed:
+ BOB
Is there a way to "auto-expand" everything in the tree when setting a new model?
Upvotes: 25
Views: 33714
Reputation: 1
public void expandTree(){
int row = 1;
while (row++ < tree.getRowCount()){
tree.expandRow(row);
}
public void collapseTree(){
int row = tree.getRowCount() - 1;
while (row-- > 0){
tree.collapseRow(row);
}
}
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 351
this worked for me..
import javax.swing.*;
import javax.swing.tree.DefaultMutableTreeNode;
import javax.swing.tree.TreePath;
import javax.swing.tree.TreeNode;
import java.awt.*;
import java.awt.event.ActionListener;
import java.awt.event.ActionEvent;
import java.util.Enumeration;
public class JTreeNodeAutoExpandCollapse extends JFrame {
public JTreeNodeAutoExpandCollapse() throws HeadlessException {
initializeUI();
}
private void initializeUI() {
setSize(200, 200);
setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
DefaultMutableTreeNode root = new DefaultMutableTreeNode("Root");
DefaultMutableTreeNode chapter1 = new DefaultMutableTreeNode("Chapter 1");
DefaultMutableTreeNode sub1 = new DefaultMutableTreeNode("1.1");
DefaultMutableTreeNode sub2 = new DefaultMutableTreeNode("1.2");
DefaultMutableTreeNode sub3 = new DefaultMutableTreeNode("1.3");
DefaultMutableTreeNode sub31 = new DefaultMutableTreeNode("1.3.1");
DefaultMutableTreeNode sub32 = new DefaultMutableTreeNode("1.3.2");
root.add(chapter1);
chapter1.add(sub1);
chapter1.add(sub2);
chapter1.add(sub3);
sub3.add(sub31);
sub3.add(sub32);
final JTree tree = new JTree(root);
expandTree(tree, false);
JScrollPane pane = new JScrollPane(tree);
pane.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(200, 200));
JPanel buttonPanel = new JPanel(new BorderLayout());
JButton expandAll = new JButton("Expand All");
expandAll.addActionListener(new ActionListener() {
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
expandTree(tree, true);
}
});
JButton collapseAll = new JButton("Collapse All");
collapseAll.addActionListener(new ActionListener() {
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
expandTree(tree, false);
}
});
buttonPanel.add(expandAll, BorderLayout.WEST);
buttonPanel.add(collapseAll, BorderLayout.EAST);
getContentPane().setLayout(new BorderLayout());
getContentPane().add(pane, BorderLayout.CENTER);
getContentPane().add(buttonPanel, BorderLayout.SOUTH);
}
private void expandTree(JTree tree, boolean expand) {
TreeNode root = (TreeNode) tree.getModel().getRoot();
expandAll(tree, new TreePath(root), expand);
}
private void expandAll(JTree tree, TreePath path, boolean expand) {
TreeNode node = (TreeNode) path.getLastPathComponent();
if (node.getChildCount() >= 0) {
Enumeration enumeration = node.children();
while (enumeration.hasMoreElements()) {
TreeNode n = (TreeNode) enumeration.nextElement();
TreePath p = path.pathByAddingChild(n);
expandAll(tree, p, expand);
}
}
if (expand) {
tree.expandPath(path);
} else {
tree.collapsePath(path);
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
new JTreeNodeAutoExpandCollapse().setVisible(true);
}
});
}
}
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 5305
I had a similar problem.
Your solution (as posted https://stackoverflow.com/a/15211697/837530) seemed to work for me only for the top level tree nodes.
But I needed to expand all the a descendants node. So I solved it with the following recursive method:
private void expandAllNodes(JTree tree, int startingIndex, int rowCount){
for(int i=startingIndex;i<rowCount;++i){
tree.expandRow(i);
}
if(tree.getRowCount()!=rowCount){
expandAllNodes(tree, rowCount, tree.getRowCount());
}
}
which is invoked with
expandAllNodes(tree, 0, tree.getRowCount());
where, tree
is a JTree
.
Unless someone has a better solution.
Upvotes: 21
Reputation: 487
There's also this non-recursive version.
private void expandAllNodes(JTree tree) {
int j = tree.getRowCount();
int i = 0;
while(i < j) {
tree.expandRow(i);
i += 1;
j = tree.getRowCount();
}
}
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 25096
The following worked for me (called after setting the new model):
for (int i = 0; i < tree.getRowCount(); i++) {
tree.expandRow(i);
}
Upvotes: 54