Dmitry
Dmitry

Reputation: 3038

JTextPane appending a new string

In an every article the answer to a question "How to append a string to a JEditorPane?" is something like

jep.setText(jep.getText + "new string");

I have tried this:

jep.setText("<b>Termination time : </b>" + 
                        CriterionFunction.estimateIndividual_top(individual) + " </br>");
jep.setText(jep.getText() + "Processes' distribution: </br>");

And as a result I got "Termination time : 1000" without "Processes' distribution:"

Why did this happen???

Upvotes: 37

Views: 102703

Answers (3)

camickr
camickr

Reputation: 324118

I doubt that is the recommended approach for appending text. This means every time you change some text you need to reparse the entire document. The reason people may do this is because the don't understand how to use a JEditorPane. That includes me.

I much prefer using a JTextPane and then using attributes. A simple example might be something like:

JTextPane textPane = new JTextPane();
textPane.setText( "original text" );
StyledDocument doc = textPane.getStyledDocument();

//  Define a keyword attribute

SimpleAttributeSet keyWord = new SimpleAttributeSet();
StyleConstants.setForeground(keyWord, Color.RED);
StyleConstants.setBackground(keyWord, Color.YELLOW);
StyleConstants.setBold(keyWord, true);

//  Add some text

try
{
    doc.insertString(0, "Start of text\n", null );
    doc.insertString(doc.getLength(), "\nEnd of text", keyWord );
}
catch(Exception e) { System.out.println(e); }

Upvotes: 69

Brandon Buck
Brandon Buck

Reputation: 7181

A JEditorPane, just a like a JTextPane has a Document that you can use for inserting strings.

What you'll want to do to append text into a JEditorPane is this snippet:

JEditorPane pane = new JEditorPane();
/* ... Other stuff ... */
public void append(String s) {
   try {
      Document doc = pane.getDocument();
      doc.insertString(doc.getLength(), s, null);
   } catch(BadLocationException exc) {
      exc.printStackTrace();
   }
}

I tested this and it worked fine for me. The doc.getLength() is where you want to insert the string, obviously with this line you would be adding it to the end of the text.

Upvotes: 30

Istao
Istao

Reputation: 7585

setText is to set all text in a textpane. Use the StyledDocument interface to append, remove, ans so on text.

txtPane.getStyledDocument().insertString(
  offsetWhereYouWant, "text you want", attributesYouHope);

Upvotes: 4

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