Search code examples
swingheaderjtablerenderer

JTable, custom header renderer and sorting icons


While setting a custom renderer on a JTable header I get the expected visual behavior (borders, font, alignment, ...) but I can't manage to get the LaF sorting icons that usually appear when the rows are sorted.

This is the code for setting the custom header renderer:

Enumeration<TableColumn> columns = getColumnModel().getColumns();
   while (columns.hasMoreElements())
   columns.nextElement().setHeaderRenderer(new XDeliveryTableHeaderRenderer());

This is an excerpt of the custom header renderer:

public class MyTableHeaderRenderer extends JLabel implements TableCellRenderer {
     private static final Font labelFont = new Font("Arial", Font.BOLD, 11);

     @Override
     public Component getTableCellRendererComponent(JTable table, Object value, boolean isSelected, boolean hasFocus, int row, int column) {
        setFont(labelFont);
        setHorizontalAlignment(SwingConstants.CENTER);
        setText(value.toString());
        setBorder(BorderFactory.createEtchedBorder());
        return this;
     }
}

Any hints?


Solution

  • Try delegating to the L&F installed renderer:

    public class MyTableHeaderRenderer implements TableCellRenderer {
     private static final Font labelFont = new Font("Arial", Font.BOLD, 11);
    
     private TableCellRenderer delegate;
    
     public MyTableHeaderRenderer(TableCellRenderer delegate) {
         this.delegate = delegate;
     } 
    
     @Override
     public Component getTableCellRendererComponent(JTable table, Object value, boolean isSelected, boolean hasFocus, int row, int column) {
    
        Component c = delegate.getTableCellRendererComponent(table, value, isSelected, hasFocus, row, column);
    
        if(c instanceof JLabel) {
            JLabel label = (JLabel) c;
            label.setFont(labelFont);
            label.setHorizontalAlignment(SwingConstants.CENTER);
            label.setBorder(BorderFactory.createEtchedBorder());
        }
        return c;
     }
    }
    
    // Usage:
    JTableHeader header = table.getTableHeader();
    header.setDefaultRenderer(new MyTableHeaderRenderer(header.getDefaultRenderer()));
    

    As kleopatra warned, this might not be the most stable solution, see this bug report which I just got in production. The reporter of that issue suggest using a custom Table/TableColumn sub classes which updating the delegate renderer in TableColumn#getDefaultRenderer.