I am saving a .txt and .doc file containing the data from my JTable. At the minute when it saves it lays the text out like its in a table, but due to different lengths of da
In addition to the answers already provided, I have implemented a solution which saves the contents to a text file of type .csv (Comma-Separated Values).
Firstly, I have created a method which places the contents of a JTable into a two-dimensional array of type Object. I have chosen the type Object because various columns within a JTable may store different types of data e.g. numbers, Strings etc. This method is located within my GUI front-end:
/**
*
* This method extrapolates the data from the JTable and places
* it into a two-dimensional object array.
*
* It then returns the object array in preparation for writing
to disk
*
*
* @param aTable - the selected table for rendering into a two-
dimensional object array
*
* @return Object[][] - the two-dimensional object array which
shall be written to disk
*
* @see
*
*/
public Object[][] getTableData(JTable aTable)
{
int rowCount = aTable.getModel().getRowCount();
int columnCount = aTable.getModel().getColumnCount();
Object[][] curTableData =
new Object[rowCount][columnCount];
for ( int row = 0; row < rowCount; row++)
{
for (int column = 0; column < columnCount; column++)
{
curTableData[row][column] =
aTable.getModel().getValueAt(row,column);
// System.out.println("curTableData["+row+"]["+column+"] = "+curTableData[row][column]);
}
}
return curTableData;
}
Secondly, I have created a class that is responsible for writing the contents of the two-dimensional object array (JTable contents) to disk. This is outlined below:
import java.io.*;
/**
*
* This class is responsible for writing the 2D object to disk.
* The 2d Object contains your JTable contents
*
*
* @author Mark Burleigh
* @version %I%, %G%
* @since 1.0
*
*/
public class WriteJTableContents
{
/**
*
* This constructor takes in two parameters. It is also responsible
* for writing the JTable contents to disk (to csv file)
*
*
* @param aData - the JTable data to be saved to disk
* @param afile - the name of the file where the data shall be saved
* (this is a .CSV type file)
*
*
*/
public WriteRandomSampleData(Object[][] aData, String afile)
{
writeToDisk(aData,afile);
// This method prints the two-dimensional array to the command console
// printData();
}
/**
*
* This method is responsible for writing the contents of a JTable (2d
* array object) to disk (csv text file)
*
*
* @param aData - the 2D data (Jtable contents) to be stored to disk
* @param aDatafile - the file where the data shall be stored
* to disk. This shall be of type.CSV
*
* @return
*
* @see
*
*/
public void writeToDisk(Object[][] aData, String aDatafile)
{
try
{
FileOutputStream fout = new FileOutputStream(aDatafile, false);
BufferedWriter bw = new BufferedWriter(new OutputStreamWriter(fout));
//Headers
bw.append("Script No., Candidate No., Mark, Grade,Script No., Candidate No., Mark, Grade");
// End of data row (Jable row) so append new line character in csv file
bw.append('\n');
for (int row = 0; row < aData.length; row++)
{
for (int column = 0; column < aData[row].length; column++)
{
if(aData[row][column] == null)
{
bw.append("null");
// The comma separated value
bw.append(',');
}
else
{
/* In my particular example, I am doing some checking on
the 2d array for types:
if the data is not of type null (as checked above)
then it must be of type Integer.
This is because the 2D data array only contains data of either
Integer or null
each of these object types have a method called toString().
we need this in order to convert the types to a string prior to wrting them to
the file.
*/
bw.append(aData[row][column].toString());
bw.append(',');
}
}//end column loop (inner loop)
bw.append('\n');
}//end row loop (outer loop)
bw.close();
}
catch (Exception e)
{
e.getStackTrace();
}
}//end of readFileFromDisk
/**
*
* These methods is responsible for printing the random sample scripts
* Into the command console.
*
*
*
*/
public void printData()
{
//System.out.println();
//System.out.println("=======WriteRandomSampleData Class===========");
//System.out.println();
for (int row = 0; row < data.length; row++)
{
for (int column = 0; column < data[row].length; column++)
{
System.out.println("data["+row+"]["+column+"] = " +data[row][column]);
}
}
}
//==================Instance Variables=============================
// JTable contents hedata
private Object[][] data;
//====================Test Driver============================
public static void main(String args[])
{
// file seperator for windows platform '\\'
String aFileLocation = "C:\\dirA\\subdir1\\subdir2\\";
// Dummy values - 2D array which stores the contents of a
// JTable into a csv text file
Object[][] testData = new Object [][] {
{new Integer(1),new Integer(1),null,null,new Integer(11),new Integer(1),null,null},
{new Integer(2),new Integer(1),null,null,new Integer(12),new Integer(1),null,null},
{new Integer(3),new Integer(1),null,null,new Integer(13),new Integer(1),null,null},
{new Integer(4),new Integer(1),null,null,new Integer(14),new Integer(1),null,null},
{new Integer(5),new Integer(1),null,null,new Integer(15),new Integer(1),null,null},
{new Integer(6),new Integer(1),null,null,new Integer(16),new Integer(1),null,null},
{new Integer(7),new Integer(1),null,null,new Integer(17),new Integer(1),null,null},
{new Integer(8),new Integer(1),null,null,new Integer(18),new Integer(1),null,null},
{new Integer(9),new Integer(1),null,null,new Integer(19),new Integer(1),null,null},
{new Integer(10),new Integer(1),null,null,new Integer(20),new Integer(1),null,null}
};
// SampleData_TEST.csv gets created in the particular directory
// and the file gets populated with the contents of the JTable
new WriteRandomSampleData(testData,aFileLocation2+"SampleData_TEST.csv");
}
}
The contents of the resulting SampleData_TEST.csv file are outlined below:
As depicted above, the csv file format can be opened in Microsoft Excel which can be more versatile (depending on the type of data) than a .doc or .txt file