Accept only numbers and a dot in Java TextField

六眼飞鱼酱① 提交于 2019-11-29 06:53:24
Suresh Atta

As suggested by Oracle ,Use Formatted Text Fields

Formatted text fields provide a way for developers to specify the valid set of characters that can be typed in a text field.

amountFormat = NumberFormat.getNumberInstance();
...
amountField = new JFormattedTextField(amountFormat);
amountField.setValue(new Double(amount));
amountField.setColumns(10);
amountField.addPropertyChangeListener("value", this);

JTextField txField = new DoubleJTextField();

Create a file DoubleJTextField.java and be happy

public class DoubleJTextField extends JTextField {
    public DoubleJTextField(){
        addKeyListener(new KeyAdapter() {
            public void keyTyped(KeyEvent e) {
                char ch = e.getKeyChar();

                if (!isNumber(ch) && !isValidSignal(ch) && !validatePoint(ch)  && ch != '\b') {
                    e.consume();
                }
            }
        });

    }

    private boolean isNumber(char ch){
        return ch >= '0' && ch <= '9';
    }

    private boolean isValidSignal(char ch){
        if( (getText() == null || "".equals(getText().trim()) ) && ch == '-'){
            return true;
        }

        return false;
    }

    private boolean validatePoint(char ch){
        if(ch != '.'){
            return false;
        }

        if(getText() == null || "".equals(getText().trim())){
            setText("0.");
            return false;
        }else if("-".equals(getText())){
            setText("-0.");
        }

        return true;
    }
}
Brayan Byrdsong

I just use a try-catch block:

try {// if is number
    Integer.parseInt(String);
} catch (NumberFormatException e) {
    // else then do blah
}

Don't ever use a KeyListener for this. Your code above has two serious bugs, both caused by the use of a KeyListener. First, it will miss any text that gets pasted in. Whenever I find a field that filters out non-digits, I always try to paste in some text, just for fun. Nine times out of ten, the text gets accepted, because they used a key listener.

Second, you didn't filter out modifiers. If the user tries to save their work by typing control-s while they're in this field, your key listener will consume the event. And if your application assigns, say, a control-5 or alt-5 shortcut to some action, this KeyListener will add a 5 to the field when they type it, even though the user wasn't trying to type a character. You did figure out that you needed to pass the backspace key, but that's not all you need to pass. Your arrow keys won't work. Neither will your function keys. You can fix all these problems, but it starts to be a lot of work.

There's a third disadvantage, but it only shows up if you adapt your application to a foreign alphabet, particularly one that takes multiple keystrokes to generate a single character, like Chinese. These alphabets make KeyListeners useless.

The trouble is this. You need to filter characters, but KeyListeners aren't about characters, they're about keystrokes, which are not the same thing: Not all keystrokes generate characters, and not all characters are generated by keystrokes. You need an approach that looks at characters after they've been generated, and after modified keystrokes have already been filtered out.

The simplest approach is to use a JFormattedTextField, but I've never liked that approach, because it doesn't format or filter as you type. So instead, I will use a DocumentFilter. DocumentFilters don't operate on keystrokes, they operate on the text strings as they get inserted to your JTextField's data model. Hence, all the control-keys, arrow and function keys and such don't even reach the DocumentFilter. All pasted text goes through the DocumentFilter, too. And, for languages that take three keystrokes to generate a single character, the DocumentFilter doesn't get invoked until the character is generated. Here's what it looks like:

    ptoMinimoField = new JTextField();
    ptoMinimoField.setBounds(348, 177, 167, 20); // Don't do this! See below.
    contentPanel.add(ptoMinimoField);
    ptoMinimoField.setColumns(10);

    PlainDocument document = (PlainDocument) ptoMinimoField.getDocument();
    document.setDocumentFilter(new DigitFilter());
}

The DigitFilter class looks like this:

public class DigitFilter extends DocumentFilter {
    @Override
    public void insertString(FilterBypass fb, int offset, String text, 
            AttributeSet attr) throws BadLocationException {
        super.insertString(fb, offset, revise(text), attr);
    }

    @Override
    public void replace(FilterBypass fb, int offset, int length, String text,
                        AttributeSet attrs) throws BadLocationException {
        super.replace(fb, offset, length, revise(text), attrs);
    }

    private String revise(String text) {
        StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder(text);
        int index = 0;
        while (index < builder.length()) {
            if (accept(builder.charAt(index))) {
                index++;
            } else {
                // Don't increment index here, or you'll skip the next character!
                builder.deleteCharAt(index);
            }
        }
        return builder.toString();
    }

    /**
     * Determine if the character should remain in the String. You may
     * override this to get any matching criteria you want. 
     * @param c The character in question
     * @return true if it's valid, false if it should be removed.
     */
    public boolean accept(final char c) {
        return Character.isDigit(c) || c == '.';
    }
}

You could write this as an inner class, but I created a separate class so you can override the accept() method to use any criteria you want. You may also notice that I don't test for digits by writing this:

(c < '0') || (c > '9')

Instead, I do this:

Character.isDigit()

This is faster, cleaner, and works with foreign numbering systems. I also don't need your test for the backspace character, '\b'. I'm guessing that your first KeyListener was filtering out the backspace key, which was your first clue that it was the wrong approach.

And on an unrelated note, don't hard code your component positions. Learn how to use the LayoutManagers. They're easy to use, and they'll make your code much easier to maintain.

Have you looked at a JFormattedTextField? It would seem it does what you want.

Vũ Trung Sơn

Enter the double number of JTextField in java

private boolean dot = false;
private void txtMarkKeyTyped(java.awt.event.KeyEvent evt) {                                 
    char vChar = evt.getKeyChar();
    if (txtMark.getText().equals(""))
        dot = false;
    if (dot == false){
        if (vChar == '.') dot = true;
        else if (!(Character.isDigit(vChar)
                || (vChar == KeyEvent.VK_BACK_SPACE)
                || (vChar == KeyEvent.VK_DELETE))) {
                evt.consume();
        }
    } else {
        if (!(Character.isDigit(vChar)
                || (vChar == KeyEvent.VK_BACK_SPACE)
                || (vChar == KeyEvent.VK_DELETE))) {
                evt.consume();
        }
    }
}

This bit of code;

if (((caracter < '0') || (caracter > '9'))
                    && (caracter != '\b')) {

decides whether to consume the key event. You need to update the condition so it doesn't consume the dot character.

SchneiderJinn

Just right click on TextField / events / key / keytyped

if(!Character.isDigit(evt.getKeyChar())){
            evt.consume();}

/////////////

    JTextField ptoMinimoField = new JTextField();
    ptoMinimoField.addKeyListener(new KeyAdapter() {
        public void keyTyped(KeyEvent e) {
             boolean ret = true;
                try {

                    Double.parseDouble(ptoMinimoField.getText()+e.getKeyChar());
                }catch (NumberFormatException ee) {
                    ret = false;
                }


            if (!ret) {
                e.consume();
            }
        }
    });

maybe can help you for filtering keytyped just number and dot

public void filterHanyaAngkaDot(java.awt.event.KeyEvent evt){
      char c = evt.getKeyChar();
      if (! ((Character.isDigit(c) ||
              (c == KeyEvent.VK_BACK_SPACE) ||
              (c == KeyEvent.VK_DELETE))
              )&& c==KeyEvent.VK_COMMA
              )
      {
          evt.consume();
      }
 }
JTextField txtMyTextField = new JTextField();

numOnly(txtMyTextField);

public void numOnly(Object objSource){
    ((Component) objSource).addKeyListener(new KeyListener() {

        @Override
        public void keyTyped(KeyEvent e) {
            String filterStr = "0123456789.";
            char c = (char)e.getKeyChar();
            if(filterStr.indexOf(c)<0){
                e.consume();
            }
        }
        @Override
        public void keyReleased(KeyEvent e) {}

        @Override
        public void keyPressed(KeyEvent e) {}
    });
}

WARNING: This function does not follow proper java documentation guide.

I have been using this solution, it's simple and efficient:

                jtextfield.addKeyListener(new KeyAdapter() {
                public void keyTyped(KeyEvent e) {
                    char vChar = e.getKeyChar();
                    if (!(Character.isDigit(vChar)
                            || (vChar == KeyEvent.VK_BACK_SPACE)
                            || (vChar == KeyEvent.VK_DELETE))) {
                        e.consume();
                    }
                }
            });
Noiwong Suwijak
private boolean point = false;
private void txtProductCostPriceAddKeyTyped(java.awt.event.KeyEvent evt)   
{
    char Char = evt.getKeyChar();
    if (txtProductCostPriceAdd.getText().equals(""))
        point = false;
    if (point == false){
        if (Char == '.') point = true;
        else if (!(Character.isDigit(Char) || (Char == KeyEvent.VK_BACK_SPACE) || (Char == KeyEvent.VK_DELETE))) {
                evt.consume();
        }
    } else {
        if (!(Character.isDigit(Char) || (Char == KeyEvent.VK_BACK_SPACE) || (Char == KeyEvent.VK_DELETE))) {
                evt.consume();
        }
    }
}
JTextField textField = new JTextField();
textField.setColumns(10);

textField.addKeyListener(new KeyAdapter() {
    @Override
    public void KeyTyped(KeyEvent e) {
        if (!(e.getKeyChar() >= '0' && e.getKeyChar() <= '9')) {
            e.consume();
        }
    }
})

this is the easiest method i have found so far, and it works without any error

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