Question

When my jTextArea is in focus it allows text highlighting, but it doesn't show the text selection when it loses focus. Is it possible to continue displaying the text highlighting even if the user moves focus to another component on the related jFrame?

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Solution 2

but doesn't show selection on text when looses focus.

there are three ways:

enter image description here

  • or programatically override Highlighter

enter image description here

import java.awt.BorderLayout;
import java.awt.event.ActionEvent;
import java.awt.event.ActionListener;
import javax.swing.JButton;
import javax.swing.JFrame;
import javax.swing.JScrollPane;
import javax.swing.JTextArea;
import javax.swing.JTextField;
import javax.swing.SwingUtilities;
import javax.swing.text.BadLocationException;
import javax.swing.text.DefaultHighlighter;
import javax.swing.text.Highlighter;
import javax.swing.text.JTextComponent;

public class MultiHighlight implements ActionListener {

    private JTextComponent comp;
    private String charsToHighlight;

    public MultiHighlight(JTextComponent c, String chars) {
        comp = c;
        charsToHighlight = chars;
    }

    @Override
    public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
        Highlighter h = comp.getHighlighter();
        h.removeAllHighlights();
        String text = comp.getText().toUpperCase();
        for (int j = 0; j < text.length(); j += 1) {
            char ch = text.charAt(j);
            if (charsToHighlight.indexOf(ch) >= 0) {
                try {
                    h.addHighlight(j, j + 1, DefaultHighlighter.DefaultPainter);
                } catch (BadLocationException ble) {
                }
            }
        }
    }

    public static void main(String args[]) {
        final JFrame frame = new JFrame("MultiHighlight");
        frame.add(new JTextField("Another focusable JComponents"), BorderLayout.NORTH);
        JTextArea area = new JTextArea(10, 20);
        area.setText("This is the story\nof the hare who\nlost his spectacles."
                + "\nThis is the story\nof the hare who\nlost his spectacles.");
        frame.getContentPane().add(new JScrollPane(area), BorderLayout.CENTER);
        JButton b = new JButton("Highlight All Vowels");
        b.addActionListener(new MultiHighlight(area, "aeiouAEIOU"));
        frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
        frame.getContentPane().add(b, BorderLayout.SOUTH);
        SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
            @Override
            public void run() {
                frame.pack();
                frame.setVisible(true);
            }
        });
    }
}

OTHER TIPS

One simple workaround for caret selection is a simple subclassing of DefaultCaret:

textArea.setCaret(new DefaultCaret() {
   @Override
   public void setSelectionVisible(boolean visible) {
      super.setSelectionVisible(true);
   }
});
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