/* * Copyright (c) 1997, 2018, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. * * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions * are met: * * - Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * * - Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. * * - Neither the name of Oracle nor the names of its * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived * from this software without specific prior written permission. * * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS * IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, * THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR * PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR * CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, * EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, * PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR * PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING * NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS * SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
/* * This source code is provided to illustrate the usage of a given feature * or technique and has been deliberately simplified. Additional steps * required for a production-quality application, such as security checks, * input validation and proper error handling, might not be present in * this sample code.
*/
/** * A sorter for TableModels. The sorter has a model (conforming to TableModel) * and itself implements TableModel. TableSorter does not store or copy * the data in the TableModel, instead it maintains an array of * integers which it keeps the same size as the number of rows in its * model. When the model changes it notifies the sorter that something * has changed eg. "rowsAdded" so that its internal array of integers * can be reallocated. As requests are made of the sorter (like * getValueAt(row, col) it redirects them to its model via the mapping * array. That way the TableSorter appears to hold another copy of the table * with the rows in a different order. The sorting algorthm used is stable * which means that it does not move around rows when its comparison * function returns 0 to denote that they are equivalent. * * @author Philip Milne
*/
@SuppressWarnings("serial") publicfinalclass TableSorter extends TableMap {
int[] indexes;
List<Integer> sortingColumns = new ArrayList<Integer>(); boolean ascending = true; int compares;
public TableSorter() {
indexes = newint[0]; // For consistency.
}
public TableSorter(TableModel model) {
setModel(model);
}
// If both values are null return 0 if (o1 == null && o2 == null) { return 0;
} elseif (o1 == null) { // Define null less than everything. return -1;
} elseif (o2 == null) { return 1;
}
/* We copy all returned values from the getValue call in case an optimised model is reusing one object to return many values. The Number subclasses in the JDK are immutable and so will not be used in this way but other subclasses of Number might want to do this to save space and avoid unnecessary heap allocation.
*/ if (type.getSuperclass() == java.lang.Number.class) {
Number n1 = (Number) data.getValueAt(row1, column); double d1 = n1.doubleValue();
Number n2 = (Number) data.getValueAt(row2, column); double d2 = n2.doubleValue();
if (d1 < d2) { return -1;
} elseif (d1 > d2) { return 1;
} else { return 0;
}
} elseif (type == java.util.Date.class) {
Date d1 = (Date) data.getValueAt(row1, column); long n1 = d1.getTime();
Date d2 = (Date) data.getValueAt(row2, column); long n2 = d2.getTime();
publicvoid n2sort() { for (int i = 0; i < getRowCount(); i++) { for (int j = i + 1; j < getRowCount(); j++) { if (compare(indexes[i], indexes[j]) == -1) {
swap(i, j);
}
}
}
}
// This is a home-grown implementation which we have not had time // to research - it may perform poorly in some circumstances. It // requires twice the space of an in-place algorithm and makes // NlogN assigments shuttling the values between the two // arrays. The number of compares appears to vary between N-1 and // NlogN depending on the initial order but the main reason for // using it here is that, unlike qsort, it is stable. publicvoid shuttlesort(int[] from, int[] to, int low, int high) { if (high - low < 2) { return;
} int middle = (low + high) / 2;
shuttlesort(to, from, low, middle);
shuttlesort(to, from, middle, high);
int p = low; int q = middle;
/* This is an optional short-cut; at each recursive call, check to see if the elements in this subset are already ordered. If so, no further comparisons are needed; the sub-array can just be copied. The array must be copied rather than assigned otherwise sister calls in the recursion might get out of sinc. When the number of elements is three they are partitioned so that the first set, [low, mid), has one element and the second, [mid, high), has two. We skip the optimisation when the number of elements is three or less as the first compare in the normal merge will produce the same sequence of steps. This optimisation seems to be worthwhile for partially ordered lists but some analysis is needed to find out how the performance drops to Nlog(N) as the initial
order diminishes - it may drop very quickly. */
if (high - low >= 4 && compare(from[middle - 1], from[middle]) <= 0) {
System.arraycopy(from, low, to, low, high - low); return;
}
// A normal merge.
for (int i = low; i < high; i++) { if (q >= high || (p < middle && compare(from[p], from[q]) <= 0)) {
to[i] = from[p++];
} else {
to[i] = from[q++];
}
}
}
publicvoid swap(int i, int j) { int tmp = indexes[i];
indexes[i] = indexes[j];
indexes[j] = tmp;
}
// The mapping only affects the contents of the data rows. // Pass all requests to these rows through the mapping array: "indexes".
@Override public Object getValueAt(int aRow, int aColumn) {
checkModel(); return model.getValueAt(indexes[aRow], aColumn);
}
@Override publicvoid setValueAt(Object aValue, int aRow, int aColumn) {
checkModel();
model.setValueAt(aValue, indexes[aRow], aColumn);
}
// There is no-where else to put this. // Add a mouse listener to the Table to trigger a table sort // when a column heading is clicked in the JTable. publicvoid addMouseListenerToHeaderInTable(JTable table) { final TableSorter sorter = this; final JTable tableView = table;
tableView.setColumnSelectionAllowed(false);
MouseAdapter listMouseListener = new MouseAdapter() {
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