![]() |
The Java Developers Almanac 1.4Order this book from Amazon. |
e1008. Sharing Styles Between JTextPanesStyles are stored in a style context. By default, text panes do not share style contexts, so any styles created for a text pane are available only in that text pane. This example creates two text panes that share a style context. Any new styles created in one text pane are available in the other. This also applies to changes in a shared style.JTextPane c1 = new JTextPane(); JTextPane c2 = new JTextPane(); // Create new styled documents with the same style context StyleContext styleContext = new StyleContext(); c1.setDocument(new DefaultStyledDocument(styleContext)); c2.setDocument(new DefaultStyledDocument(styleContext)); // Create a new style with one text pane Style style = c1.addStyle("style name", null); StyleConstants.setForeground(style, Color.red); // Modify an existing style using the other text pane style = c2.getStyle("style name"); StyleConstants.setBold(style, true);
e1007. Setting the Font and Color of Text in a JTextPane Using Styles e1009. Listing the Styles Associated with a JTextPane e1010. Listing the Attributes in a Style e1011. Using a Popup to Apply Styles to a JTextPane e1012. Retaining the Logical Style When Setting a New Paragraph Style e1013. Automatically Updating Styled Text When a Style Is Updated e1014. Determining If a Style Attribute Applies to a Character or the Paragraph
© 2002 Addison-Wesley. |