Connecting SQL Server with Java (javafx) - java

I have the setup below for the connection SQL Server with Java. Am also using javafx. I am very new to developing with Java. Note: I added the sqljdbc driver. I don't want to add main to DBConnection because am using the Connection method in the controller. Is there a way to fix this or how can I add main method without changing the connection method? Am getting error message:
Error Message
Error: Main method not found in class application.ConnectionDB, please define the main method as:
public static void main(String[] args)
or a JavaFX application class must extend javafx.application.Application
FXML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?import javafx.scene.control.Button?>
<?import javafx.scene.control.Label?>
<?import javafx.scene.control.TextField?>
<?import javafx.scene.layout.AnchorPane?>
<AnchorPane fx:controller="application.MainController" prefHeight="407.0" prefWidth="578.0" xmlns="http://javafx.com/javafx/10.0.1" xmlns:fx="http://javafx.com/fxml/1">
<children>
<Label layoutX="123.0" layoutY="65.0" prefHeight="31.0" prefWidth="79.0" text="Date:" />
<Label layoutX="123.0" layoutY="138.0" prefHeight="25.0" prefWidth="127.0" text="Rim Current Value:" />
<Label layoutX="125.0" layoutY="210.0" text="Rim Sales Value for the Month:" />
<Label layoutX="123.0" layoutY="283.0" text="Rim Sold Cost Bought:" />
<TextField fx:id="txtdate" layoutX="123.0" layoutY="97.0" />
<TextField fx:id="txtcurvalue" layoutX="123.0" layoutY="163.0" />
<TextField fx:id="txtsalesvalue" layoutX="123.0" layoutY="234.0" />
<TextField fx:id="txtsoldcost" layoutX="123.0" layoutY="300.0" />
<Button layoutX="246.0" layoutY="340.0" mnemonicParsing="false" onAction="#Rmsubmit" prefHeight="25.0" prefWidth="103.0" text="Submit" />
</children>
</AnchorPane>
Connection Class
package application;
import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.DriverManager;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
public class ConnectionDB
{
public static Connection dbConn() {
Connection conn = null;
try {
Class.forName("com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerDriver");
String url = "jdbc:sqlserver:[server name];database=SalesManager;user=[username];password=[password];encrypt=true;trustServerCert ificate=false;hostNameInCertificate=*.database.windows.net;loginTimeout=30";
conn = DriverManager.getConnection(url);
}
catch (ClassNotFoundException | SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(ConnectionDB.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE,null,ex);
}
return conn;
}
}
Controller
package application;
import javafx.event.ActionEvent;
import javafx.fxml.FXML;
import javafx.scene.control.TextField;
import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.PreparedStatement;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.util.ResourceBundle;
import javax.print.DocFlavor.URL;
public class MainController {
#FXML
public TextField txtdate;
#FXML
public TextField txtcurvalue;
#FXML
public TextField txtsalesvalue;
#FXML
public TextField txtsoldcost;
public Connection conn =null;
public PreparedStatement pat = null;
#FXML
public void Rmsubmit(ActionEvent actionEvent) {
String sqla = "Insert into RimCalc(Date, Rim_Vale,Rim_Sales,Rim_Cost) Values (?,?,?,?)";
String date = txtdate.getText();
String rim_value = txtcurvalue.getText();
String Rim_Sales = txtsalesvalue.getText();
String rim_cost = txtsoldcost.getText();
try {
pat = conn.prepareStatement(sqla);
pat.setString(1, date);
pat.setString(2, rim_value);
pat.setString(3, Rim_Sales);
pat.setString(4, rim_cost);
int i = pat.executeUpdate();
if(i==1) {
System.out.println("Insert Successfully");
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
public void initializer(URL url, ResourceBundle rb) {
conn = application.ConnectionDB.dbConn();
}
}

Java programs require a main method as an entry point in order to run. The standard definition of a main method is like this:
public static void main(String[] args) {
// First code of your program goes here
}
This main() method should include the code that starts your application and loads any interface elements for display.
A JavaFX application also needs to have a class that extends Application and override its start() method.
Here is a very quick and dirty example of one such class:
import javafx.application.Application;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
class Main extends Application {
public static void main(String[] args) {
launch(args); // Starts the JavaFX application and calls the start() method
}
#Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage) throws Exception {
// Here is where you'll initialize your views and such
}
}
I would recommend taking a few Java and JavaFX tutorials to get a feel for some of the basics before attempting more complicated tasks like connecting to databases.

Related

TableView on javafx showing empty rows [duplicate]

OK, new to java by several weeks, but have been programming for 30 years. The following code executes, but only the first column is showing anything. The data object is showing multiple rows of data, with fields of data that are filled in. I'm sure I'm missing something, and have looked through similar questions on here.
APVoucher_batchgridController.java
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.ResourceBundle;
import javafx.event.ActionEvent;
import javafx.fxml.Initializable;
import javafx.fxml.FXML;
import javafx.scene.control.TableView;
import javafx.scene.input.MouseEvent;
import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.DriverManager;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.sql.Statement;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javafx.collections.FXCollections;
import javafx.collections.ObservableList;
import javafx.scene.control.TableColumn;
import javafx.scene.control.cell.PropertyValueFactory;
/**
* FXML Controller class
*
* #author kmitchell
*/
public class APVoucher_batchgridController implements Initializable {
public TableView tblMainList;
public TableColumn colDateEntered;
public TableColumn colCreatedBy;
public TableColumn colDescription;
/**
* Initializes the controller class.
*/
#Override
public void initialize(URL url, ResourceBundle rb) {
}
#FXML
public void opentables(ActionEvent event) {
Object forName = null;
Connection conn = null;
Statement stmt = null;
ResultSet rs = null;
colDateEntered.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("DateEntered"));
colDescription.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc"));
colCreatedBy.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CreatedBy"));
try {
// load the driver into memory
forName = Class.forName("jstels.jdbc.dbf.DBFDriver2");
} catch (ClassNotFoundException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
try {
conn = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:jstels:dbf:e:\\keystone-data\\keyfund\\seymour\\keyfund.dbc");
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
if (conn != null) {
try {
stmt = conn.createStatement();
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
if (stmt != null) {
// execute a query
try {
ObservableList<Object> data = FXCollections.observableArrayList();
rs = stmt.executeQuery("SELECT denteredon, cdesc, ccreatedby FROM apvbatch WHERE ldeleted = false ORDER BY denteredon DESC");
while (rs.next()) {
String enteredon = rs.getString("denteredon");
String desc = rs.getString("cdesc");
String createdby = rs.getString("ccreatedby");
sresult row = new sresult(createdby, enteredon, desc);
data.add(row);
}
tblMainList.setItems(data);
tblMainList.setVisible(true);
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
}
}
}
public class sresult {
private String DateEntered;
private String EnteredBy;
private String cDesc;
public sresult(String T, String d, String c) {
this.EnteredBy = T;
this.DateEntered = d;
this.cDesc = c;
}
public String getEnteredBy() {
return EnteredBy;
}
public void setEnteredBy(String T) {
EnteredBy = T;
}
public String getDateEntered() {
return DateEntered;
}
public void setDateEntered(String d) {
DateEntered = d;
}
public String getcDesc() {
return cDesc;
}
public void setcDesc(String c) {
cDesc = c;
}
}
}
and APVoucher_batchgrid.fxml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?import java.lang.*?>
<?import java.net.*?>
<?import java.util.*?>
<?import javafx.geometry.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.control.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.layout.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.text.*?>
<AnchorPane id="AnchorPane" fx:id="batchlistform" prefHeight="400.0" prefWidth="600.0" styleClass="mainFxmlClass" xmlns:fx="http://javafx.com/fxml/1" xmlns="http://javafx.com/javafx/2.2" fx:controller="keystone.APVoucher_batchgridController">
<children>
<BorderPane layoutX="0.0" layoutY="0.0" prefHeight="400.0" prefWidth="600.0">
<center>
<AnchorPane prefHeight="-1.0" prefWidth="-1.0">
<children>
<Pane layoutX="0.0" layoutY="0.0" prefHeight="53.0" prefWidth="580.0">
<children>
<Label layoutX="7.0" layoutY="9.0" prefWidth="202.0" text="AP Vouchers Batch List">
<font>
<Font name="System Bold" size="14.0" />
</font>
</Label>
<Button fx:id="btnClose" cancelButton="true" layoutX="513.0" layoutY="27.0" mnemonicParsing="false" text="Close" />
<Button id="btnClose" fx:id="apvRefresh" cancelButton="true" layoutX="185.0" layoutY="27.0" mnemonicParsing="false" onAction="#opentables" text="Refresh" />
</children>
</Pane>
<TableView fx:id="tblMainList" layoutX="0.0" layoutY="53.0" prefHeight="323.0" prefWidth="580.0">
<columns>
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="91.0" text="Date Entered" fx:id="colDateEntered" />
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="100.0" text="Created By" fx:id="colCreatedBy" />
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="261.0" text="Description" fx:id="colDescription" />
</columns>
</TableView>
</children>
</AnchorPane>
</center>
<padding>
<Insets bottom="10.0" left="10.0" right="10.0" top="10.0" />
</padding>
</BorderPane>
</children>
<stylesheets>
<URL value="#apvoucher_batchgrid.css" />
</stylesheets>
</AnchorPane>
THANK YOU for the answer. Way to many years in case insensitive languages. This has been a quick and dirty exercise for me to learn java and the latest & greatest stuff or as I like to say New Exciting Technology (NExT!)
For anyone looking at the answer and still not completely clued in, here are the changes that made the code work properly.
colDateEntered.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("Denteredon"));
colDescription.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CDesc"));
colEnteredBy.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("Ccreatedby"));
public class sresult {
private String Denteredon;
private String Ccreatedby;
private String CDesc;
public sresult(String T, String d, String c) {
this.Ccreatedby = T;
this.Denteredon = d;
this.CDesc = c;
}
public String getCcreatedby() {
return Ccreatedby;
}
public void setCreatedby(String T) {
Ccreatedby = T;
}
public String getDenteredon() {
return Denteredon;
}
public void setDenteredon(String d) {
Denteredon = d;
}
public String getCDesc() {
return CDesc;
}
public void setCDesc(String c) {
CDesc = c;
}
}
}
This question is really a duplicate of: Javafx PropertyValueFactory not populating Tableview, but I'll specifically address your specific case, so it's clear.
Suggested solution (use a Lambda, not a PropertyValueFactory)
Instead of:
aColumn.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<Appointment,LocalDate>("date"));
Write:
aColumn.setCellValueFactory(cellData -> cellData.getValue().dateProperty());
For more information, see this answer:
Java: setCellValuefactory; Lambda vs. PropertyValueFactory; advantages/disadvantages
How do you use a JavaFX TableView with java records?
demonstrates replacing PropertyValueFactory with lambda expressions.
Solution using PropertyValueFactory
The lambda solution outlined above is preferred, but if you wish to use PropertyValueFactory, this alternate solution provides information on that.
Background
PropertyValueFactory uses reflection to determine the methods to get and set data values as well as to retrieve bindable properties from your model class. The pattern followed is:
PropertyValueType getName()
void setName(PropertyValueType value)
PropertyType nameProperty()
Where "name" is the string specified in the PropertyValueFactory constructor. The first letter of the property name in the getter and setter is capitalized (by java bean naming convention).
Why your application doesn't work
You have these three expressions:
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("DateEntered")
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc")
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CreatedBy")
For your sample properties, the PropertyValueFactory will look for these methods:
"DateEntered" => getDateEntered()
"cDesc" => getCDesc()
"CreatedBy" => getCreatedBy()
And you have these three getters on your sresult class:
getDateEntered()
getcDesc()
getEnteredBy()
Only getDateEntered() is going to be picked up by the PropertyValueFactory because that is the only matching method defined in the sresult class.
Advice
You will have to adopt Java standards if you want the reflection in PropertyValueFactory to work (the alternative is to not use the PropertyValueFactory and instead write your own cell factories from scratch).
Adopting Java camel case naming conventions also makes it easier for Java developers to read your code.
Some times columns doesn't show data because of column names. eg,
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc")
and getter is getcDesc cDesc column may not display data. If you change code to
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CDesc")
and getter is getCDesc CDesc column may display data.
For anyone else who still wasn't getting it after going through the above, my problem was that I wasn't specifying my setters with the "public final" designation.

Data I fetched from an XML file in JavaFX doesn't show up in TableView [duplicate]

OK, new to java by several weeks, but have been programming for 30 years. The following code executes, but only the first column is showing anything. The data object is showing multiple rows of data, with fields of data that are filled in. I'm sure I'm missing something, and have looked through similar questions on here.
APVoucher_batchgridController.java
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.ResourceBundle;
import javafx.event.ActionEvent;
import javafx.fxml.Initializable;
import javafx.fxml.FXML;
import javafx.scene.control.TableView;
import javafx.scene.input.MouseEvent;
import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.DriverManager;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.sql.Statement;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javafx.collections.FXCollections;
import javafx.collections.ObservableList;
import javafx.scene.control.TableColumn;
import javafx.scene.control.cell.PropertyValueFactory;
/**
* FXML Controller class
*
* #author kmitchell
*/
public class APVoucher_batchgridController implements Initializable {
public TableView tblMainList;
public TableColumn colDateEntered;
public TableColumn colCreatedBy;
public TableColumn colDescription;
/**
* Initializes the controller class.
*/
#Override
public void initialize(URL url, ResourceBundle rb) {
}
#FXML
public void opentables(ActionEvent event) {
Object forName = null;
Connection conn = null;
Statement stmt = null;
ResultSet rs = null;
colDateEntered.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("DateEntered"));
colDescription.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc"));
colCreatedBy.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CreatedBy"));
try {
// load the driver into memory
forName = Class.forName("jstels.jdbc.dbf.DBFDriver2");
} catch (ClassNotFoundException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
try {
conn = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:jstels:dbf:e:\\keystone-data\\keyfund\\seymour\\keyfund.dbc");
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
if (conn != null) {
try {
stmt = conn.createStatement();
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
if (stmt != null) {
// execute a query
try {
ObservableList<Object> data = FXCollections.observableArrayList();
rs = stmt.executeQuery("SELECT denteredon, cdesc, ccreatedby FROM apvbatch WHERE ldeleted = false ORDER BY denteredon DESC");
while (rs.next()) {
String enteredon = rs.getString("denteredon");
String desc = rs.getString("cdesc");
String createdby = rs.getString("ccreatedby");
sresult row = new sresult(createdby, enteredon, desc);
data.add(row);
}
tblMainList.setItems(data);
tblMainList.setVisible(true);
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
}
}
}
public class sresult {
private String DateEntered;
private String EnteredBy;
private String cDesc;
public sresult(String T, String d, String c) {
this.EnteredBy = T;
this.DateEntered = d;
this.cDesc = c;
}
public String getEnteredBy() {
return EnteredBy;
}
public void setEnteredBy(String T) {
EnteredBy = T;
}
public String getDateEntered() {
return DateEntered;
}
public void setDateEntered(String d) {
DateEntered = d;
}
public String getcDesc() {
return cDesc;
}
public void setcDesc(String c) {
cDesc = c;
}
}
}
and APVoucher_batchgrid.fxml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?import java.lang.*?>
<?import java.net.*?>
<?import java.util.*?>
<?import javafx.geometry.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.control.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.layout.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.text.*?>
<AnchorPane id="AnchorPane" fx:id="batchlistform" prefHeight="400.0" prefWidth="600.0" styleClass="mainFxmlClass" xmlns:fx="http://javafx.com/fxml/1" xmlns="http://javafx.com/javafx/2.2" fx:controller="keystone.APVoucher_batchgridController">
<children>
<BorderPane layoutX="0.0" layoutY="0.0" prefHeight="400.0" prefWidth="600.0">
<center>
<AnchorPane prefHeight="-1.0" prefWidth="-1.0">
<children>
<Pane layoutX="0.0" layoutY="0.0" prefHeight="53.0" prefWidth="580.0">
<children>
<Label layoutX="7.0" layoutY="9.0" prefWidth="202.0" text="AP Vouchers Batch List">
<font>
<Font name="System Bold" size="14.0" />
</font>
</Label>
<Button fx:id="btnClose" cancelButton="true" layoutX="513.0" layoutY="27.0" mnemonicParsing="false" text="Close" />
<Button id="btnClose" fx:id="apvRefresh" cancelButton="true" layoutX="185.0" layoutY="27.0" mnemonicParsing="false" onAction="#opentables" text="Refresh" />
</children>
</Pane>
<TableView fx:id="tblMainList" layoutX="0.0" layoutY="53.0" prefHeight="323.0" prefWidth="580.0">
<columns>
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="91.0" text="Date Entered" fx:id="colDateEntered" />
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="100.0" text="Created By" fx:id="colCreatedBy" />
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="261.0" text="Description" fx:id="colDescription" />
</columns>
</TableView>
</children>
</AnchorPane>
</center>
<padding>
<Insets bottom="10.0" left="10.0" right="10.0" top="10.0" />
</padding>
</BorderPane>
</children>
<stylesheets>
<URL value="#apvoucher_batchgrid.css" />
</stylesheets>
</AnchorPane>
THANK YOU for the answer. Way to many years in case insensitive languages. This has been a quick and dirty exercise for me to learn java and the latest & greatest stuff or as I like to say New Exciting Technology (NExT!)
For anyone looking at the answer and still not completely clued in, here are the changes that made the code work properly.
colDateEntered.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("Denteredon"));
colDescription.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CDesc"));
colEnteredBy.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("Ccreatedby"));
public class sresult {
private String Denteredon;
private String Ccreatedby;
private String CDesc;
public sresult(String T, String d, String c) {
this.Ccreatedby = T;
this.Denteredon = d;
this.CDesc = c;
}
public String getCcreatedby() {
return Ccreatedby;
}
public void setCreatedby(String T) {
Ccreatedby = T;
}
public String getDenteredon() {
return Denteredon;
}
public void setDenteredon(String d) {
Denteredon = d;
}
public String getCDesc() {
return CDesc;
}
public void setCDesc(String c) {
CDesc = c;
}
}
}
This question is really a duplicate of: Javafx PropertyValueFactory not populating Tableview, but I'll specifically address your specific case, so it's clear.
Suggested solution (use a Lambda, not a PropertyValueFactory)
Instead of:
aColumn.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<Appointment,LocalDate>("date"));
Write:
aColumn.setCellValueFactory(cellData -> cellData.getValue().dateProperty());
For more information, see this answer:
Java: setCellValuefactory; Lambda vs. PropertyValueFactory; advantages/disadvantages
How do you use a JavaFX TableView with java records?
demonstrates replacing PropertyValueFactory with lambda expressions.
Solution using PropertyValueFactory
The lambda solution outlined above is preferred, but if you wish to use PropertyValueFactory, this alternate solution provides information on that.
Background
PropertyValueFactory uses reflection to determine the methods to get and set data values as well as to retrieve bindable properties from your model class. The pattern followed is:
PropertyValueType getName()
void setName(PropertyValueType value)
PropertyType nameProperty()
Where "name" is the string specified in the PropertyValueFactory constructor. The first letter of the property name in the getter and setter is capitalized (by java bean naming convention).
Why your application doesn't work
You have these three expressions:
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("DateEntered")
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc")
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CreatedBy")
For your sample properties, the PropertyValueFactory will look for these methods:
"DateEntered" => getDateEntered()
"cDesc" => getCDesc()
"CreatedBy" => getCreatedBy()
And you have these three getters on your sresult class:
getDateEntered()
getcDesc()
getEnteredBy()
Only getDateEntered() is going to be picked up by the PropertyValueFactory because that is the only matching method defined in the sresult class.
Advice
You will have to adopt Java standards if you want the reflection in PropertyValueFactory to work (the alternative is to not use the PropertyValueFactory and instead write your own cell factories from scratch).
Adopting Java camel case naming conventions also makes it easier for Java developers to read your code.
Some times columns doesn't show data because of column names. eg,
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc")
and getter is getcDesc cDesc column may not display data. If you change code to
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CDesc")
and getter is getCDesc CDesc column may display data.
For anyone else who still wasn't getting it after going through the above, my problem was that I wasn't specifying my setters with the "public final" designation.

write in TableView JavaFx [duplicate]

OK, new to java by several weeks, but have been programming for 30 years. The following code executes, but only the first column is showing anything. The data object is showing multiple rows of data, with fields of data that are filled in. I'm sure I'm missing something, and have looked through similar questions on here.
APVoucher_batchgridController.java
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.ResourceBundle;
import javafx.event.ActionEvent;
import javafx.fxml.Initializable;
import javafx.fxml.FXML;
import javafx.scene.control.TableView;
import javafx.scene.input.MouseEvent;
import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.DriverManager;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.sql.Statement;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javafx.collections.FXCollections;
import javafx.collections.ObservableList;
import javafx.scene.control.TableColumn;
import javafx.scene.control.cell.PropertyValueFactory;
/**
* FXML Controller class
*
* #author kmitchell
*/
public class APVoucher_batchgridController implements Initializable {
public TableView tblMainList;
public TableColumn colDateEntered;
public TableColumn colCreatedBy;
public TableColumn colDescription;
/**
* Initializes the controller class.
*/
#Override
public void initialize(URL url, ResourceBundle rb) {
}
#FXML
public void opentables(ActionEvent event) {
Object forName = null;
Connection conn = null;
Statement stmt = null;
ResultSet rs = null;
colDateEntered.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("DateEntered"));
colDescription.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc"));
colCreatedBy.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CreatedBy"));
try {
// load the driver into memory
forName = Class.forName("jstels.jdbc.dbf.DBFDriver2");
} catch (ClassNotFoundException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
try {
conn = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:jstels:dbf:e:\\keystone-data\\keyfund\\seymour\\keyfund.dbc");
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
if (conn != null) {
try {
stmt = conn.createStatement();
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
if (stmt != null) {
// execute a query
try {
ObservableList<Object> data = FXCollections.observableArrayList();
rs = stmt.executeQuery("SELECT denteredon, cdesc, ccreatedby FROM apvbatch WHERE ldeleted = false ORDER BY denteredon DESC");
while (rs.next()) {
String enteredon = rs.getString("denteredon");
String desc = rs.getString("cdesc");
String createdby = rs.getString("ccreatedby");
sresult row = new sresult(createdby, enteredon, desc);
data.add(row);
}
tblMainList.setItems(data);
tblMainList.setVisible(true);
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
}
}
}
public class sresult {
private String DateEntered;
private String EnteredBy;
private String cDesc;
public sresult(String T, String d, String c) {
this.EnteredBy = T;
this.DateEntered = d;
this.cDesc = c;
}
public String getEnteredBy() {
return EnteredBy;
}
public void setEnteredBy(String T) {
EnteredBy = T;
}
public String getDateEntered() {
return DateEntered;
}
public void setDateEntered(String d) {
DateEntered = d;
}
public String getcDesc() {
return cDesc;
}
public void setcDesc(String c) {
cDesc = c;
}
}
}
and APVoucher_batchgrid.fxml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?import java.lang.*?>
<?import java.net.*?>
<?import java.util.*?>
<?import javafx.geometry.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.control.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.layout.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.text.*?>
<AnchorPane id="AnchorPane" fx:id="batchlistform" prefHeight="400.0" prefWidth="600.0" styleClass="mainFxmlClass" xmlns:fx="http://javafx.com/fxml/1" xmlns="http://javafx.com/javafx/2.2" fx:controller="keystone.APVoucher_batchgridController">
<children>
<BorderPane layoutX="0.0" layoutY="0.0" prefHeight="400.0" prefWidth="600.0">
<center>
<AnchorPane prefHeight="-1.0" prefWidth="-1.0">
<children>
<Pane layoutX="0.0" layoutY="0.0" prefHeight="53.0" prefWidth="580.0">
<children>
<Label layoutX="7.0" layoutY="9.0" prefWidth="202.0" text="AP Vouchers Batch List">
<font>
<Font name="System Bold" size="14.0" />
</font>
</Label>
<Button fx:id="btnClose" cancelButton="true" layoutX="513.0" layoutY="27.0" mnemonicParsing="false" text="Close" />
<Button id="btnClose" fx:id="apvRefresh" cancelButton="true" layoutX="185.0" layoutY="27.0" mnemonicParsing="false" onAction="#opentables" text="Refresh" />
</children>
</Pane>
<TableView fx:id="tblMainList" layoutX="0.0" layoutY="53.0" prefHeight="323.0" prefWidth="580.0">
<columns>
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="91.0" text="Date Entered" fx:id="colDateEntered" />
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="100.0" text="Created By" fx:id="colCreatedBy" />
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="261.0" text="Description" fx:id="colDescription" />
</columns>
</TableView>
</children>
</AnchorPane>
</center>
<padding>
<Insets bottom="10.0" left="10.0" right="10.0" top="10.0" />
</padding>
</BorderPane>
</children>
<stylesheets>
<URL value="#apvoucher_batchgrid.css" />
</stylesheets>
</AnchorPane>
THANK YOU for the answer. Way to many years in case insensitive languages. This has been a quick and dirty exercise for me to learn java and the latest & greatest stuff or as I like to say New Exciting Technology (NExT!)
For anyone looking at the answer and still not completely clued in, here are the changes that made the code work properly.
colDateEntered.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("Denteredon"));
colDescription.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CDesc"));
colEnteredBy.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("Ccreatedby"));
public class sresult {
private String Denteredon;
private String Ccreatedby;
private String CDesc;
public sresult(String T, String d, String c) {
this.Ccreatedby = T;
this.Denteredon = d;
this.CDesc = c;
}
public String getCcreatedby() {
return Ccreatedby;
}
public void setCreatedby(String T) {
Ccreatedby = T;
}
public String getDenteredon() {
return Denteredon;
}
public void setDenteredon(String d) {
Denteredon = d;
}
public String getCDesc() {
return CDesc;
}
public void setCDesc(String c) {
CDesc = c;
}
}
}
This question is really a duplicate of: Javafx PropertyValueFactory not populating Tableview, but I'll specifically address your specific case, so it's clear.
Suggested solution (use a Lambda, not a PropertyValueFactory)
Instead of:
aColumn.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<Appointment,LocalDate>("date"));
Write:
aColumn.setCellValueFactory(cellData -> cellData.getValue().dateProperty());
For more information, see this answer:
Java: setCellValuefactory; Lambda vs. PropertyValueFactory; advantages/disadvantages
How do you use a JavaFX TableView with java records?
demonstrates replacing PropertyValueFactory with lambda expressions.
Solution using PropertyValueFactory
The lambda solution outlined above is preferred, but if you wish to use PropertyValueFactory, this alternate solution provides information on that.
Background
PropertyValueFactory uses reflection to determine the methods to get and set data values as well as to retrieve bindable properties from your model class. The pattern followed is:
PropertyValueType getName()
void setName(PropertyValueType value)
PropertyType nameProperty()
Where "name" is the string specified in the PropertyValueFactory constructor. The first letter of the property name in the getter and setter is capitalized (by java bean naming convention).
Why your application doesn't work
You have these three expressions:
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("DateEntered")
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc")
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CreatedBy")
For your sample properties, the PropertyValueFactory will look for these methods:
"DateEntered" => getDateEntered()
"cDesc" => getCDesc()
"CreatedBy" => getCreatedBy()
And you have these three getters on your sresult class:
getDateEntered()
getcDesc()
getEnteredBy()
Only getDateEntered() is going to be picked up by the PropertyValueFactory because that is the only matching method defined in the sresult class.
Advice
You will have to adopt Java standards if you want the reflection in PropertyValueFactory to work (the alternative is to not use the PropertyValueFactory and instead write your own cell factories from scratch).
Adopting Java camel case naming conventions also makes it easier for Java developers to read your code.
Some times columns doesn't show data because of column names. eg,
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc")
and getter is getcDesc cDesc column may not display data. If you change code to
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CDesc")
and getter is getCDesc CDesc column may display data.
For anyone else who still wasn't getting it after going through the above, my problem was that I wasn't specifying my setters with the "public final" designation.

Javafx TableView fails to show anything, but complies without error? [duplicate]

OK, new to java by several weeks, but have been programming for 30 years. The following code executes, but only the first column is showing anything. The data object is showing multiple rows of data, with fields of data that are filled in. I'm sure I'm missing something, and have looked through similar questions on here.
APVoucher_batchgridController.java
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.ResourceBundle;
import javafx.event.ActionEvent;
import javafx.fxml.Initializable;
import javafx.fxml.FXML;
import javafx.scene.control.TableView;
import javafx.scene.input.MouseEvent;
import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.DriverManager;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.sql.Statement;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javafx.collections.FXCollections;
import javafx.collections.ObservableList;
import javafx.scene.control.TableColumn;
import javafx.scene.control.cell.PropertyValueFactory;
/**
* FXML Controller class
*
* #author kmitchell
*/
public class APVoucher_batchgridController implements Initializable {
public TableView tblMainList;
public TableColumn colDateEntered;
public TableColumn colCreatedBy;
public TableColumn colDescription;
/**
* Initializes the controller class.
*/
#Override
public void initialize(URL url, ResourceBundle rb) {
}
#FXML
public void opentables(ActionEvent event) {
Object forName = null;
Connection conn = null;
Statement stmt = null;
ResultSet rs = null;
colDateEntered.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("DateEntered"));
colDescription.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc"));
colCreatedBy.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CreatedBy"));
try {
// load the driver into memory
forName = Class.forName("jstels.jdbc.dbf.DBFDriver2");
} catch (ClassNotFoundException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
try {
conn = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:jstels:dbf:e:\\keystone-data\\keyfund\\seymour\\keyfund.dbc");
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
if (conn != null) {
try {
stmt = conn.createStatement();
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
if (stmt != null) {
// execute a query
try {
ObservableList<Object> data = FXCollections.observableArrayList();
rs = stmt.executeQuery("SELECT denteredon, cdesc, ccreatedby FROM apvbatch WHERE ldeleted = false ORDER BY denteredon DESC");
while (rs.next()) {
String enteredon = rs.getString("denteredon");
String desc = rs.getString("cdesc");
String createdby = rs.getString("ccreatedby");
sresult row = new sresult(createdby, enteredon, desc);
data.add(row);
}
tblMainList.setItems(data);
tblMainList.setVisible(true);
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
}
}
}
public class sresult {
private String DateEntered;
private String EnteredBy;
private String cDesc;
public sresult(String T, String d, String c) {
this.EnteredBy = T;
this.DateEntered = d;
this.cDesc = c;
}
public String getEnteredBy() {
return EnteredBy;
}
public void setEnteredBy(String T) {
EnteredBy = T;
}
public String getDateEntered() {
return DateEntered;
}
public void setDateEntered(String d) {
DateEntered = d;
}
public String getcDesc() {
return cDesc;
}
public void setcDesc(String c) {
cDesc = c;
}
}
}
and APVoucher_batchgrid.fxml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?import java.lang.*?>
<?import java.net.*?>
<?import java.util.*?>
<?import javafx.geometry.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.control.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.layout.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.text.*?>
<AnchorPane id="AnchorPane" fx:id="batchlistform" prefHeight="400.0" prefWidth="600.0" styleClass="mainFxmlClass" xmlns:fx="http://javafx.com/fxml/1" xmlns="http://javafx.com/javafx/2.2" fx:controller="keystone.APVoucher_batchgridController">
<children>
<BorderPane layoutX="0.0" layoutY="0.0" prefHeight="400.0" prefWidth="600.0">
<center>
<AnchorPane prefHeight="-1.0" prefWidth="-1.0">
<children>
<Pane layoutX="0.0" layoutY="0.0" prefHeight="53.0" prefWidth="580.0">
<children>
<Label layoutX="7.0" layoutY="9.0" prefWidth="202.0" text="AP Vouchers Batch List">
<font>
<Font name="System Bold" size="14.0" />
</font>
</Label>
<Button fx:id="btnClose" cancelButton="true" layoutX="513.0" layoutY="27.0" mnemonicParsing="false" text="Close" />
<Button id="btnClose" fx:id="apvRefresh" cancelButton="true" layoutX="185.0" layoutY="27.0" mnemonicParsing="false" onAction="#opentables" text="Refresh" />
</children>
</Pane>
<TableView fx:id="tblMainList" layoutX="0.0" layoutY="53.0" prefHeight="323.0" prefWidth="580.0">
<columns>
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="91.0" text="Date Entered" fx:id="colDateEntered" />
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="100.0" text="Created By" fx:id="colCreatedBy" />
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="261.0" text="Description" fx:id="colDescription" />
</columns>
</TableView>
</children>
</AnchorPane>
</center>
<padding>
<Insets bottom="10.0" left="10.0" right="10.0" top="10.0" />
</padding>
</BorderPane>
</children>
<stylesheets>
<URL value="#apvoucher_batchgrid.css" />
</stylesheets>
</AnchorPane>
THANK YOU for the answer. Way to many years in case insensitive languages. This has been a quick and dirty exercise for me to learn java and the latest & greatest stuff or as I like to say New Exciting Technology (NExT!)
For anyone looking at the answer and still not completely clued in, here are the changes that made the code work properly.
colDateEntered.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("Denteredon"));
colDescription.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CDesc"));
colEnteredBy.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("Ccreatedby"));
public class sresult {
private String Denteredon;
private String Ccreatedby;
private String CDesc;
public sresult(String T, String d, String c) {
this.Ccreatedby = T;
this.Denteredon = d;
this.CDesc = c;
}
public String getCcreatedby() {
return Ccreatedby;
}
public void setCreatedby(String T) {
Ccreatedby = T;
}
public String getDenteredon() {
return Denteredon;
}
public void setDenteredon(String d) {
Denteredon = d;
}
public String getCDesc() {
return CDesc;
}
public void setCDesc(String c) {
CDesc = c;
}
}
}
This question is really a duplicate of: Javafx PropertyValueFactory not populating Tableview, but I'll specifically address your specific case, so it's clear.
Suggested solution (use a Lambda, not a PropertyValueFactory)
Instead of:
aColumn.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<Appointment,LocalDate>("date"));
Write:
aColumn.setCellValueFactory(cellData -> cellData.getValue().dateProperty());
For more information, see this answer:
Java: setCellValuefactory; Lambda vs. PropertyValueFactory; advantages/disadvantages
How do you use a JavaFX TableView with java records?
demonstrates replacing PropertyValueFactory with lambda expressions.
Solution using PropertyValueFactory
The lambda solution outlined above is preferred, but if you wish to use PropertyValueFactory, this alternate solution provides information on that.
Background
PropertyValueFactory uses reflection to determine the methods to get and set data values as well as to retrieve bindable properties from your model class. The pattern followed is:
PropertyValueType getName()
void setName(PropertyValueType value)
PropertyType nameProperty()
Where "name" is the string specified in the PropertyValueFactory constructor. The first letter of the property name in the getter and setter is capitalized (by java bean naming convention).
Why your application doesn't work
You have these three expressions:
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("DateEntered")
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc")
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CreatedBy")
For your sample properties, the PropertyValueFactory will look for these methods:
"DateEntered" => getDateEntered()
"cDesc" => getCDesc()
"CreatedBy" => getCreatedBy()
And you have these three getters on your sresult class:
getDateEntered()
getcDesc()
getEnteredBy()
Only getDateEntered() is going to be picked up by the PropertyValueFactory because that is the only matching method defined in the sresult class.
Advice
You will have to adopt Java standards if you want the reflection in PropertyValueFactory to work (the alternative is to not use the PropertyValueFactory and instead write your own cell factories from scratch).
Adopting Java camel case naming conventions also makes it easier for Java developers to read your code.
Some times columns doesn't show data because of column names. eg,
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc")
and getter is getcDesc cDesc column may not display data. If you change code to
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CDesc")
and getter is getCDesc CDesc column may display data.
For anyone else who still wasn't getting it after going through the above, my problem was that I wasn't specifying my setters with the "public final" designation.

Rows not displaying TableView Javafx [duplicate]

OK, new to java by several weeks, but have been programming for 30 years. The following code executes, but only the first column is showing anything. The data object is showing multiple rows of data, with fields of data that are filled in. I'm sure I'm missing something, and have looked through similar questions on here.
APVoucher_batchgridController.java
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.ResourceBundle;
import javafx.event.ActionEvent;
import javafx.fxml.Initializable;
import javafx.fxml.FXML;
import javafx.scene.control.TableView;
import javafx.scene.input.MouseEvent;
import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.DriverManager;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.sql.Statement;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javafx.collections.FXCollections;
import javafx.collections.ObservableList;
import javafx.scene.control.TableColumn;
import javafx.scene.control.cell.PropertyValueFactory;
/**
* FXML Controller class
*
* #author kmitchell
*/
public class APVoucher_batchgridController implements Initializable {
public TableView tblMainList;
public TableColumn colDateEntered;
public TableColumn colCreatedBy;
public TableColumn colDescription;
/**
* Initializes the controller class.
*/
#Override
public void initialize(URL url, ResourceBundle rb) {
}
#FXML
public void opentables(ActionEvent event) {
Object forName = null;
Connection conn = null;
Statement stmt = null;
ResultSet rs = null;
colDateEntered.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("DateEntered"));
colDescription.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc"));
colCreatedBy.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CreatedBy"));
try {
// load the driver into memory
forName = Class.forName("jstels.jdbc.dbf.DBFDriver2");
} catch (ClassNotFoundException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
try {
conn = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:jstels:dbf:e:\\keystone-data\\keyfund\\seymour\\keyfund.dbc");
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
if (conn != null) {
try {
stmt = conn.createStatement();
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
if (stmt != null) {
// execute a query
try {
ObservableList<Object> data = FXCollections.observableArrayList();
rs = stmt.executeQuery("SELECT denteredon, cdesc, ccreatedby FROM apvbatch WHERE ldeleted = false ORDER BY denteredon DESC");
while (rs.next()) {
String enteredon = rs.getString("denteredon");
String desc = rs.getString("cdesc");
String createdby = rs.getString("ccreatedby");
sresult row = new sresult(createdby, enteredon, desc);
data.add(row);
}
tblMainList.setItems(data);
tblMainList.setVisible(true);
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(APVoucher_batchgridController.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
}
}
}
public class sresult {
private String DateEntered;
private String EnteredBy;
private String cDesc;
public sresult(String T, String d, String c) {
this.EnteredBy = T;
this.DateEntered = d;
this.cDesc = c;
}
public String getEnteredBy() {
return EnteredBy;
}
public void setEnteredBy(String T) {
EnteredBy = T;
}
public String getDateEntered() {
return DateEntered;
}
public void setDateEntered(String d) {
DateEntered = d;
}
public String getcDesc() {
return cDesc;
}
public void setcDesc(String c) {
cDesc = c;
}
}
}
and APVoucher_batchgrid.fxml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?import java.lang.*?>
<?import java.net.*?>
<?import java.util.*?>
<?import javafx.geometry.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.control.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.layout.*?>
<?import javafx.scene.text.*?>
<AnchorPane id="AnchorPane" fx:id="batchlistform" prefHeight="400.0" prefWidth="600.0" styleClass="mainFxmlClass" xmlns:fx="http://javafx.com/fxml/1" xmlns="http://javafx.com/javafx/2.2" fx:controller="keystone.APVoucher_batchgridController">
<children>
<BorderPane layoutX="0.0" layoutY="0.0" prefHeight="400.0" prefWidth="600.0">
<center>
<AnchorPane prefHeight="-1.0" prefWidth="-1.0">
<children>
<Pane layoutX="0.0" layoutY="0.0" prefHeight="53.0" prefWidth="580.0">
<children>
<Label layoutX="7.0" layoutY="9.0" prefWidth="202.0" text="AP Vouchers Batch List">
<font>
<Font name="System Bold" size="14.0" />
</font>
</Label>
<Button fx:id="btnClose" cancelButton="true" layoutX="513.0" layoutY="27.0" mnemonicParsing="false" text="Close" />
<Button id="btnClose" fx:id="apvRefresh" cancelButton="true" layoutX="185.0" layoutY="27.0" mnemonicParsing="false" onAction="#opentables" text="Refresh" />
</children>
</Pane>
<TableView fx:id="tblMainList" layoutX="0.0" layoutY="53.0" prefHeight="323.0" prefWidth="580.0">
<columns>
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="91.0" text="Date Entered" fx:id="colDateEntered" />
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="100.0" text="Created By" fx:id="colCreatedBy" />
<TableColumn maxWidth="5000.0" minWidth="10.0" prefWidth="261.0" text="Description" fx:id="colDescription" />
</columns>
</TableView>
</children>
</AnchorPane>
</center>
<padding>
<Insets bottom="10.0" left="10.0" right="10.0" top="10.0" />
</padding>
</BorderPane>
</children>
<stylesheets>
<URL value="#apvoucher_batchgrid.css" />
</stylesheets>
</AnchorPane>
THANK YOU for the answer. Way to many years in case insensitive languages. This has been a quick and dirty exercise for me to learn java and the latest & greatest stuff or as I like to say New Exciting Technology (NExT!)
For anyone looking at the answer and still not completely clued in, here are the changes that made the code work properly.
colDateEntered.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("Denteredon"));
colDescription.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CDesc"));
colEnteredBy.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("Ccreatedby"));
public class sresult {
private String Denteredon;
private String Ccreatedby;
private String CDesc;
public sresult(String T, String d, String c) {
this.Ccreatedby = T;
this.Denteredon = d;
this.CDesc = c;
}
public String getCcreatedby() {
return Ccreatedby;
}
public void setCreatedby(String T) {
Ccreatedby = T;
}
public String getDenteredon() {
return Denteredon;
}
public void setDenteredon(String d) {
Denteredon = d;
}
public String getCDesc() {
return CDesc;
}
public void setCDesc(String c) {
CDesc = c;
}
}
}
This question is really a duplicate of: Javafx PropertyValueFactory not populating Tableview, but I'll specifically address your specific case, so it's clear.
Suggested solution (use a Lambda, not a PropertyValueFactory)
Instead of:
aColumn.setCellValueFactory(new PropertyValueFactory<Appointment,LocalDate>("date"));
Write:
aColumn.setCellValueFactory(cellData -> cellData.getValue().dateProperty());
For more information, see this answer:
Java: setCellValuefactory; Lambda vs. PropertyValueFactory; advantages/disadvantages
How do you use a JavaFX TableView with java records?
demonstrates replacing PropertyValueFactory with lambda expressions.
Solution using PropertyValueFactory
The lambda solution outlined above is preferred, but if you wish to use PropertyValueFactory, this alternate solution provides information on that.
Background
PropertyValueFactory uses reflection to determine the methods to get and set data values as well as to retrieve bindable properties from your model class. The pattern followed is:
PropertyValueType getName()
void setName(PropertyValueType value)
PropertyType nameProperty()
Where "name" is the string specified in the PropertyValueFactory constructor. The first letter of the property name in the getter and setter is capitalized (by java bean naming convention).
Why your application doesn't work
You have these three expressions:
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("DateEntered")
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc")
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CreatedBy")
For your sample properties, the PropertyValueFactory will look for these methods:
"DateEntered" => getDateEntered()
"cDesc" => getCDesc()
"CreatedBy" => getCreatedBy()
And you have these three getters on your sresult class:
getDateEntered()
getcDesc()
getEnteredBy()
Only getDateEntered() is going to be picked up by the PropertyValueFactory because that is the only matching method defined in the sresult class.
Advice
You will have to adopt Java standards if you want the reflection in PropertyValueFactory to work (the alternative is to not use the PropertyValueFactory and instead write your own cell factories from scratch).
Adopting Java camel case naming conventions also makes it easier for Java developers to read your code.
Some times columns doesn't show data because of column names. eg,
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("cDesc")
and getter is getcDesc cDesc column may not display data. If you change code to
new PropertyValueFactory<sresult, String>("CDesc")
and getter is getCDesc CDesc column may display data.
For anyone else who still wasn't getting it after going through the above, my problem was that I wasn't specifying my setters with the "public final" designation.

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