Documentation

Using and Creating a DataFlavor
Trail: Creating a GUI With JFC/Swing
Lesson: Drag and Drop and Data Transfer

Using and Creating a DataFlavor

The DataFlavor class allows you to specify the content type of your data. You need to specify a DataFlavor when fetching the data from the importData method. Several flavor types are predefined for you:

For most applications, this is all you need to know about data flavors. However, if you require a flavor other than these predefined types, you can create your own. If you create a custom component and want it to participate in data transfer, you will need to create a custom data flavor. The constructor for specifying a data flavor is DataFlavor(Class, String). For example, to create a data flavor for the java.util.ArrayList class:

new DataFlavor(ArrayList.class, "ArrayList");

To create a data flavor for an integer array:

new DataFlavor(int[].class, "Integer Array");

Transferring the data using this mechanism uses Object serialization, so the class you use to transfer the data must implement the Serializable interface, as must anything that is serialized with it. If everything is not serializable, you will see a NotSerializableException during drop or copy to the clipboard.

Creating a data flavor using the DataFlavor(Class, String) constructor allows you to transfer data between applications, including native applications. If you want to create a data flavor that transfers data only within an application, use javaJVMLocalObjectMimeType and the DataFlavor(String) constructor. For example, to specify a data flavor that transfers color from a JColorChooser only within your application, you could use this code:

String colorType = DataFlavor.javaJVMLocalObjectMimeType +
                   ";class=java.awt.Color";
DataFlavor colorFlavor = new DataFlavor(colorType);

To create a data flavor for an ArrayList that would work only within your application:

new DataFlavor(DataFlavor.javaJVMLocalObjectMimeType +
               ";class=java.util.ArrayList");

To create a data flavor for an integer array:

new DataFlavor(DataFlavor.javaJVMLocalObjectMimeType +
               ";class=\"" + int[].class.getName() + "\"");

A MIME type containing special characters, such as [ or ;, must have those characters enclosed in quotes.

A Transferable can be implemented to support multiple flavors. For example, you can use both local and serialization flavors together, or you can use two forms of the same data, such as the ArrayList and integer array flavors, together, or you can create a TransferHandler that accepts different types of data, such as color and text.

When you create an array of DataFlavors to be returned from the Transferable's getTransferDataFlavors method, the flavors should be inserted in preferred order, with the most preferred appearing at element 0 of the array. Genereally the preferred order is from the richest, or most complex, form of the data down to the simpleset — the form most likely to be understood by other objects.


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