By: MakeItSimple. in Java Tutorials on 2008年09月02日 [フレーム]
Expressions are a powerful feature of JasperReports. They can be used for declaring report variables that perform various calculations, for data grouping on the report, to specify report text fields content or to further customize the appearance of objects on the report.
Basically, all report expressions are Java expressions that can reference report fields and report variables.
In an XML report design there are several elements that define expressions:
<variableExpression>, .
<initialValueExpression>,
<groupExpression>,
<printWhenExpression>,
<imageExpression> and <textFieldExpression>
In order to use a report field reference in an expression, the name of the field must be put between $F{ and } character sequences.
For example, if we want to display in a text field, on the report, the concatenated values of two fields, we can define an expression like this one:
<textFieldExpression> $F{FirstName} + " " + $F{LastName}</textFieldExpression>
The expression can be even more complex:
<textFieldExpression> $F{FirstName} + " " + $F{LastName} + " was hired on " + (new SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy")).format($F{HireDate}) + "."</textFieldExpression>
To reference a variable in an expression, we must put the name of the variable between $V{ and } like in the example below:
<textFieldExpression> "Total quantity : " + $V{QuantitySum} + " kg."</textFieldExpression>
There is an equivalent syntax for using parameters in expressions. The name of the parameter should be put between $P{ and } like in the following example:
<textFieldExpression> "Max Order ID is : " + $P{MaxOrderID}</textFieldExpression> This policy contains information about your privacy. By posting, you are declaring that you understand this policy:
This policy is subject to change at any time and without notice.
These terms and conditions contain rules about posting comments. By submitting a comment, you are declaring that you agree with these rules:
Failure to comply with these rules may result in being banned from submitting further comments.
These terms and conditions are subject to change at any time and without notice.
Most Viewed Articles (in Java )
Step by Step guide to setup freetts for Java
Open a .docx file and show content in a TextArea using Java
concurrent.Flow instead of Observable class in Java
DateFormat sample program in Java
Simple Port Scanner application using Java
Using the AWS SDK for Java in Eclipse
Read a file having a list of telnet commands and execute them one by one using Java
Calculator application in Java
Latest Articles (in Java)
Read a file having a list of telnet commands and execute them one by one using Java
Open a .docx file and show content in a TextArea using Java
Step by Step guide to setup freetts for Java
Of Object, equals (), == and hashCode ()
Using the AWS SDK for Java in Eclipse
DateFormat sample program in Java
concurrent.Flow instead of Observable class in Java
Calculator application in Java
Sending Email from Java application (using gmail)
Read a file having a list of telnet commands and execute them one by one using Java
Open a .docx file and show content in a TextArea using Java
Step by Step guide to setup freetts for Java
Of Object, equals (), == and hashCode ()
Using the AWS SDK for Java in Eclipse
DateFormat sample program in Java
concurrent.Flow instead of Observable class in Java
Calculator application in Java
Sending Email from Java application (using gmail)
© 2023 Java-samples.com
Tutorial Archive: Data Science React Native Android AJAX ASP.net C C++ C# Cocoa Cloud Computing EJB Errors Java Certification Interview iPhone Javascript JSF JSP Java Beans J2ME JDBC Linux Mac OS X MySQL Perl PHP Python Ruby SAP VB.net EJB Struts Trends WebServices XML Office 365 Hibernate
Latest Tutorials on: Data Science React Native Android AJAX ASP.net C Cocoa C++ C# EJB Errors Java Certification Interview iPhone Javascript JSF JSP Java Beans J2ME JDBC Linux Mac OS X MySQL Perl PHP Python Ruby SAP VB.net EJB Struts Cloud Computing WebServices XML Office 365 Hibernate