You can use the Properties dialog to view and set properties for elements, bands, or a report. The Properties dialog shows all the properties that can be set in Properties view along with additional properties not shown elsewhere in the user interface.
Most element types support static values or expressions in properties. Some element types only allow static properties, including bands and parameters. The properties available for fields depend on the query language.
The steps to open the Properties dialog differ depending on the element you select. For example:
| • | To open the Properties dialog for a text field, go to the Appearance tab in Properties view and click the Edit Properties button. |
| • | To open the Properties dialog for a report, go the Advanced tab in Properties view and select Edit Properties, then click .... |
Properties dialog for a report |
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By default, the Properties dialog displays a form with available properties grouped by category. The available categories depend on the element type. For example, reports allow you to set a number of JDBC and timezone properties. Each property has a widget that allows you to set the property. Deprecated properties are displayed with strikethrough.
The Properties dialog box supports the following actions:
| • | Hover to view the description of a property. |
| • | Right-click on an entry box to set the property to Null or reset it to the default value (when available). |
| • | Click |
| • | Click |
| • | Enter a string in the Search property entry bar to search for a property by name. |
| • | Some properties include variables in the property names, shown with curly brackets {}. To use these properties, replace the entire value, including the brackets, with the name you want to use. |
| You can also use styles to format some types of elements. Styles can be applied to multiple elements, but are more restrictive. Properties must be individually applied to each element. |
Example of Using the Properties Dialog
This example shows how to set a property expression that turns values in a text field red when they are greater than 10.
Create a report:
To create the report for the chart
| 1. | Create a new, blank report using the Sample DB data adapter and the query: select * from PRODUCT. |
| 3. | Click |
| 4. | Delete all bands except for Column Header and Details. |
| 5. | In Outline view, expand the Fields node, select all fields, and drag them to the detail band. |
The fields are added to the detail band and headers are automatically added to the Column Header band.
| 6. | Drag to select the fields in the detail band, right-click, and select Align in Container > Align to Top Margin. Then double-click the detail band to resize it to fit the fields. |
Set properties on a text field:
| 1. | Select the $F{COST} field in the detail band. |
| 2. | First, set this field to display as currency. Select the Text Field tab in Properties view, click *** and enter the following expression: |
"$###,###.00"
| 3. | Select the Appearance tab in Properties view and click Edit Properties at the bottom of the view. |
| 4. | To see properties related to color, type "color" in the search bar. |
Properties dialog for a report |
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| 5. | Click the expression editor icon next to net.sf.jasperreports.style.forecolor to open the expression editor. |
| 6. | Select Use Expression and enter the following expression: |
$F{COST}.compareTo(new BigDecimal(10)) > 0 ? "#FF0000" :"#000000"
| 8. | Click Preview to view the report. |
Variables in Property Names
Variables in property names are shown inside curly brackets ({}). To use these properties, replace the entire variable (including the brackets) with the name you want to use. You can create multiple properties and set them to different expressions.
Sample Property with Variables in the Name
To see an example of a property with variables in the name:
| 1. | Select the root node of any report. |
| 2. | Go to the Advanced tab in Properties view and select Edit Properties … . |
| 3. | In the Properties dialog, and scroll down to the Export properties or search on "export". You see the property net.sf.jasperreports.export.csv.column.names.{arbitrary_name}. |
You can use an instance of this property to set a comma-separated list of names of columns you want to appear in CSV exports of the report. Each report element associated with one of these column names will be exported. Elements that are not associated with these column names won't be part of the export. For example, setting <property name="net.sf.jasperreports.export.csv.column.names.1" value="id,name,department"/> tells the CSV exporter to export those columns.
You can also set this property on a higher level, such as a dataset or crosstab. To associate an element with a column name, set the net.sf.jasperreports.export.csv.column.name property for that element.
Using Multiple Properties With the Same Prefix
You can create multiple properties with this prefix and set column names for each instance. At runtime, all properties starting with the net.sf.jasperreports.export.csv.column.names. prefix are collected and their values are parsed to get the list of all column names to be exported.
For instance, in a report you can have:
For this example, the result is the following columns, in this order: id, name, department, address.
The {arbitrary_name} suffix can be any name you choose. The following code gives the same result at runtime:
<property name="net.sf.jasperreports.export.csv.column.names.first.column.set" value="id,name,department"/> <property name="net.sf.jasperreports.export.csv.column.names.address" value="address"/> |
You can use multiple properties with the same prefix for dynamic properties. For example, you could generate column names from two different parameters:
<![CDATA[$P{columns1}]]>[/code] |
and
<![CDATA[$P{other_columns}]]>[/code] |
When using multiple properties with the same prefix
| • | Properties are collected in the same order they are declared in the report. |
| • | If you have a single column name, you do not need a comma. |
| • | Each instance should have a different name, in order to make them distinct. If you have two instances with the same name, the second instance overwrites the first. |
| • | If a column name appears in both instances of the property, it will be collected twice. This behavior should be avoided. |
Adding a Custom Property
When you create custom components using JasperReports Library, properties for these custom components may not be discovered by the Jaspersoft Studio UI. In this case, you can add the property to the Jaspersoft Studio interface by clicking + in the Properties dialog and manually entering the property name. All properties in the Properties dialog are loosely coupled to the JRXML, which means that adding or removing these properties does not change the JRXML document structure.
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