This is a (very) small project that builds upon Apache's PDFBox (>= 2.0.4) and should allow you to create tables in a fairly simple way. It emerged from the need in another project. Therefore it also may miss some crucial features. Nevertheless there is:
- setting font and font size on table, row and cell level
- setting single cells with bottom-, top-, left- and right-border width separately
- background color on table, row and cell level
- padding (top, bottom, left, right) on cell level
- border colors (on table, row or cell level)
- support for text alignment (right, left, center, justified)
- vertical text alignment (top, middle, bottom)
- cell spanning and row spanning
- line breaking and line spacing
- images in cells
In order to produce a whole PDF document with a table that looks like this one:
You will need this code. In the same file you find the code for this table:
There are more examples (just see the folder), for instance this one:
Again, just have a look at the code.
If you run the tests with mvn clean test
there also some PDF documents created which you can find in the target
folder.
The corresponding sources (in order to understand how to use the code) can be found in the test package.
Add this to your pom.xml
:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.vandeseer</groupId>
<artifactId>easytable</artifactId>
<version>0.4.0</version>
</dependency>
- to Binghammer for implementing cell coloring and text center alignment
- to Sebastian Göhring for finding and fixing a bug (column spanning)
- to AndreKoepke for the line breaking feature, some bigger nice refactorings and improvements
- to Wolfgang Apolinarski for the printing over pages and bugfixes
- to AdrianMiska for finding and fixing an issue with cell height
- to TheRealSourceSeeker for finding a bug caused by using
float
s
Nope. You will need Java 8.
Well, Using it with PDFBox 1.8.9 requires you to check out version 0.0.7 (tagged as such in git) and install it locally, i.e.:
git checkout v0.0.7
mvn clean install
Note though that the API will have changed in the meantime ...
Yes. Or you can upvote this answer on stackoverflow.