Code for changing the color of subtasks in Gantt Chart
Asked Answered
E

2

1

I need to change the color of subtasks in a Gantt chart. My example is based on GanttDemo2 with the following dataset and renderer. In different forums I found some discussions related to this topic, but I did not find a clear simple working example. In particular, I can change the color of tasks, but I don't know how to extract subtasks.

private IntervalCategoryDataset createSampleDataset() {

    final TaskSeries s1 = new TaskSeries("Scheduled");

    final Task t1 = new Task(
        "Design", date(1, Calendar.APRIL, 2001), date(1, Calendar.MAY, 2001));
    t1.addSubtask(new Task("Design 1", date(1, Calendar.APRIL, 2001), date(15, Calendar.APRIL, 2001)));
    t1.addSubtask(new Task("Design 2", date(16, Calendar.APRIL, 2001), date(25, Calendar.APRIL, 2001)));
    t1.addSubtask(new Task("Design 3", date(26, Calendar.APRIL, 2001), date(1, Calendar.MAY, 2001)));
    s1.add(t1);

    final Task t2 = new Task(
        "Proposal", date(1, Calendar.JUNE, 2001), date(1, Calendar.JULY, 2001));
    t2.addSubtask(new Task("Proposal 1", date(1, Calendar.JUNE, 2001), date(15, Calendar.JUNE, 2001)));
    t2.addSubtask(new Task("Proposal 2", date(16, Calendar.JUNE, 2001), date(25, Calendar.JUNE, 2001)));
    t2.addSubtask(new Task("Proposal 3", date(26, Calendar.JUNE, 2001), date(1, Calendar.JULY, 2001)));
    s1.add(t2);

    final TaskSeriesCollection collection = new TaskSeriesCollection();
    collection.add(s1);
    return collection;
}

class MyRenderer extends GanttRenderer {

    private static final Color subtask1Color = Color.blue;
    private static final Color subtask2Color = Color.cyan;
    private static final Color subtask3Color = Color.green;
    private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;

    public MyRenderer() {
        super();
    }

    @Override
    public Paint getItemPaint(int row, int col) {
        System.out.println(row + " " + col + " " + super.getItemPaint(row, col));
        if (row == 0) {
            return subtask1Color;
        } else if (row == 1) {
            return subtask2Color;
        } else if (row == 2) {
            return subtask3Color;
        } else {
            return super.getItemPaint(row, col);
        }
    }
}
Entomb answered 20/1, 2012 at 8:39 Comment(1)
+1 for sscce; added link to copyrighted source.Arcuate
A
5

As suggested here, a custom renderer can query the model to condition the result returned by getItemPaint(). In this example, subtasks are rendered using a palette of varying saturations of the default color for a given series. The approach assumes that the renderer makes two passes; some care should be given to documenting the dependency.

GanttSubtaskDemo

/** @see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8938690 */
private static class MyRenderer extends GanttRenderer {

    private static final int PASS = 2; // assumes two passes
    private final List<Color> clut = new ArrayList<Color>();
    private final TaskSeriesCollection model;
    private int row;
    private int col;
    private int index;

    public MyRenderer(TaskSeriesCollection model) {
        this.model = model;
    }

    @Override
    public Paint getItemPaint(int row, int col) {
        if (clut.isEmpty() || this.row != row || this.col != col) {
            initClut(row, col);
            this.row = row;
            this.col = col;
            index = 0;
        }
        int clutIndex = index++ / PASS;
        return clut.get(clutIndex);
    }

    private void initClut(int row, int col) {
        clut.clear();
        Color c = (Color) super.getItemPaint(row, col);
        float[] a = new float[3];
        Color.RGBtoHSB(c.getRed(), c.getGreen(), c.getBlue(), a);
        TaskSeries series = (TaskSeries) model.getRowKeys().get(row);
        List<Task> tasks = series.getTasks(); // unchecked
        int taskCount = tasks.get(col).getSubtaskCount();
        taskCount = Math.max(1, taskCount);
        for (int i = 0; i < taskCount; i++) {
            clut.add(Color.getHSBColor(a[0], a[1] / i, a[2]));
        }
    }
}
Arcuate answered 21/1, 2012 at 1:17 Comment(3)
NB: In this geometric regression, division by zero is automatically pinned to maximum saturation. Other schemes that vary saturation and/or brightness are possible.Arcuate
I do understand but can I have a full source code for this? so, I can understand it better for my further process. I need exactly what I have seen over here.Turco
@ParthBhayani: To gain beter understanding, see How to Ask a new question; cite this answer; use the tag jfreechart; using this data, include a minimal reproducible example that shows where you're getting stuck.Arcuate
E
0

Or you could extend the task and use a thread local variable to keep track of the last item accessed by the renderer:

private ThreadLocal<Integer> lastSubTask = new ThreadLocal<Integer>();
...
private class MyTask extends Task {
    ...
    public Task getSubtask(int index) {
        lastSubTask.set(index);
        return super.getSubtask(index);
    }
}
...
private class MyRenderer extends GanttRenderer {
    ...
    public Paint getCompletePaint() {
        Integer index = lastSubTask.get();
        return getColorForSubTask(index);
    }
    ...
}

This may potentially be more resilient to changes in jfreechart.

Envenom answered 5/8, 2013 at 23:46 Comment(0)

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