https://bz.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=126531
Issue ID: 126531 Issue Type: DEFECT Summary: different behaviour for "CharColor" and "CharBackColor" properties in java Product: App Dev Version: 4.1.1 Hardware: PC OS: Windows 10 Status: UNCONFIRMED Severity: normal Priority: P5 Component: api Assignee: issues@openoffice.apache.org Reporter: john.dora...@cappellaniauniroma3.org ==Overview== When using the com.sun.star.beans.XPropertySet interface in a java extension, I am seeing different behaviour for the "CharColor" property and the "CharBackColor" property. The API documentation says that they take a "long" value; and it then gives as an example the usage of a hex number such as 0x00FFFF00 (https://wiki.openoffice.org/wiki/Documentation/DevGuide/Text/Formatting). The "CharBackColor" property, differently from the "CharColor" property, will not take an integer value such as the one produced by the Color.getRGB() method. ==Steps to reproduce== The "CharColor" property will take an integer as produced by the getRGB() method: xPropertySet.setPropertyValue("CharColor", Color.YELLOW.getRGB()); This will correctly set the character color to yellow. However this will not work for the "CharBackColor" property: xPropertySet.setPropertyValue("CharBackColor", Color.YELLOW.getRGB()); This simply will not do anything, it does not give an error but it also does not set the background to yellow. This will work instead: xPropertySet.setPropertyValue("CharBackColor", 0x00FFFF00); Casting a variable as "long" and passing it in as value for the "CharBackColor" property results in an error: long bgColor = 0x00FFFF00; //Long bgColor = (long) 0x00FFFF00 xPropertySet.setPropertyValue("CharBackColor", bgColor); com.sun.star.lang.IllegalArgumentException: at com.sun.star.bridges.jni_uno.JNI_proxy.dispatch_call(Native Method) at com.sun.star.bridges.jni_uno.JNI_proxy.invoke(JNI_proxy.java:171) at com.sun.proxy.$Proxy6.setPropertyValue(Unknown Source) ==Actual results== Passing an integer value as produced by Color.getRGB() into the "CharBackColor" property will not throw an error but will have no result. Passing a value cast as "long" or "Long" or "int" will result in an error. ==Expected results== Passing a Color.getRGB() value into the "CharBackColor" property should be sufficient to correctly set the color. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the issue.