GUI Tutorial

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

GUI Tutorial. Images. Images. Useful Info – not on final exam. Images and Icons. Image class Abstract class – why? Superclass of all graphical image classes Icon interface Represents a fixed-sized picture Methods getIconHeight, getIconWidth, paintIcon - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

GUI Tutorial

Images

Images

Useful Info – not on final exam

Images and Icons Image class

Abstract class – why? Superclass of all graphical image classes

Icon interface Represents a fixed-sized picture Methods getIconHeight, getIconWidth, paintIcon Can be used to decorate buttons, labels, tabbed

panes ImageIcon class

Implementation of the Icon interface Creates an icon from a GIF, JPEG, or PNG image.

*

Where’s the image? Common issue: Eclipse must be able to find the

images For compatibility with jar files, store under src How can Eclipse find the image?

1. Create images folder under the [Project]/src2. Drag your file into Eclipse (DO NOT just copy in

Windows, Eclipse won’t know about it.)

Need to find the imageURL url = getClass().getResource("/images/sm_crazybird.gif");

URL = uniform resource locator getClass() returns a Class object. Stores details about the class, such

as methods, fields etc. getResource(String) finds a resource with a given name. First creates

absolute name of resource. If the String begins with ‘/’, absolute name is String (minus the ‘/’). Otherwise, the package name is appended to the front. In the package name, . are converted to ‘/’ (e.g. package one.two.three would be one/two/three. Important in order to match directory structure.

Toolkit - abstract superclass of all actual implementations of the Abstract Window Toolkit. Subclasses of Toolkit are used to bind the various components to particular native toolkit implementations.

Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit() – gets appropriate toolkit for this platform Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getImage(url) – reads gif, png or jpg pixel

data, creates an Image

Potential Issue Images have to be loaded from disk, can take

time Might have code to draw image on JPanel, but

image isn’t loaded when app displays Solution: MediaTracker

Create a MediaTracker object Add image(s) Wait for image(s) to load Must use try/catch, in case process is interrupted

Put it in codepublic class ImagePanel extends JPanel {

private Image thumbnail;

public ImagePanel() {

MediaTracker tracker = new MediaTracker(this);

URL url = getClass().getResource("/images/crazy_cat.gif");

Image original = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getImage(url);

tracker.addImage(original, 0);

try {

tracker.waitForID(0);

} catch (InterruptedException e) { return; }

thumbnail = original.getScaledInstance(64, 64, Image.SCALE_FAST);

}

public void paintComponent(Graphics g) {

int PADDING = 20;

g.drawImage(thumbnail, PADDING, PADDING, 64, 64, null);

}

}

CHANGE image name as needed

Images and Buttonspublic class ButtonPanel extends JPanel {

private JButton myButton;

private ImageIcon myImage;

public ButtonPanel() {

myButton = new JButton();

URL url = getClass().getResource("/images/crazycat.gif");

myImage = new ImageIcon(Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getImage(url));

myButton.setIcon(myImage);

add(myButton);

}

}

Put it all togetherpublic class ImageFrame extends JFrame {

public ImageFrame() {

setTitle("Image Play");

setSize(180, 250);

setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);

ImagePanel imagePanel = new ImagePanel();

add(imagePanel, BorderLayout.CENTER);

ButtonPanel buttonPanel = new ButtonPanel();

add(buttonPanel, BorderLayout.SOUTH);

}

public static void main(String[] args) {

// Puts GUI on regular event queue, will update as soon as possible

SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {

public void run() {

ImageFrame frame = new ImageFrame();

frame.setVisible(true);

} });

}

}

Quick Info: Threads Threads are covered in detail in CSCI400 and CSCI442 For now, it’s good to know that there are potentially 3

threads: Initial threads, the threads that execute initial application

code. The main method runs in this thread The event dispatch thread, where all event-handling code

is executed. Most code that interacts with the Swing framework must also execute on this thread.

Worker threads, also known as background threads, where time-consuming background tasks are executed. We won’t deal with these.

http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/uiswing/concurrency/index.html

Correct way to start a GUIpublic static void main(String[] args) {

SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {

public void run() {

ImageFrame frame = new ImageFrame();

frame.setVisible(true);

}

});

}

http://javarevisited.blogspot.com/2011/09/invokeandwait-invokelater-swing-example.htmlhttp://www.javamex.com/tutorials/threads/invokelater.shtmlhttp://www2.sys-con.com/itsg/virtualcd/Java/archives/0605/ford/index.html

More Images

Draw on a panel, MediaTracker

MediaTracker Images that are created from a URL,

filename or byte array are preloaded using MediaTracker to monitor the loaded state of the image.

You can also draw imagesimport javax.swing.*;

import java.net.*;

import java.awt.*;

public class ImagePanel extends JPanel {

private Image original;

private MediaTracker tracker;

public static final int PADDING = 20;

public ImagePanel()

{

tracker = new MediaTracker(this);

original = getImage("/images/crazycat.gif");

tracker.addImage(original, 0);

try {

tracker.waitForID(0);

} catch (InterruptedException e) {

return;

}

}

Use MediaTracker to control timing – without this, the panel may display before the image is loaded.

Drawing images, continuedpublic void paintComponent(Graphics g) {

g.drawImage(original, PADDING, PADDING, 64, 64, null);

}

private Image getImage(String pathName) {

URL url = getClass().getResource(pathName);

Image image = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getImage(url);

return image;

}

public static void main(String[] args) {

JFrame frame = new JFrame("Image Play");

ImagePanel panel = new ImagePanel();

frame.add(panel);

frame.setSize(200, 200);

frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);

frame.setVisible(true);

}

}

Advanced Topics

Image in a jar

Jar File In Eclipse, highlight project Right-click, Export, Jar. Pick location for jar file On the last dialog, identify the class

containing main

Complete program for reference - Image

import java.awt.*;

import javax.swing.*;

import java.net.*;

public class ImageGUI extends JPanel {

private ImageIcon myImage;

public ImageGUI()

{

JButton button = new JButton();

add(button);

myImage = new ImageIcon(getImage("/images/crazycat.gif"));

Image original = myImage.getImage();

button.setIcon(myImage);

}

public Image getImage(String pathName)

{

URL url = getClass().getResource(pathName);

Image image = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getImage(url);

return image;

}

public static void main(String[] args) {

JFrame frame = new JFrame("Image Play");

ImageGUI panel = new ImageGUI();

frame.add(panel, BorderLayout.CENTER);

frame.setSize(200, 200);

frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(

JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);

frame.setVisible(true);

}

} // end of class

Recommended