I want to parse url after I input something in text dialog and comfirm.
But it will cost time, so I created a thread to do it:
public void onAddMod(ActionEvent actionEvent) throws IOException {
Platform.runLater(() -> {
status.setText("Downloading...");
TextInputDialog dialog = new TextInputDialog("fabric-api");
dialog.setTitle("Add a mod from Modrinth");
dialog.setHeaderText("");
dialog.setContentText("Modrinth slug: ");
Optional<String> opt = dialog.showAndWait();
if (opt.isPresent()) {
try {
// parsing
Information info = ModrinthUtils.information(opt.get());
DataSaver.MODS.put(info.modName(), info);
ModList.getItems().add(info.modName());
} catch (IOException ignored) {}
}
status.setText("Finished!");
});
}
*onAddMod() will run after the button pressed
However, Platform.runLater() CANNOT let the thread "run later". When I confirm, the program stopped until parsing finished.
How can I fix it? Where am I doing wrong?
Here's an excerpt from the documentation of Platform#runLater(Runnable):
Run the specified Runnable on the JavaFX Application Thread at some unspecified time in the future. This method, which may be called from any thread, will post the Runnable to an event queue and then return immediately to the caller. The Runnables are executed in the order they are posted.
But your onAddMod method is already being invoked by the JavaFX Application Thread. So, all your current code is doing is delaying the code's execution by a small amount.
You need to modify your code to use a background thread. Creating a new thread is done the same way as in any other Java application. If you want just a one-off thread, then create a new Thread instance, passing it a Runnable, and call Thread#start(). If you want a thread pool, then make use of the Executor / ExecutorService API (also see the Executors class).
But as this is a JavaFX application, you probably also want to make use of the classes in the javafx.concurrent package. See Concurrency in JavaFX. For example:
public void onAddMod(ActionEvent actionEvent) {
// run dialog code on FX thread
TextInputDialog dialog = new TextInputDialog("fabric-api");
dialog.setTitle("Add a mod from Modrinth");
dialog.setHeaderText("");
dialog.setContentText("Modrinth slug: ");
Optional<String> opt = dialog.showAndWait();
if (opt.isPresent()) {
Task<Information> task = new Task<>() {
#Override
protected Information call() throws Exception {
// this method is invoked on the background thread
updateMessage("Downloading..."); // update coalesced on FX thread
Information info = ModrinthUtils.information(opt.get());
updateMessage("Finished!"); // update coalesced on FX thread
return info;
}
};
// might want to unbind when the task finishes?
status.textProperty().bind(task.messageProperty());
task.setOnSucceeded(event -> {
// this event handler is invoked on the FX thread
Information info = task.getValue();
DataSaver.MODS.put(info.modName(), info);
ModList.getItems().add(info.modName());
});
// this event handler is also invoked on the FX thread
task.setOnFailed(event -> /* notify user of failure */ );
Thread thread = new Thread(task); // 'Task' is a 'Runnable'
thread.setDaemon(true);
thread.start(); // start the background thread
}
}
The above makes use of Task and creates a one-off Thread instance. See Service for a reusable JavaFX worker, which also makes use of Executor so that you reuse the same thread pool.
I didn't know if:
DataSaver.MODS.put(info.modName(), info);
ModList.getItems().add(info.modName());
Needed to be executed on a certain thread, so I just put it on the FX thread, same as your current code, via the onSucceeded handler (the example puts the parsing on the background thread, if I understand your code correctly).
Related
I'm trying to understand how threads works in java. This is a simple database request that returns a ResultSet. I'm using JavaFx.
package application;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import javafx.fxml.FXML;
import javafx.scene.control.Button;
import javafx.scene.control.Label;
import javafx.scene.control.TextField;
public class Controller{
#FXML
private Button getCourseBtn;
#FXML
private TextField courseId;
#FXML
private Label courseCodeLbl;
private ModelController mController;
private void requestCourseName(){
String courseName = "";
Course c = new Course();
c.setCCode(Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText()));
mController = new ModelController(c);
try {
ResultSet rs = mController.<Course>get();
if(rs.next()){
courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1));
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
// return courseName;
}
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
try {
// courseCodeLbl.setText(requestCourseName());
Thread t = new Thread(new Runnable(){
public void run(){
requestCourseName();
}
}, "Thread A");
t.start();
} catch (NumberFormatException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
This returns an exception:
Exception in thread "Thread A" java.lang.IllegalStateException: Not on FX application thread; currentThread = Thread A
How do I correctly implement threading so that every database request is executed in a second thread instead of the main thread?
I've heard of implementing Runnable but then how do I invoke different methods in run method?
Never worked with threading before but I thought it's time for it.
Threading Rules for JavaFX
There are two basic rules for threads and JavaFX:
Any code that modifies or accesses the state of a node that is part of a scene graph must be executed on the JavaFX application thread. Certain other operations (e.g. creating new Stages) are also bound by this rule.
Any code that may take a long time to run should be executed on a background thread (i.e. not on the FX Application Thread).
The reason for the first rule is that, like most UI toolkits, the framework is written without any synchronization on the state of elements of the scene graph. Adding synchronization incurs a performance cost, and this turns out to be a prohibitive cost for UI toolkits. Thus only one thread can safely access this state. Since the UI thread (FX Application Thread for JavaFX) needs to access this state to render the scene, the FX Application Thread is the only thread on which you can access "live" scene graph state. In JavaFX 8 and later, most methods subject to this rule perform checks and throw runtime exceptions if the rule is violated. (This is in contrast to Swing, where you can write "illegal" code and it may appear to run fine, but is in fact prone to random and unpredictable failure at arbitrary time.) This is the cause of the IllegalStateException you are seeing: you are calling courseCodeLbl.setText(...) from a thread other than the FX Application Thread.
The reason for the second rule is that the FX Application Thread, as well as being responsible for processing user events, is also responsible for rendering the scene. Thus if you perform a long-running operation on that thread, the UI will not be rendered until that operation is complete, and will become unresponsive to user events. While this won't generate exceptions or cause corrupt object state (as violating rule 1 will), it (at best) creates a poor user experience.
Thus if you have a long-running operation (such as accessing a database) that needs to update the UI on completion, the basic plan is to perform the long-running operation in a background thread, returning the results of the operation when it is complete, and then schedule an update to the UI on the UI (FX Application) thread. All single-threaded UI toolkits have a mechanism to do this: in JavaFX you can do so by calling Platform.runLater(Runnable r) to execute r.run() on the FX Application Thread. (In Swing, you can call SwingUtilities.invokeLater(Runnable r) to execute r.run() on the AWT event dispatch thread.) JavaFX (see later in this answer) also provides some higher-level API for managing the communication back to the FX Application Thread.
General Good Practices for Multithreading
The best practice for working with multiple threads is to structure code that is to be executed on a "user-defined" thread as an object that is initialized with some fixed state, has a method to perform the operation, and on completion returns an object representing the result. Using immutable objects, in particular, a record, for the initialized state and computation result is highly desirable. The idea here is to eliminate the possibility of any mutable state being visible from multiple threads as far as possible. Accessing data from a database fits this idiom nicely: you can initialize your "worker" object with the parameters for the database access (search terms, etc). Perform the database query and get a result set, use the result set to populate a collection of domain objects, and return the collection at the end.
In some cases it will be necessary to share mutable state between multiple threads. When this absolutely has to be done, you need to carefully synchronize access to that state to avoid observing the state in an inconsistent state (there are other more subtle issues that need to be addressed, such as liveness of the state, etc). The strong recommendation when this is needed is to use a high-level library to manage these complexities for you.
Using the javafx.concurrent API
JavaFX provides a concurrency API that is designed for executing code in a background thread, with API specifically designed for updating the JavaFX UI on completion of (or during) the execution of that code. This API is designed to interact with the java.util.concurrent API, which provides general facilities for writing multithreaded code (but with no UI hooks). The key class in javafx.concurrent is Task, which represents a single, one-off, unit of work intended to be performed on a background thread. This class defines a single abstract method, call(), which takes no parameters, returns a result, and may throw checked exceptions. Task implements Runnable with its run() method simply invoking call(). Task also has a collection of methods which are guaranteed to update state on the FX Application Thread, such as updateProgress(...), updateMessage(...), etc. It defines some observable properties (e.g. state and value): listeners to these properties will be notified of changes on the FX Application Thread. Finally, there are some convenience methods to register handlers (setOnSucceeded(...), setOnFailed(...), etc); any handlers registered via these methods will also be invoked on the FX Application Thread.
So the general formula for retrieving data from a database is:
Create a Task to handle the call to the database.
Initialize the Task with any state that is needed to perform the database call.
Implement the task's call() method to perform the database call, returning the results of the call.
Register a handler with the task to send the results to the UI when it is complete.
Invoke the task on a background thread.
For database access, I strongly recommend encapsulating the actual database code in a separate class that knows nothing about the UI (Data Access Object design pattern). Then just have the task invoke the methods on the data access object.
So you might have a DAO class like this (note there is no UI code here):
public class WidgetDAO {
// In real life, you might want a connection pool here, though for
// desktop applications a single connection often suffices:
private Connection conn ;
public WidgetDAO() throws Exception {
conn = ... ; // initialize connection (or connection pool...)
}
public List<Widget> getWidgetsByType(String type) throws SQLException {
try (PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement("select * from widget where type = ?")) {
pstmt.setString(1, type);
ResultSet rs = pstmt.executeQuery();
List<Widget> widgets = new ArrayList<>();
while (rs.next()) {
Widget widget = new Widget();
widget.setName(rs.getString("name"));
widget.setNumberOfBigRedButtons(rs.getString("btnCount"));
// ...
widgets.add(widget);
}
return widgets ;
}
}
// ...
public void shutdown() throws Exception {
conn.close();
}
}
Retrieving a bunch of widgets might take a long time, so any calls from a UI class (e.g a controller class) should schedule this on a background thread. A controller class might look like this:
public class MyController {
private WidgetDAO widgetAccessor ;
// java.util.concurrent.Executor typically provides a pool of threads...
private Executor exec ;
#FXML
private TextField widgetTypeSearchField ;
#FXML
private TableView<Widget> widgetTable ;
public void initialize() throws Exception {
widgetAccessor = new WidgetDAO();
// create executor that uses daemon threads:
exec = Executors.newCachedThreadPool(runnable -> {
Thread t = new Thread(runnable);
t.setDaemon(true);
return t ;
});
}
// handle search button:
#FXML
public void searchWidgets() {
final String searchString = widgetTypeSearchField.getText();
Task<List<Widget>> widgetSearchTask = new Task<List<Widget>>() {
#Override
public List<Widget> call() throws Exception {
return widgetAccessor.getWidgetsByType(searchString);
}
};
widgetSearchTask.setOnFailed(e -> {
widgetSearchTask.getException().printStackTrace();
// inform user of error...
});
widgetSearchTask.setOnSucceeded(e ->
// Task.getValue() gives the value returned from call()...
widgetTable.getItems().setAll(widgetSearchTask.getValue()));
// run the task using a thread from the thread pool:
exec.execute(widgetSearchTask);
}
// ...
}
Notice how the call to the (potentially) long-running DAO method is wrapped in a Task which is run on a background thread (via the accessor) to prevent blocking the UI (rule 2 above). The update to the UI (widgetTable.setItems(...)) is actually executed back on the FX Application Thread, using the Task's convenience callback method setOnSucceeded(...) (satisfying rule 1).
In your case, the database access you are performing returns a single result, so you might have a method like
public class MyDAO {
private Connection conn ;
// constructor etc...
public Course getCourseByCode(int code) throws SQLException {
try (PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement("select * from course where c_code = ?")) {
pstmt.setInt(1, code);
ResultSet results = pstmt.executeQuery();
if (results.next()) {
Course course = new Course();
course.setName(results.getString("c_name"));
// etc...
return course ;
} else {
// maybe throw an exception if you want to insist course with given code exists
// or consider using Optional<Course>...
return null ;
}
}
}
// ...
}
And then your controller code would look like
final int courseCode = Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText());
Task<Course> courseTask = new Task<Course>() {
#Override
public Course call() throws Exception {
return myDAO.getCourseByCode(courseCode);
}
};
courseTask.setOnSucceeded(e -> {
Course course = courseTask.getCourse();
if (course != null) {
courseCodeLbl.setText(course.getName());
}
});
exec.execute(courseTask);
The API docs for Task have many more examples, including updating the progress property of the task (useful for progress bars..., etc.
Related
JavaFX - Background Thread for SQL Query
Sample for accessing a local database from JavaFX using concurrent tasks for database operations so that the UI remains responsive.
Exception in thread "Thread A" java.lang.IllegalStateException: Not on FX application thread; currentThread = Thread A
The exception is trying to tell you that you are trying to access JavaFX scene graph outside the JavaFX application thread. But where ??
courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1)); // <--- The culprit
If I can't do this how do I use a background thread?
The are different approaches which leads to similar solutions.
Wrap you Scene graph element with Platform.runLater
There easier and most simple way is to wrap the above line in Plaform.runLater, such that it gets executed on JavaFX Application thread.
Platform.runLater(() -> courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1)));
Use Task
The better approach to go with these scenarios is to use Task, which has specialized methods to send back updates. In the following example, I am using updateMessage to update the message. This property is bind to courseCodeLbl textProperty.
Task<Void> task = new Task<Void>() {
#Override
public Void call() {
String courseName = "";
Course c = new Course();
c.setCCode(Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText()));
mController = new ModelController(c);
try {
ResultSet rs = mController.<Course>get();
if(rs.next()) {
// update message property
updateMessage(rs.getString(1));
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
return null;
}
}
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
try {
Thread t = new Thread(task);
// To update the label
courseCodeLbl.textProperty.bind(task.messageProperty());
t.setDaemon(true); // Imp! missing in your code
t.start();
} catch (NumberFormatException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
This has nothing to do with database. JavaFx, like pretty much all GUI libraries, requires that you only use the main UI thread to modify the GUI.
You need to pass the data from the database back to the main UI thread. Use Platform.runLater() to schedule a Runnable to be run in the main UI thread.
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
new Thread(new Runnable(){
public void run(){
String courseName = requestCourseName();
Platform.runLater(new Runnable(){
courseCodeLbl.setText(courseName)
});
}
}, "Thread A").start();
}
Alternatively, you can use Task.
I'm trying to understand how threads works in java. This is a simple database request that returns a ResultSet. I'm using JavaFx.
package application;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import javafx.fxml.FXML;
import javafx.scene.control.Button;
import javafx.scene.control.Label;
import javafx.scene.control.TextField;
public class Controller{
#FXML
private Button getCourseBtn;
#FXML
private TextField courseId;
#FXML
private Label courseCodeLbl;
private ModelController mController;
private void requestCourseName(){
String courseName = "";
Course c = new Course();
c.setCCode(Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText()));
mController = new ModelController(c);
try {
ResultSet rs = mController.<Course>get();
if(rs.next()){
courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1));
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
// return courseName;
}
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
try {
// courseCodeLbl.setText(requestCourseName());
Thread t = new Thread(new Runnable(){
public void run(){
requestCourseName();
}
}, "Thread A");
t.start();
} catch (NumberFormatException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
This returns an exception:
Exception in thread "Thread A" java.lang.IllegalStateException: Not on FX application thread; currentThread = Thread A
How do I correctly implement threading so that every database request is executed in a second thread instead of the main thread?
I've heard of implementing Runnable but then how do I invoke different methods in run method?
Never worked with threading before but I thought it's time for it.
Threading Rules for JavaFX
There are two basic rules for threads and JavaFX:
Any code that modifies or accesses the state of a node that is part of a scene graph must be executed on the JavaFX application thread. Certain other operations (e.g. creating new Stages) are also bound by this rule.
Any code that may take a long time to run should be executed on a background thread (i.e. not on the FX Application Thread).
The reason for the first rule is that, like most UI toolkits, the framework is written without any synchronization on the state of elements of the scene graph. Adding synchronization incurs a performance cost, and this turns out to be a prohibitive cost for UI toolkits. Thus only one thread can safely access this state. Since the UI thread (FX Application Thread for JavaFX) needs to access this state to render the scene, the FX Application Thread is the only thread on which you can access "live" scene graph state. In JavaFX 8 and later, most methods subject to this rule perform checks and throw runtime exceptions if the rule is violated. (This is in contrast to Swing, where you can write "illegal" code and it may appear to run fine, but is in fact prone to random and unpredictable failure at arbitrary time.) This is the cause of the IllegalStateException you are seeing: you are calling courseCodeLbl.setText(...) from a thread other than the FX Application Thread.
The reason for the second rule is that the FX Application Thread, as well as being responsible for processing user events, is also responsible for rendering the scene. Thus if you perform a long-running operation on that thread, the UI will not be rendered until that operation is complete, and will become unresponsive to user events. While this won't generate exceptions or cause corrupt object state (as violating rule 1 will), it (at best) creates a poor user experience.
Thus if you have a long-running operation (such as accessing a database) that needs to update the UI on completion, the basic plan is to perform the long-running operation in a background thread, returning the results of the operation when it is complete, and then schedule an update to the UI on the UI (FX Application) thread. All single-threaded UI toolkits have a mechanism to do this: in JavaFX you can do so by calling Platform.runLater(Runnable r) to execute r.run() on the FX Application Thread. (In Swing, you can call SwingUtilities.invokeLater(Runnable r) to execute r.run() on the AWT event dispatch thread.) JavaFX (see later in this answer) also provides some higher-level API for managing the communication back to the FX Application Thread.
General Good Practices for Multithreading
The best practice for working with multiple threads is to structure code that is to be executed on a "user-defined" thread as an object that is initialized with some fixed state, has a method to perform the operation, and on completion returns an object representing the result. Using immutable objects, in particular, a record, for the initialized state and computation result is highly desirable. The idea here is to eliminate the possibility of any mutable state being visible from multiple threads as far as possible. Accessing data from a database fits this idiom nicely: you can initialize your "worker" object with the parameters for the database access (search terms, etc). Perform the database query and get a result set, use the result set to populate a collection of domain objects, and return the collection at the end.
In some cases it will be necessary to share mutable state between multiple threads. When this absolutely has to be done, you need to carefully synchronize access to that state to avoid observing the state in an inconsistent state (there are other more subtle issues that need to be addressed, such as liveness of the state, etc). The strong recommendation when this is needed is to use a high-level library to manage these complexities for you.
Using the javafx.concurrent API
JavaFX provides a concurrency API that is designed for executing code in a background thread, with API specifically designed for updating the JavaFX UI on completion of (or during) the execution of that code. This API is designed to interact with the java.util.concurrent API, which provides general facilities for writing multithreaded code (but with no UI hooks). The key class in javafx.concurrent is Task, which represents a single, one-off, unit of work intended to be performed on a background thread. This class defines a single abstract method, call(), which takes no parameters, returns a result, and may throw checked exceptions. Task implements Runnable with its run() method simply invoking call(). Task also has a collection of methods which are guaranteed to update state on the FX Application Thread, such as updateProgress(...), updateMessage(...), etc. It defines some observable properties (e.g. state and value): listeners to these properties will be notified of changes on the FX Application Thread. Finally, there are some convenience methods to register handlers (setOnSucceeded(...), setOnFailed(...), etc); any handlers registered via these methods will also be invoked on the FX Application Thread.
So the general formula for retrieving data from a database is:
Create a Task to handle the call to the database.
Initialize the Task with any state that is needed to perform the database call.
Implement the task's call() method to perform the database call, returning the results of the call.
Register a handler with the task to send the results to the UI when it is complete.
Invoke the task on a background thread.
For database access, I strongly recommend encapsulating the actual database code in a separate class that knows nothing about the UI (Data Access Object design pattern). Then just have the task invoke the methods on the data access object.
So you might have a DAO class like this (note there is no UI code here):
public class WidgetDAO {
// In real life, you might want a connection pool here, though for
// desktop applications a single connection often suffices:
private Connection conn ;
public WidgetDAO() throws Exception {
conn = ... ; // initialize connection (or connection pool...)
}
public List<Widget> getWidgetsByType(String type) throws SQLException {
try (PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement("select * from widget where type = ?")) {
pstmt.setString(1, type);
ResultSet rs = pstmt.executeQuery();
List<Widget> widgets = new ArrayList<>();
while (rs.next()) {
Widget widget = new Widget();
widget.setName(rs.getString("name"));
widget.setNumberOfBigRedButtons(rs.getString("btnCount"));
// ...
widgets.add(widget);
}
return widgets ;
}
}
// ...
public void shutdown() throws Exception {
conn.close();
}
}
Retrieving a bunch of widgets might take a long time, so any calls from a UI class (e.g a controller class) should schedule this on a background thread. A controller class might look like this:
public class MyController {
private WidgetDAO widgetAccessor ;
// java.util.concurrent.Executor typically provides a pool of threads...
private Executor exec ;
#FXML
private TextField widgetTypeSearchField ;
#FXML
private TableView<Widget> widgetTable ;
public void initialize() throws Exception {
widgetAccessor = new WidgetDAO();
// create executor that uses daemon threads:
exec = Executors.newCachedThreadPool(runnable -> {
Thread t = new Thread(runnable);
t.setDaemon(true);
return t ;
});
}
// handle search button:
#FXML
public void searchWidgets() {
final String searchString = widgetTypeSearchField.getText();
Task<List<Widget>> widgetSearchTask = new Task<List<Widget>>() {
#Override
public List<Widget> call() throws Exception {
return widgetAccessor.getWidgetsByType(searchString);
}
};
widgetSearchTask.setOnFailed(e -> {
widgetSearchTask.getException().printStackTrace();
// inform user of error...
});
widgetSearchTask.setOnSucceeded(e ->
// Task.getValue() gives the value returned from call()...
widgetTable.getItems().setAll(widgetSearchTask.getValue()));
// run the task using a thread from the thread pool:
exec.execute(widgetSearchTask);
}
// ...
}
Notice how the call to the (potentially) long-running DAO method is wrapped in a Task which is run on a background thread (via the accessor) to prevent blocking the UI (rule 2 above). The update to the UI (widgetTable.setItems(...)) is actually executed back on the FX Application Thread, using the Task's convenience callback method setOnSucceeded(...) (satisfying rule 1).
In your case, the database access you are performing returns a single result, so you might have a method like
public class MyDAO {
private Connection conn ;
// constructor etc...
public Course getCourseByCode(int code) throws SQLException {
try (PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement("select * from course where c_code = ?")) {
pstmt.setInt(1, code);
ResultSet results = pstmt.executeQuery();
if (results.next()) {
Course course = new Course();
course.setName(results.getString("c_name"));
// etc...
return course ;
} else {
// maybe throw an exception if you want to insist course with given code exists
// or consider using Optional<Course>...
return null ;
}
}
}
// ...
}
And then your controller code would look like
final int courseCode = Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText());
Task<Course> courseTask = new Task<Course>() {
#Override
public Course call() throws Exception {
return myDAO.getCourseByCode(courseCode);
}
};
courseTask.setOnSucceeded(e -> {
Course course = courseTask.getCourse();
if (course != null) {
courseCodeLbl.setText(course.getName());
}
});
exec.execute(courseTask);
The API docs for Task have many more examples, including updating the progress property of the task (useful for progress bars..., etc.
Related
JavaFX - Background Thread for SQL Query
Sample for accessing a local database from JavaFX using concurrent tasks for database operations so that the UI remains responsive.
Exception in thread "Thread A" java.lang.IllegalStateException: Not on FX application thread; currentThread = Thread A
The exception is trying to tell you that you are trying to access JavaFX scene graph outside the JavaFX application thread. But where ??
courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1)); // <--- The culprit
If I can't do this how do I use a background thread?
The are different approaches which leads to similar solutions.
Wrap you Scene graph element with Platform.runLater
There easier and most simple way is to wrap the above line in Plaform.runLater, such that it gets executed on JavaFX Application thread.
Platform.runLater(() -> courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1)));
Use Task
The better approach to go with these scenarios is to use Task, which has specialized methods to send back updates. In the following example, I am using updateMessage to update the message. This property is bind to courseCodeLbl textProperty.
Task<Void> task = new Task<Void>() {
#Override
public Void call() {
String courseName = "";
Course c = new Course();
c.setCCode(Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText()));
mController = new ModelController(c);
try {
ResultSet rs = mController.<Course>get();
if(rs.next()) {
// update message property
updateMessage(rs.getString(1));
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
return null;
}
}
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
try {
Thread t = new Thread(task);
// To update the label
courseCodeLbl.textProperty.bind(task.messageProperty());
t.setDaemon(true); // Imp! missing in your code
t.start();
} catch (NumberFormatException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
This has nothing to do with database. JavaFx, like pretty much all GUI libraries, requires that you only use the main UI thread to modify the GUI.
You need to pass the data from the database back to the main UI thread. Use Platform.runLater() to schedule a Runnable to be run in the main UI thread.
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
new Thread(new Runnable(){
public void run(){
String courseName = requestCourseName();
Platform.runLater(new Runnable(){
courseCodeLbl.setText(courseName)
});
}
}, "Thread A").start();
}
Alternatively, you can use Task.
I have the following code:
#FXML
private void test(){
textField.setText("Pending...");
boolean passed = doStuff();
if(passed){
textField.setText("OK");
} else {
textField.setText("Error");
}
}
And what I tries to achieve is that while the doStuff() do his stuff in a textField in the GUI there should be written "Pending..." and as soon as it finish it should change to "OK" / "Error".
I want that the GUI is blocked while doStuff is running so the user has to wait and can't click something else.
But what happens is that as soon as I start test it does the doStuff() but only updates the textField with "OK"/"Error" but I never see "Pending...".
I have the feeling that I have somehow update the GUI, but I'm not sure how it should be done.
Update:
What I tried is to move the doStuff in another Thread:
#FXML
private void test(){
textField.setText("Pending...");
Thread t = new Thread(){
public void run(){
boolean passed = doStuff();
if(passed){
textField.setText("OK");
} else {
textField.setText("Error");
}
}
};
t.start();
t.join();
}
It would works if i would remove the t.join(); command, but then the UI wouldn't be blocked. So I'm at a loss right now.
Thanks
You must never run long running tasks on the JavaFX Application Thread. Doing so will prevent said thread from doing any GUI related things which results in a frozen UI. This makes your user(s) sad. However, your attempt at putting the long running task on a background task is flawed. You call Thread.join which will block the calling thread until the target thread dies; this is effectively the same thing as just running the task on the calling thread.
For a quick fix to your example, you could do the following:
#FXML
private void test(){
textField.setText("Pending...");
Thread t = new Thread(){
#Override public void run(){
boolean passed = doStuff();
Platform.runLater(() -> {
if(passed){
textField.setText("OK");
} else {
textField.setText("Error");
}
});
}
};
t.start();
}
That will create a thread, start it, and let it run in the background while letting the JavaFX Application Thread continue doing what it needs to. Inside the background thread you must update the TextField inside a Platform.runLater(Runnable) call. This is needed because you must never update a live scene graph from a thread other than the JavaFX Application Thread; doing so will lead to undefined behavior. Also, you should look into “implements Runnable” vs “extends Thread” in Java. It's better, or at least more idiomatic, to do:
Thread t = new Thread(() -> { /* background code */ });
You could also use a javafx.concurrent.Task which may make it easier to communicate back to the JavaFX Application Thread. One option would be:
#FXML
private void test(){
textField.setText("Pending...");
Task<Boolean> task = new Task<>() {
#Override protected Boolean call() throws Exception {
return doStuff();
}
};
task.setOnSucceeded(event -> textField.setText(task.getValue() ? "Ok" : "Error"));
new Thread(task).start();
}
You could also bind the TextField to the message property of the Task and call updateMessage("Pending...") inside the call method. You could even provide more detailed messages if and when possible.
That said, creating and starting Threads yourself is not ideal and you should look into thread pooling (using something like an ExecutorService). You might also want to look into javafx.concurrent.Service for "reusing" Tasks.
For more information about JavaFX concurrency see Concurrency in JavaFX and read the documentation of the classes in javafx.concurrent. For the basics of multi-threading in Java see Lesson: Concurrency from The Java™ Tutorials.
I'm trying to understand how threads works in java. This is a simple database request that returns a ResultSet. I'm using JavaFx.
package application;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import javafx.fxml.FXML;
import javafx.scene.control.Button;
import javafx.scene.control.Label;
import javafx.scene.control.TextField;
public class Controller{
#FXML
private Button getCourseBtn;
#FXML
private TextField courseId;
#FXML
private Label courseCodeLbl;
private ModelController mController;
private void requestCourseName(){
String courseName = "";
Course c = new Course();
c.setCCode(Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText()));
mController = new ModelController(c);
try {
ResultSet rs = mController.<Course>get();
if(rs.next()){
courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1));
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
// return courseName;
}
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
try {
// courseCodeLbl.setText(requestCourseName());
Thread t = new Thread(new Runnable(){
public void run(){
requestCourseName();
}
}, "Thread A");
t.start();
} catch (NumberFormatException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
This returns an exception:
Exception in thread "Thread A" java.lang.IllegalStateException: Not on FX application thread; currentThread = Thread A
How do I correctly implement threading so that every database request is executed in a second thread instead of the main thread?
I've heard of implementing Runnable but then how do I invoke different methods in run method?
Never worked with threading before but I thought it's time for it.
Threading Rules for JavaFX
There are two basic rules for threads and JavaFX:
Any code that modifies or accesses the state of a node that is part of a scene graph must be executed on the JavaFX application thread. Certain other operations (e.g. creating new Stages) are also bound by this rule.
Any code that may take a long time to run should be executed on a background thread (i.e. not on the FX Application Thread).
The reason for the first rule is that, like most UI toolkits, the framework is written without any synchronization on the state of elements of the scene graph. Adding synchronization incurs a performance cost, and this turns out to be a prohibitive cost for UI toolkits. Thus only one thread can safely access this state. Since the UI thread (FX Application Thread for JavaFX) needs to access this state to render the scene, the FX Application Thread is the only thread on which you can access "live" scene graph state. In JavaFX 8 and later, most methods subject to this rule perform checks and throw runtime exceptions if the rule is violated. (This is in contrast to Swing, where you can write "illegal" code and it may appear to run fine, but is in fact prone to random and unpredictable failure at arbitrary time.) This is the cause of the IllegalStateException you are seeing: you are calling courseCodeLbl.setText(...) from a thread other than the FX Application Thread.
The reason for the second rule is that the FX Application Thread, as well as being responsible for processing user events, is also responsible for rendering the scene. Thus if you perform a long-running operation on that thread, the UI will not be rendered until that operation is complete, and will become unresponsive to user events. While this won't generate exceptions or cause corrupt object state (as violating rule 1 will), it (at best) creates a poor user experience.
Thus if you have a long-running operation (such as accessing a database) that needs to update the UI on completion, the basic plan is to perform the long-running operation in a background thread, returning the results of the operation when it is complete, and then schedule an update to the UI on the UI (FX Application) thread. All single-threaded UI toolkits have a mechanism to do this: in JavaFX you can do so by calling Platform.runLater(Runnable r) to execute r.run() on the FX Application Thread. (In Swing, you can call SwingUtilities.invokeLater(Runnable r) to execute r.run() on the AWT event dispatch thread.) JavaFX (see later in this answer) also provides some higher-level API for managing the communication back to the FX Application Thread.
General Good Practices for Multithreading
The best practice for working with multiple threads is to structure code that is to be executed on a "user-defined" thread as an object that is initialized with some fixed state, has a method to perform the operation, and on completion returns an object representing the result. Using immutable objects, in particular, a record, for the initialized state and computation result is highly desirable. The idea here is to eliminate the possibility of any mutable state being visible from multiple threads as far as possible. Accessing data from a database fits this idiom nicely: you can initialize your "worker" object with the parameters for the database access (search terms, etc). Perform the database query and get a result set, use the result set to populate a collection of domain objects, and return the collection at the end.
In some cases it will be necessary to share mutable state between multiple threads. When this absolutely has to be done, you need to carefully synchronize access to that state to avoid observing the state in an inconsistent state (there are other more subtle issues that need to be addressed, such as liveness of the state, etc). The strong recommendation when this is needed is to use a high-level library to manage these complexities for you.
Using the javafx.concurrent API
JavaFX provides a concurrency API that is designed for executing code in a background thread, with API specifically designed for updating the JavaFX UI on completion of (or during) the execution of that code. This API is designed to interact with the java.util.concurrent API, which provides general facilities for writing multithreaded code (but with no UI hooks). The key class in javafx.concurrent is Task, which represents a single, one-off, unit of work intended to be performed on a background thread. This class defines a single abstract method, call(), which takes no parameters, returns a result, and may throw checked exceptions. Task implements Runnable with its run() method simply invoking call(). Task also has a collection of methods which are guaranteed to update state on the FX Application Thread, such as updateProgress(...), updateMessage(...), etc. It defines some observable properties (e.g. state and value): listeners to these properties will be notified of changes on the FX Application Thread. Finally, there are some convenience methods to register handlers (setOnSucceeded(...), setOnFailed(...), etc); any handlers registered via these methods will also be invoked on the FX Application Thread.
So the general formula for retrieving data from a database is:
Create a Task to handle the call to the database.
Initialize the Task with any state that is needed to perform the database call.
Implement the task's call() method to perform the database call, returning the results of the call.
Register a handler with the task to send the results to the UI when it is complete.
Invoke the task on a background thread.
For database access, I strongly recommend encapsulating the actual database code in a separate class that knows nothing about the UI (Data Access Object design pattern). Then just have the task invoke the methods on the data access object.
So you might have a DAO class like this (note there is no UI code here):
public class WidgetDAO {
// In real life, you might want a connection pool here, though for
// desktop applications a single connection often suffices:
private Connection conn ;
public WidgetDAO() throws Exception {
conn = ... ; // initialize connection (or connection pool...)
}
public List<Widget> getWidgetsByType(String type) throws SQLException {
try (PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement("select * from widget where type = ?")) {
pstmt.setString(1, type);
ResultSet rs = pstmt.executeQuery();
List<Widget> widgets = new ArrayList<>();
while (rs.next()) {
Widget widget = new Widget();
widget.setName(rs.getString("name"));
widget.setNumberOfBigRedButtons(rs.getString("btnCount"));
// ...
widgets.add(widget);
}
return widgets ;
}
}
// ...
public void shutdown() throws Exception {
conn.close();
}
}
Retrieving a bunch of widgets might take a long time, so any calls from a UI class (e.g a controller class) should schedule this on a background thread. A controller class might look like this:
public class MyController {
private WidgetDAO widgetAccessor ;
// java.util.concurrent.Executor typically provides a pool of threads...
private Executor exec ;
#FXML
private TextField widgetTypeSearchField ;
#FXML
private TableView<Widget> widgetTable ;
public void initialize() throws Exception {
widgetAccessor = new WidgetDAO();
// create executor that uses daemon threads:
exec = Executors.newCachedThreadPool(runnable -> {
Thread t = new Thread(runnable);
t.setDaemon(true);
return t ;
});
}
// handle search button:
#FXML
public void searchWidgets() {
final String searchString = widgetTypeSearchField.getText();
Task<List<Widget>> widgetSearchTask = new Task<List<Widget>>() {
#Override
public List<Widget> call() throws Exception {
return widgetAccessor.getWidgetsByType(searchString);
}
};
widgetSearchTask.setOnFailed(e -> {
widgetSearchTask.getException().printStackTrace();
// inform user of error...
});
widgetSearchTask.setOnSucceeded(e ->
// Task.getValue() gives the value returned from call()...
widgetTable.getItems().setAll(widgetSearchTask.getValue()));
// run the task using a thread from the thread pool:
exec.execute(widgetSearchTask);
}
// ...
}
Notice how the call to the (potentially) long-running DAO method is wrapped in a Task which is run on a background thread (via the accessor) to prevent blocking the UI (rule 2 above). The update to the UI (widgetTable.setItems(...)) is actually executed back on the FX Application Thread, using the Task's convenience callback method setOnSucceeded(...) (satisfying rule 1).
In your case, the database access you are performing returns a single result, so you might have a method like
public class MyDAO {
private Connection conn ;
// constructor etc...
public Course getCourseByCode(int code) throws SQLException {
try (PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement("select * from course where c_code = ?")) {
pstmt.setInt(1, code);
ResultSet results = pstmt.executeQuery();
if (results.next()) {
Course course = new Course();
course.setName(results.getString("c_name"));
// etc...
return course ;
} else {
// maybe throw an exception if you want to insist course with given code exists
// or consider using Optional<Course>...
return null ;
}
}
}
// ...
}
And then your controller code would look like
final int courseCode = Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText());
Task<Course> courseTask = new Task<Course>() {
#Override
public Course call() throws Exception {
return myDAO.getCourseByCode(courseCode);
}
};
courseTask.setOnSucceeded(e -> {
Course course = courseTask.getCourse();
if (course != null) {
courseCodeLbl.setText(course.getName());
}
});
exec.execute(courseTask);
The API docs for Task have many more examples, including updating the progress property of the task (useful for progress bars..., etc.
Related
JavaFX - Background Thread for SQL Query
Sample for accessing a local database from JavaFX using concurrent tasks for database operations so that the UI remains responsive.
Exception in thread "Thread A" java.lang.IllegalStateException: Not on FX application thread; currentThread = Thread A
The exception is trying to tell you that you are trying to access JavaFX scene graph outside the JavaFX application thread. But where ??
courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1)); // <--- The culprit
If I can't do this how do I use a background thread?
The are different approaches which leads to similar solutions.
Wrap you Scene graph element with Platform.runLater
There easier and most simple way is to wrap the above line in Plaform.runLater, such that it gets executed on JavaFX Application thread.
Platform.runLater(() -> courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1)));
Use Task
The better approach to go with these scenarios is to use Task, which has specialized methods to send back updates. In the following example, I am using updateMessage to update the message. This property is bind to courseCodeLbl textProperty.
Task<Void> task = new Task<Void>() {
#Override
public Void call() {
String courseName = "";
Course c = new Course();
c.setCCode(Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText()));
mController = new ModelController(c);
try {
ResultSet rs = mController.<Course>get();
if(rs.next()) {
// update message property
updateMessage(rs.getString(1));
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
return null;
}
}
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
try {
Thread t = new Thread(task);
// To update the label
courseCodeLbl.textProperty.bind(task.messageProperty());
t.setDaemon(true); // Imp! missing in your code
t.start();
} catch (NumberFormatException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
This has nothing to do with database. JavaFx, like pretty much all GUI libraries, requires that you only use the main UI thread to modify the GUI.
You need to pass the data from the database back to the main UI thread. Use Platform.runLater() to schedule a Runnable to be run in the main UI thread.
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
new Thread(new Runnable(){
public void run(){
String courseName = requestCourseName();
Platform.runLater(new Runnable(){
courseCodeLbl.setText(courseName)
});
}
}, "Thread A").start();
}
Alternatively, you can use Task.
I'm trying to understand how threads works in java. This is a simple database request that returns a ResultSet. I'm using JavaFx.
package application;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import javafx.fxml.FXML;
import javafx.scene.control.Button;
import javafx.scene.control.Label;
import javafx.scene.control.TextField;
public class Controller{
#FXML
private Button getCourseBtn;
#FXML
private TextField courseId;
#FXML
private Label courseCodeLbl;
private ModelController mController;
private void requestCourseName(){
String courseName = "";
Course c = new Course();
c.setCCode(Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText()));
mController = new ModelController(c);
try {
ResultSet rs = mController.<Course>get();
if(rs.next()){
courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1));
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
// return courseName;
}
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
try {
// courseCodeLbl.setText(requestCourseName());
Thread t = new Thread(new Runnable(){
public void run(){
requestCourseName();
}
}, "Thread A");
t.start();
} catch (NumberFormatException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
This returns an exception:
Exception in thread "Thread A" java.lang.IllegalStateException: Not on FX application thread; currentThread = Thread A
How do I correctly implement threading so that every database request is executed in a second thread instead of the main thread?
I've heard of implementing Runnable but then how do I invoke different methods in run method?
Never worked with threading before but I thought it's time for it.
Threading Rules for JavaFX
There are two basic rules for threads and JavaFX:
Any code that modifies or accesses the state of a node that is part of a scene graph must be executed on the JavaFX application thread. Certain other operations (e.g. creating new Stages) are also bound by this rule.
Any code that may take a long time to run should be executed on a background thread (i.e. not on the FX Application Thread).
The reason for the first rule is that, like most UI toolkits, the framework is written without any synchronization on the state of elements of the scene graph. Adding synchronization incurs a performance cost, and this turns out to be a prohibitive cost for UI toolkits. Thus only one thread can safely access this state. Since the UI thread (FX Application Thread for JavaFX) needs to access this state to render the scene, the FX Application Thread is the only thread on which you can access "live" scene graph state. In JavaFX 8 and later, most methods subject to this rule perform checks and throw runtime exceptions if the rule is violated. (This is in contrast to Swing, where you can write "illegal" code and it may appear to run fine, but is in fact prone to random and unpredictable failure at arbitrary time.) This is the cause of the IllegalStateException you are seeing: you are calling courseCodeLbl.setText(...) from a thread other than the FX Application Thread.
The reason for the second rule is that the FX Application Thread, as well as being responsible for processing user events, is also responsible for rendering the scene. Thus if you perform a long-running operation on that thread, the UI will not be rendered until that operation is complete, and will become unresponsive to user events. While this won't generate exceptions or cause corrupt object state (as violating rule 1 will), it (at best) creates a poor user experience.
Thus if you have a long-running operation (such as accessing a database) that needs to update the UI on completion, the basic plan is to perform the long-running operation in a background thread, returning the results of the operation when it is complete, and then schedule an update to the UI on the UI (FX Application) thread. All single-threaded UI toolkits have a mechanism to do this: in JavaFX you can do so by calling Platform.runLater(Runnable r) to execute r.run() on the FX Application Thread. (In Swing, you can call SwingUtilities.invokeLater(Runnable r) to execute r.run() on the AWT event dispatch thread.) JavaFX (see later in this answer) also provides some higher-level API for managing the communication back to the FX Application Thread.
General Good Practices for Multithreading
The best practice for working with multiple threads is to structure code that is to be executed on a "user-defined" thread as an object that is initialized with some fixed state, has a method to perform the operation, and on completion returns an object representing the result. Using immutable objects, in particular, a record, for the initialized state and computation result is highly desirable. The idea here is to eliminate the possibility of any mutable state being visible from multiple threads as far as possible. Accessing data from a database fits this idiom nicely: you can initialize your "worker" object with the parameters for the database access (search terms, etc). Perform the database query and get a result set, use the result set to populate a collection of domain objects, and return the collection at the end.
In some cases it will be necessary to share mutable state between multiple threads. When this absolutely has to be done, you need to carefully synchronize access to that state to avoid observing the state in an inconsistent state (there are other more subtle issues that need to be addressed, such as liveness of the state, etc). The strong recommendation when this is needed is to use a high-level library to manage these complexities for you.
Using the javafx.concurrent API
JavaFX provides a concurrency API that is designed for executing code in a background thread, with API specifically designed for updating the JavaFX UI on completion of (or during) the execution of that code. This API is designed to interact with the java.util.concurrent API, which provides general facilities for writing multithreaded code (but with no UI hooks). The key class in javafx.concurrent is Task, which represents a single, one-off, unit of work intended to be performed on a background thread. This class defines a single abstract method, call(), which takes no parameters, returns a result, and may throw checked exceptions. Task implements Runnable with its run() method simply invoking call(). Task also has a collection of methods which are guaranteed to update state on the FX Application Thread, such as updateProgress(...), updateMessage(...), etc. It defines some observable properties (e.g. state and value): listeners to these properties will be notified of changes on the FX Application Thread. Finally, there are some convenience methods to register handlers (setOnSucceeded(...), setOnFailed(...), etc); any handlers registered via these methods will also be invoked on the FX Application Thread.
So the general formula for retrieving data from a database is:
Create a Task to handle the call to the database.
Initialize the Task with any state that is needed to perform the database call.
Implement the task's call() method to perform the database call, returning the results of the call.
Register a handler with the task to send the results to the UI when it is complete.
Invoke the task on a background thread.
For database access, I strongly recommend encapsulating the actual database code in a separate class that knows nothing about the UI (Data Access Object design pattern). Then just have the task invoke the methods on the data access object.
So you might have a DAO class like this (note there is no UI code here):
public class WidgetDAO {
// In real life, you might want a connection pool here, though for
// desktop applications a single connection often suffices:
private Connection conn ;
public WidgetDAO() throws Exception {
conn = ... ; // initialize connection (or connection pool...)
}
public List<Widget> getWidgetsByType(String type) throws SQLException {
try (PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement("select * from widget where type = ?")) {
pstmt.setString(1, type);
ResultSet rs = pstmt.executeQuery();
List<Widget> widgets = new ArrayList<>();
while (rs.next()) {
Widget widget = new Widget();
widget.setName(rs.getString("name"));
widget.setNumberOfBigRedButtons(rs.getString("btnCount"));
// ...
widgets.add(widget);
}
return widgets ;
}
}
// ...
public void shutdown() throws Exception {
conn.close();
}
}
Retrieving a bunch of widgets might take a long time, so any calls from a UI class (e.g a controller class) should schedule this on a background thread. A controller class might look like this:
public class MyController {
private WidgetDAO widgetAccessor ;
// java.util.concurrent.Executor typically provides a pool of threads...
private Executor exec ;
#FXML
private TextField widgetTypeSearchField ;
#FXML
private TableView<Widget> widgetTable ;
public void initialize() throws Exception {
widgetAccessor = new WidgetDAO();
// create executor that uses daemon threads:
exec = Executors.newCachedThreadPool(runnable -> {
Thread t = new Thread(runnable);
t.setDaemon(true);
return t ;
});
}
// handle search button:
#FXML
public void searchWidgets() {
final String searchString = widgetTypeSearchField.getText();
Task<List<Widget>> widgetSearchTask = new Task<List<Widget>>() {
#Override
public List<Widget> call() throws Exception {
return widgetAccessor.getWidgetsByType(searchString);
}
};
widgetSearchTask.setOnFailed(e -> {
widgetSearchTask.getException().printStackTrace();
// inform user of error...
});
widgetSearchTask.setOnSucceeded(e ->
// Task.getValue() gives the value returned from call()...
widgetTable.getItems().setAll(widgetSearchTask.getValue()));
// run the task using a thread from the thread pool:
exec.execute(widgetSearchTask);
}
// ...
}
Notice how the call to the (potentially) long-running DAO method is wrapped in a Task which is run on a background thread (via the accessor) to prevent blocking the UI (rule 2 above). The update to the UI (widgetTable.setItems(...)) is actually executed back on the FX Application Thread, using the Task's convenience callback method setOnSucceeded(...) (satisfying rule 1).
In your case, the database access you are performing returns a single result, so you might have a method like
public class MyDAO {
private Connection conn ;
// constructor etc...
public Course getCourseByCode(int code) throws SQLException {
try (PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement("select * from course where c_code = ?")) {
pstmt.setInt(1, code);
ResultSet results = pstmt.executeQuery();
if (results.next()) {
Course course = new Course();
course.setName(results.getString("c_name"));
// etc...
return course ;
} else {
// maybe throw an exception if you want to insist course with given code exists
// or consider using Optional<Course>...
return null ;
}
}
}
// ...
}
And then your controller code would look like
final int courseCode = Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText());
Task<Course> courseTask = new Task<Course>() {
#Override
public Course call() throws Exception {
return myDAO.getCourseByCode(courseCode);
}
};
courseTask.setOnSucceeded(e -> {
Course course = courseTask.getCourse();
if (course != null) {
courseCodeLbl.setText(course.getName());
}
});
exec.execute(courseTask);
The API docs for Task have many more examples, including updating the progress property of the task (useful for progress bars..., etc.
Related
JavaFX - Background Thread for SQL Query
Sample for accessing a local database from JavaFX using concurrent tasks for database operations so that the UI remains responsive.
Exception in thread "Thread A" java.lang.IllegalStateException: Not on FX application thread; currentThread = Thread A
The exception is trying to tell you that you are trying to access JavaFX scene graph outside the JavaFX application thread. But where ??
courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1)); // <--- The culprit
If I can't do this how do I use a background thread?
The are different approaches which leads to similar solutions.
Wrap you Scene graph element with Platform.runLater
There easier and most simple way is to wrap the above line in Plaform.runLater, such that it gets executed on JavaFX Application thread.
Platform.runLater(() -> courseCodeLbl.setText(rs.getString(1)));
Use Task
The better approach to go with these scenarios is to use Task, which has specialized methods to send back updates. In the following example, I am using updateMessage to update the message. This property is bind to courseCodeLbl textProperty.
Task<Void> task = new Task<Void>() {
#Override
public Void call() {
String courseName = "";
Course c = new Course();
c.setCCode(Integer.valueOf(courseId.getText()));
mController = new ModelController(c);
try {
ResultSet rs = mController.<Course>get();
if(rs.next()) {
// update message property
updateMessage(rs.getString(1));
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
return null;
}
}
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
try {
Thread t = new Thread(task);
// To update the label
courseCodeLbl.textProperty.bind(task.messageProperty());
t.setDaemon(true); // Imp! missing in your code
t.start();
} catch (NumberFormatException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
This has nothing to do with database. JavaFx, like pretty much all GUI libraries, requires that you only use the main UI thread to modify the GUI.
You need to pass the data from the database back to the main UI thread. Use Platform.runLater() to schedule a Runnable to be run in the main UI thread.
public void getCourseNameOnClick(){
new Thread(new Runnable(){
public void run(){
String courseName = requestCourseName();
Platform.runLater(new Runnable(){
courseCodeLbl.setText(courseName)
});
}
}, "Thread A").start();
}
Alternatively, you can use Task.