I am planning to implement a screen arrangement view for a desktop Java application. By screen arrangement view, I mean a view that allows to arrange several rectangles around a central rectangle, so that no gaps are allowed, much like the screen arrangement interface in eg macOS or Windows works:
The user would be able to drag the rectangles (except the central one) around and place them somewhere adjacent to another rectangle (that is connected to another rectangle that is connected to another rectangle .... that is connected to the central rectangle). The rectangles would automatically move to a correct spot if dropped at an incorrect spot.
I have experience in Java (Android), but little knowledge of User Interface design on desktop Java. I am using Swing for all UI I have already in my application.
I have done some research but could not find any similar implementation or question on SO.
However, I do not want to reinvent the wheel, so before I start implementing from scratch, I have these questions:
What search terms could I use for further research?
Are there any built-in components I could use as a base?
Is there maybe an open-source component I could use?
Does anyone know an implementation of such a control in any language that I could use as a reference?
How would you implement such a control?
Any help is highly appreciated!
1.What search terms could I use for further research?
One of the search term you can use is drag and drop (and that is what you plan to do).
2.Are there any built-in components I could use as a base?
Java has built in classes for drag and drop. Take a look here: Drag and Drop Turotial
3.Is there maybe an open-source component I could use?
I am sure there are quite a few if you try Googling it. But, personally I don't think you need an open source component to perform your required task. Java Swing already has pretty good classes available which is easy to use and more than enough to handle what you want.
5.How would you implement such a control?
Other than using the DnD from Java, a similar feature can be implemented using custom painting + various listeners such as Mouse motion listener. This way, you set what ever rules you want over the components that is being dragged / clicked / mouse-over. For example.
Related
I was reading through the java docs and found that it is easy to make a shaped windows, making them translucent and coloured as long as the platform is supporting such feature, but I couldn't find anything about making them glossy.
Is it possible in either awt or just swing to give frame or a panel a metallic look?
I know this might be a horrible idea from cross platform point of view, but I wanted to know if it's possible somehow without resorting to some third party libraries?
I have found a button gloss example here:
http://www.andygibson.net/blog/tutorial/glass-button-tutorial-in-java/
But it is not exactly a metallic look and if I replicate the method to use rectangles instead of circles it may scale poorly.
I've been looking at JavaFX but it seems to be a massive multipurpose package - an overkill if I just want one eyecandy.
note - if you give a minus, be so kind to explain why - else its just being a jerk. I see nothing wrong with this post and I did indicate what I looked at. From what I see I've fulfilled all formal requirements and this is not a subjective type of question.
What your requesting can only be handled by calling the Windows native API. You'd have to cooperate with the Windows DWM (Desktop Windows Manager) facility. Typically it's handled by calling the DwmExtendFrameIntoClientArea function.
Long time ago, I tried to mimic the glass (AKA Aero/Frost) effect using Swing. It was partially possible. One can easily write drawing code which handles this (and surprisingly even quite performant), providing that the drawing happens on the Java side.
That was possible with Swing (see Glass effect for internal panes) and should be even simpler with JavaFX.
However, to handle your precise request - the windows borders - one has to use the native WinApi. From my little research, I only found that SWT does this in limited way (but doesn't expose as publically accessible methods).
I tried to call the Windows Shell API through the JNA project. I successfully managed to change the glass area, but the effect was unpleasant: the Swing wasn't really well prepared (~JDK 7u5) to handle partially transparent JFrames. I remember, that the JFrame code, during a repaint, was clearing the Window using some color. I had to forcefully change it to other one (which matched the one I specified by calling the Windows API), but ended up in a visual mess.
I tried to debug it and I found that certain versions of Java have different code to clear the JFrame's content. So, even if I managed to correctly set the wanted color, it could easily break with the JDK update.
I just wanted to know if there are Java libraries that allow for smooth transitions between Java Swing Containers.
Suppose I have a Java GUI application with a single JFrame. Based upon user actions I would like to change the JPanel contained in my JFrame. Now, this I can do. However this change is instantaneous. What I would like to do is have a slow transition/animation so that it is not too hard on the users cognition.
Concrete Example:
Say the JFrame I have isframe having 2 buttons and I have two JPanel, panel1 and panel2. Depending on which button the user clicked, I would replace the frame with either panel1 or panel2. However I would like this change to be slow/animated (whatever you call it), a fade-in effect per se. So my question is
Is there some Java library that allows for such transitions?
If not, are there other desktop development language(s) that I can use for such transition. I already know of Javascript frameworks like JQuery that allow for this. But, I am looking for desktop development (if not Java then anything else is also fine).
Something like that?
I had the same need: smooth transitions and animations of components, panels and screens in my app, to create a fancy UI. Since I once made an animation engine (Universal Tween Engine) for java, I quickly setup a very small and easy-to-use library to create such animations in swing UIs, the SlidingLayout library.
If that's what you're looking for, there is a dedicated forum in case you need help to setup the lib in your project.
I can think of two animation libraries that would be capable of producing the effect you're after, but you'll have to do the work of getting the transition to actually work
TimingFramework
Trident
You should also check out:
http://weblogs.java.net/blog/kirillcool/archive/2007/04/who_doesnt_want.html
For a possible implementation
I'd also suggest checking out http://filthyrichclients.org/ for further insights
I wanted to have a discussion on Java GUIs, right now, I'm still in school and I've done light gui development for class.(We briefly covered it.)
Plain and simple, I couldn't do anything I want, I wanted to build a nice clean layout but everything looked off and worse when you maximize it. JButton were huge when put inside a GridLayout, or they spanned the whole row, when I clearly specified the size of the button and etc. It's been one headache after another with Java gui development.
With Microsoft WPF/XAML UI development is more straightforward, it felt like HTML/CSS. Setting the width, height, margin, and padding is great, knowing where my components are going to be puts the mind at ease. And you can even design a custom Look and Feel.
I wanted to know if do you guys have any tips and resources for someone starting Java GUI development. And the one thing I don't get is launch new items with a JFrame, i.e a game.
At Launch your directed to a panel with 4 buttons.
Play Game - Takes you to a new panel to play the game.
Lobby - Takes you to a chat like interface
and etc
Should these be panels? Or more JFrames, like when a user click a button I launch the Play Game JFrame then close the menu JFrame. I really have no ideas with Java guis.
Make sure you understand and are using the appropriate layout managers. This Swing tutorial is very useful for learning how each works: http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/uiswing/layout/visual.html
Also realize that you can layer layouts by putting on panel inside another. This is sometimes necessary to achieve a desired effect while keeping things simple.
For your last question, buttons can just be added to a panel that can bee adding to additional panels before a frame.
First off take a look at Mig Layout. This is a real full featured layout manager and currently is the best one available. If for some reason you can't use external dependencies then you will want to look at GridBagLayout. GridBagLayout will be powerful enough to do everything you need, but it is not as easy to use as something like Mig Layout.
In 99% of the applications you will build you will have a single JFrame and just transition the JPanels to show the different screens.
First off, one of my rules of thumb when building UI panels is to never set directly any location or size.
Then, a second rule is to never set any preferred, minimum or maximum size directly in pixels (thus will bite you when you change from one monitor to another one, with higher or lower DPI resolution). Take a look at this post on my blog, quite old but still useful today.
Thirdly, I try to avoid embedding panels into panels because it leads to components alignment problems and inconsistent component sizes.
Finally, I try to use DesignGridLayout for most of my forms, and sometimes revert to GridBagLayout if the UI layout is too complex (but a complex UI layout may also be a sign of poor UI design).
As a general comment about how to build UI applications (with any UI toolkit in general, but with Swing in particular), there are several recommendations that exist out there, but it is hard to find concrete implementations, you have to read a lot about these, and then try to find the way that works best for you.
Yes, welcome. Compared to HTML /Javascript/CSS you can get nothing like the sophistication and polish for the equivalent level of time spent learning.
(I haven't sourced all the files for you for anything here - google and start looking up).
Swing, in my experience definitely feels like I read 10 million documents, played with some demos, and spend three or four months nightly for 2-3 hours, and you have some idea of how some of the api's work, and then have no idea why some don't. Its great. You want something to work and then implement that, and proceed to f*ck up the rest of your gui.
Java swing, in my opinion, is desperately crying for an open source JQuery type plugin library that will animate your JComponents and render them in a way that you like. Its a definite second class citizen on the desktop, and especially now that CSS / HTML browser rendering sophistication has improved over the last few years.
The nimbus look and feel style is an improvement definitely in the right direction.
You could also move over to JavaFx. Good luck. Apparently its quite nice. I haven't yet had the time or patience.
If you are allowed to use thirdparty library : try JAXX as an option. The idea was to create a css type implementation, where styling elements are separated into a file that can be quickly configured and tested.
Read here for good introduction: today.java.net/pub/a/today/2006/03/30/introducing-jaxx.html
JavaCSS is found in the JAXX project. JAXX is a xml format style implementation of the swing gui interface. You write an xml document, and a css style document, and are able to bind the inputs and outputs of the GUI to your java implementation engine. The css style document allows for rapid sophisticated gui development. Using the jaxx jar engine, the xml code is converted into java code that runs as rapidly as if deployed in a .java class file.
The project has been continued by a French group of programmers and is now to be found here: http://www.nuiton.org/projects/jaxx/files
The demo is at least pretty and most things seem to work.
The latest release is JAXX 2.4.2. The latest update was May or June 2011. Whilst in French, the documentation is still comprehensible in English. Just translate.
The original ethan nicholas files of jaxx were last updated on 17-07-2009
http://sourceforge.net/projects/jaxx/
Please note: www.jaxxframework.org/wiki/Main_Page is a dead link, the site is discontinued. instead a mirror has been made and can be found at: buix.labs.libre-entreprise.org/original-jaxx/www.jaxxframework.org/wiki/Main_Page.html
This documentation is essential to understand the meaning and purpose of jaxx and its use.
If you are patient, have lots of time, and are interested, also look at the timing framework by Chet Haase, to animate your components, it is possible to create sophisticated effects. It requires learning curve and time.
Or pay to get your gui components handled by a professional third party library? (Um, the obvious answer, no-one who has spent the time and effort to learn to create a pretty gui is just gonna hand that over).
So spend three years learning and then ask for moola from others?
Another idea - I am very into exploring but it looks like it might be a nightmare to implement, despite everyone saying its so easy, get an open source webbrowser html / csss renderer embedded, and design your gui on that, using CSS / JQuery / HTML.
But it looks like you have to first compile the web browser (mozilla) from source, and then wrap that in another program (e.g. JRex) and then put the whole thing in a mini- client server like Jetty, just to have a front end implementation that you halfway like.
And that is only if the browser is actually is as compliant with the CSS2 standard and HTML4. Forget about HTML5. That is for the future.
Okay, I am grumpy today, but I don't think the gripes are completely unjustified.
We have a very large Java Swing desktop application comprising of a great deal of views. Developers have done a pretty good job over the years in choosing appropriate class locations which reflect the general structure of our UI for these views. Most of this time this is very helpful in tracking down specific components that have bugs which need tending to. However, there are cases where finding a panel, dialog, etc is quite painful. It usually involves searching our properties files for unique string sequences that appear in the UI.
Does anyone know of a third-party tool that allows a developer to hook into a Swing application and click on a region of the UI to reveal that name/package/hierarchy of the component that was clicked?
SwingExplorer is the perfect tool for that. It does what you are describing, and even more (step-by-step drawing of Java2D, EDT violations, AWT events).
Does anyone know of a third-party tool that allows a developer to hook into a Swing application and click on a region of the UI to reveal that name/package/hierarchy of the component that was clicked
Darryl's Component Tree Model should provide you with this basic information. The demo shows how you would use the root pane as the container for viewing all the components. You would need to add a MouseListener to your application to get the Container that was clicked so you could display the component tree.
There's something doing exactly what you're looking for in the SwingX Demo. The JXTreeTable demo contains a tree of the components hierarchy, when the mouse rolls over a particular component, it is selected in the table.
You can have a look here
Couldn't believe it myself, but it could be really as easy as:
SwingUtilities.getRoot(...).list()
The list method exists since 1.0. lol.
How do I create a J2ME app for cellphones with a GUI similar to the menus you see in Java games? I've tried MIDlets with Netbeans but they only show you one GUI element at a time. (textbox, choice, login, etc)
And which Java IDE would you typically design these GUIs in? Netbeans or Eclipse? and is IntelliJ IDEA usable for this aswell?
Do I have to write/get a library that draws GUI controls to screen via bitmap functions .. and keeps track of the keys pressed for focus?
Try to use LWUIT - nice UI toolkit for j2me:
https://lwuit.dev.java.net/
http://lwuit.blogspot.com/
You can also use minime: http://code.google.com/p/minime/
It's an open source GUI library for j2me. miniME works on canvas level (lowest level in j2me) to draw every control so your UI will look exactly the same whatever the handset it'll be running on. Other advantage are:
- miniME uses its own event loop to manage user controlled event (botton pressed, softbar, ..), so you Application will "behave" the same whatever the handset.
- miniME support the concept of Views and stack of view, in order to make navigation between different view/screens very easy.
Here is an example: A View is what you have on the screen at a given moment (for example the main menu screen), then to go to a sub menu, you create a new view, and by calling a simple API, you push it in the stack of Views. The previous view (the main menu) is still existing, but inactive. When the sub menu view complete his work (for example, user press back, or do a selection), you can just go back to the previous view by calling a pop api.
Your question is a bit vague to give a specific aswer, but you might want to check out LWUIT or Polish, you can develop both with either Eclipse or Netbeans.
As far as designing GUIs go, neither IDE will help from a visual perspective. J2ME UI development is all done in code, beyond creating any initial graphics in a proper graphics editor you don't get to see your output until you test.
Read up on the LCDUI package documentation which explains how the UI classes work and the differences between the 'High-level' and 'low-level' APIs.
I can't comment on which IDE to use - but I do know that to create custom UI (like the ones you see in J2ME games), you have to explicitly draw the GUI controls.
Beware that you may need to customize the GUI depending on the target phones. You have to cater for different screen sizes, key pad configurations, default theme etc. This would probably mean that you need different builds for things like different screen sizes which would drive up your Java Verified certification costs (if you need it).
You may be able to find a set of nice looking UI controls that you can buy online and use (try J2ME Polish). The easy way out of course, is to use default J2ME controls :)
Links to many j2me GUI libraries: link1, link2
I know that kuix is not bad and free - watch demo.
But i prefer to make my own gui elements - this is much more flexible (but takes some time).
As for IDE - you may want to make some kind of gui-editor tool, construct interface in it, save result to some file, and read it from your app.
It's way too cumbersome to write your own GUI, especially since there are so many available these days. If you're familiar with desktop development in VB.Net and C#, you might find "J2ME GUI" easy to use. You can download it from http://www.garcer.com/. It has a similar feel and makes it easy to learn. This is the kind of GUI that I expected to come standard with MIDP2 when I started mobile development. Would have solved a lot of issues.
If you are familiar with web stuffs then you can use KUIX (kalmeo.org/home/index) framework having xml and css supports. In place of It you can use also Polish framework (www.j2mepolish.org) it's also uses the xml in easy way rather than kalmeo kuix framework.