I need to perform an action after the JFrame is closed and I have this part of code for it, but this doesn't work.
Could anyone please advise what should be change here?
private void changeDefaults(){
Thread changeDefaultsThread = new Thread(new Runnable(){
public void run(){
Change ch = new Change();
ch.setVisible(true);
ch.setListeners();
ch.defaultInput();
while(ch.isActive()){
System.out.println("active");
}
updateDefaults();
}
});
changeDefaultsThread.start();
}
Change is the JFrame I am opening for another action.
You can add listener to your JFrame
frame.addWindowListener (new java.awt.event.WindowAdapter)
and override the windowClosing
#Override
public void windowClosing
frame.addWindowListener(new java.awt.event.WindowAdapter() {
#Override
public void windowClosing(java.awt.event.WindowEvent windowEvent) {
//do something
}
});
I'm surprised no one has mentioned the simplest solution: don't use a JFrame. The best tool for this behavior -- displaying a child window and doing something immediately after it has closed -- is to use a modal dialog window such as a JDialog or JOptionPane. The JDialog set up code is very similar to that of the JFrame, with an exception being that it uses different constructors, and should have the parent window passed into it, and it uses a subset of the default close operations.
If you use a modal dialog, then program flow is halted in the calling code immediately after the dialog has been displayed (think of how a JOptionPane operates), and then immediately resumes from the spot after calling setVisible(true) on the dialog once the dialog has been closed.
The only bugaboo is that if you don't want modal behavior -- if you don't want the parent/calling window to be disabled while the child window is displayed -- then you'll have to use a non-modal JDialog window with a WindowListener.
If you want to perform an action when closing a JFrame, you just need to attach a WindowListener (extending WindowAdapter so that you do not need to implement all WindowListener methods):
import javax.swing.*;
public class AfterJFrameClose {
public static void main(String[] args) {
JFrame frame = new JFrame("My frame");
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
frame.setVisible(true);
frame.setAlwaysOnTop(true);
frame.addWindowListener(new java.awt.event.WindowAdapter() {
#Override
public void windowClosing(java.awt.event.WindowEvent windowEvent) {
System.out.println("Frame closing");
}
});
}
}
Instead of the System.out.println, just write the code you want to have executed.
Update: If you want to access another frame, you either should pass it as a parameter as suggested above or you can also iterate through active frames using something like this:
Frame[] frames = Frame.getFrames();
for (Frame frame: frames) {
System.out.println(frame.getTitle());
}
I am making a MDI application in java using netbeans.
the issue is that i have two buttons: Add employee and search employee. When i click Add employee, the internal frame for add employee opens up in the desktop pane, and when i click search employee it gets behind the earlier frame and is not visible until i exit the first frame. I want that if desktop pane is not empty then earlier internal frame should be disposed on click of the other button. Plese help me out
This is the code: Here JP is variable name for desktop pane.
private void BAddEmpActionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {
o=new EntryEmp();
JP.add(o);
o.setVisible(true);
}
private void BSearchEmpActionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {
Employee_search ob1=new Employee_search();
JP.add(ob1);
ob1.setVisible(true);
}
I think you should be able to set the first panes visibility to false:
private void BSearchEmpActionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {
Employee_search ob1=new Employee_search();
JP.add(ob1);
ob1.setVisible(true);
if (o != null && o.getVisible == true){
o.setVisible(false);
//and possibly kill it:
o = null;
}
After you've added the new JInternalFrame and made it visible call JInternalFrame#toFront
I am make a project on cars. How can I make distributor frame popup and cars frame not visible and close automatic? Kindly send any solution in simple and effective way.
I have done coding this way:-
{
Cars frm1=new Cars();
Distributor frm2=new Distributor();
frm2.setVisible(true);
frm1.setVisible(false);
frm1.setDefaultCloseOperation(frm1.DISPOSE_ON_CLOSE);
}
".Please help me to how I can make distributor frame popup and cars frame is not visible and close automatic."
Ok so in Netbeans GUI Builder, you may want to do the following (this is assuming you have created two separate JFrame form files
In the frame that is the launching program (we'll call it MyFrame1) add a button to it (we'll call it jButton1)
Add a listener to the button, then the following code should be auto-generated
public void jButton1ActionPerforemd(javax.swing.ActionEvent evt) {
}
In that actionPerformed, just instantiate the second frame (we'll call it MyFrame2) and setVisible(false) to MyFrame1. MyFrame2 should already be visible upon instantiation, so you wouldn't have to setVisisble(true) on it
public void jButton1ActionPerforemd(javax.swing.ActionEvent evt) {
MyFrame2 frame2 = new MyFrame2();
MyFrame1.this.setVisible(false);
// You can also use MyFrame1.this.dispose(); dependind if you ever need to use that frame again
}
I think this should work
you need to setVisible Jframe2 as true...so it can apear on output sceen
public void jButton1ActionPerforemd(javax.swing.ActionEvent evt)
{
myFrame2 frame2=new myframe2();
myframe1.this.setVisible(false);
frame2.setVisible(true);
}
create action event for the button such that when when you click will take
you
to the next page for my case next page is nextjFrame
private void nextButtonActionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {
setVisible(false);
nextjFrame ob=new nextjFrame();
ob.setVisible(true);
}
private void BTNConvertActionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {
/*
This is the action performed event for my Button "BTNConvert"
*/
java.awt.EventQueue.invokeLater
(new Runnable()
{
public void run()
{
new JFrame2().setVisible(true);
}
});
/*
This will set the second Frame Visible.
*/
JFrame1.this.setVisible(false);
/*
This should set the first frame invisible or whatever. Any other code should be
written before the curly brace below.
*/
}
//You're Welcome.
I have a main jFrame with the help of which i press button and open new JFrames but the problem is that when i open other JFrame the previous ones still remains there where as what i want is that when i press next button then i move forward to the new JFrame (the previous one should not be there) and when i press previous button i move back to the previous JFrame.
I know there are functions of dispose,they do well like jframe1.dispose() but i dont get it how to hide the very first JFrame whose code in the main is written like this
public static void main(String args[]) {
java.awt.EventQueue.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
public void run()
{
new GraphicalInterface().setVisible(true);
}
});
}
how do i set this as .setVisible(false) in the button code?
You need to retain a reference to the JFrame, so you can set it's visibility later.
private JFrame myFrame;
public void run() {
myFrame = new GUI();
myFrame.setVisible(true);
}
public void hide() {
myFrame.setVisible(false);
}
Note that a JFrame is a top-level container, you are only really supposed to have one per application. It may be better if instead of using multiple JFrames you use just one, and swap in various JPanels instead.
It would safe resources if you keep just one frame and set a new panel as content.
Your question was how to handle the reference to the frame? Please provide the code where the next frame is created.
You could assign your GUI (extends JFrame I suppose) to a variable and call .setVisible(false) on that object. Since your object from the code above is more or less anonymous, you won't have access on that.
You could also check this.
What's the correct way to get a JFrame to close, the same as if the user had hit the X close button, or pressed Alt+F4 (on Windows)?
I have my default close operation set the way I want, via:
setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
It does exactly what I want with the aforementioned controls. This question isn't about that.
What I really want to do is cause the GUI to behave in the same way as a press of X close button would cause it to behave.
Suppose I were to extend WindowAdaptor and then add an instance of my adaptor as a listener via addWindowListener(). I would like to see the same sequence of calls through windowDeactivated(), windowClosing(), and windowClosed() as would occur with the X close button. Not so much tearing up the window as telling it to tear itself up, so to speak.
If you want the GUI to behave as if you clicked the X close button then you need to dispatch a window closing event to the Window. The ExitAction from Closing An Application allows you to add this functionality to a menu item or any component that uses Actions easily.
frame.dispatchEvent(new WindowEvent(frame, WindowEvent.WINDOW_CLOSING));
setVisible(false); //you can't see me!
dispose(); //Destroy the JFrame object
Not too tricky.
If by Alt-F4 or X you mean "Exit the Application Immediately Without Regard for What Other Windows or Threads are Running", then System.exit(...) will do exactly what you want in a very abrupt, brute-force, and possibly problematic fashion.
If by Alt-F4 or X you mean hide the window, then frame.setVisible(false) is how you "close" the window. The window will continue to consume resources/memory but can be made visible again very quickly.
If by Alt-F4 or X you mean hide the window and dispose of any resources it is consuming, then frame.dispose() is how you "close" the window. If the frame was the last visible window and there are no other non-daemon threads running, the program will exit. If you show the window again, it will have to reinitialize all of the native resources again (graphics buffer, window handles, etc).
dispose() might be closest to the behavior that you really want. If your app has multiple windows open, do you want Alt-F4 or X to quit the app or just close the active window?
The Java Swing Tutorial on Window Listeners may help clarify things for you.
Stop the program:
System.exit(0);
Close the window:
frame.dispose();
Hide the window:
frame.setVisible(false);
If you have done this to make sure the user can't close the window:
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.DO_NOTHING_ON_CLOSE);
Then you should change your pullThePlug() method to be
public void pullThePlug() {
// this will make sure WindowListener.windowClosing() et al. will be called.
WindowEvent wev = new WindowEvent(this, WindowEvent.WINDOW_CLOSING);
Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getSystemEventQueue().postEvent(wev);
// this will hide and dispose the frame, so that the application quits by
// itself if there is nothing else around.
setVisible(false);
dispose();
// if you have other similar frames around, you should dispose them, too.
// finally, call this to really exit.
// i/o libraries such as WiiRemoteJ need this.
// also, this is what swing does for JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE
System.exit(0);
}
I found this to be the only way that plays nice with the WindowListener and JFrame.DO_NOTHING_ON_CLOSE.
Exiting from Java running process is very easy, basically you need to do just two simple things:
Call java method System.exit(...) at at application's quit point.
For example, if your application is frame based, you can add listener WindowAdapter and and call System.exit(...) inside its method windowClosing(WindowEvent e).
Note: you must call System.exit(...) otherwise your program is error involved.
Avoiding unexpected java exceptions to make sure the exit method can be called always.
If you add System.exit(...) at right point, but It does not mean that the method can be called always, because unexpected java exceptions may prevent the method from been called.
This is strongly related to your programming skills.
** Following is a simplest sample (JFrame based) which shows you how to call exit method
import java.awt.event.*;
import javax.swing.*;
public class ExitApp extends JFrame
{
public ExitApp()
{
addWindowListener(new WindowAdapter()
{
public void windowClosing(WindowEvent e)
{
dispose();
System.exit(0); //calling the method is a must
}
});
}
public static void main(String[] args)
{
ExitApp app=new ExitApp();
app.setBounds(133,100,532,400);
app.setVisible(true);
}
}
Not only to close the JFrame but also to trigger WindowListener events, try this:
myFrame.dispatchEvent(new WindowEvent(myFrame, WindowEvent.WINDOW_CLOSING));
Best way to close a Swing frame programmatically is to make it behave like it would when the "X" button is pressed. To do that you will need to implement WindowAdapter that suits your needs and set frame's default close operation to do nothing (DO_NOTHING_ON_CLOSE).
Initialize your frame like this:
private WindowAdapter windowAdapter = null;
private void initFrame() {
this.windowAdapter = new WindowAdapter() {
// WINDOW_CLOSING event handler
#Override
public void windowClosing(WindowEvent e) {
super.windowClosing(e);
// You can still stop closing if you want to
int res = JOptionPane.showConfirmDialog(ClosableFrame.this, "Are you sure you want to close?", "Close?", JOptionPane.YES_NO_OPTION);
if ( res == 0 ) {
// dispose method issues the WINDOW_CLOSED event
ClosableFrame.this.dispose();
}
}
// WINDOW_CLOSED event handler
#Override
public void windowClosed(WindowEvent e) {
super.windowClosed(e);
// Close application if you want to with System.exit(0)
// but don't forget to dispose of all resources
// like child frames, threads, ...
// System.exit(0);
}
};
// when you press "X" the WINDOW_CLOSING event is called but that is it
// nothing else happens
this.setDefaultCloseOperation(ClosableFrame.DO_NOTHING_ON_CLOSE);
// don't forget this
this.addWindowListener(this.windowAdapter);
}
You can close the frame programmatically by sending it the WINDOW_CLOSING event, like this:
WindowEvent closingEvent = new WindowEvent(targetFrame, WindowEvent.WINDOW_CLOSING);
Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getSystemEventQueue().postEvent(closingEvent);
This will close the frame like the "X" button was pressed.
If you really do not want your application to terminate when a JFrame is closed then,
use : setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.DISPOSE_ON_CLOSE);
instead of : setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
Here's a synopsis of what the solution looks like,
myFrame.dispatchEvent(new WindowEvent(myFrame, WindowEvent.WINDOW_CLOSING));
This examples shows how to realize the confirmed window close operation.
The window has a Window adapter which switches the default close operation to EXIT_ON_CLOSEor DO_NOTHING_ON_CLOSE dependent on your answer in the OptionDialog.
The method closeWindow of the ConfirmedCloseWindow fires a close window event and can be used anywhere i.e. as an action of an menu item
public class WindowConfirmedCloseAdapter extends WindowAdapter {
public void windowClosing(WindowEvent e) {
Object options[] = {"Yes", "No"};
int close = JOptionPane.showOptionDialog(e.getComponent(),
"Really want to close this application?\n", "Attention",
JOptionPane.YES_NO_OPTION,
JOptionPane.INFORMATION_MESSAGE,
null,
options,
null);
if(close == JOptionPane.YES_OPTION) {
((JFrame)e.getSource()).setDefaultCloseOperation(
JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
} else {
((JFrame)e.getSource()).setDefaultCloseOperation(
JFrame.DO_NOTHING_ON_CLOSE);
}
}
}
public class ConfirmedCloseWindow extends JFrame {
public ConfirmedCloseWindow() {
addWindowListener(new WindowConfirmedCloseAdapter());
}
private void closeWindow() {
processWindowEvent(new WindowEvent(this, WindowEvent.WINDOW_CLOSING));
}
}
Based on the answers already provided here, this is the way I implemented it:
JFrame frame= new JFrame()
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
// frame stuffs here ...
frame.dispatchEvent(new WindowEvent(frame, WindowEvent.WINDOW_CLOSING));
The JFrame gets the event to close and upon closing, exits.
You have to insert the call into the AWT message queue so all the timing happens correctly, otherwise it will not dispatch the correct event sequence, especially in a multi-threaded program. When this is done you may handle the resulting event sequence exactly as you would if the user has clicked on the [x] button for an OS suppled decorated JFrame.
public void closeWindow()
{
if(awtWindow_ != null) {
EventQueue.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
awtWindow_.dispatchEvent(new WindowEvent(awtWindow_, WindowEvent.WINDOW_CLOSING));
}
});
}
}
I have tried this, write your own code for formWindowClosing() event.
private void formWindowClosing(java.awt.event.WindowEvent evt) {
int selectedOption = JOptionPane.showConfirmDialog(null,
"Do you want to exit?",
"FrameToClose",
JOptionPane.YES_NO_OPTION);
if (selectedOption == JOptionPane.YES_OPTION) {
setVisible(false);
dispose();
} else {
setDefaultCloseOperation(javax.swing.WindowConstants.DO_NOTHING_ON_CLOSE);
}
}
This asks user whether he want to exit the Frame or Application.
setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.DISPOSE_ON_CLOSE);
Posting what was in the question body as CW answer.
Wanted to share the results, mainly derived from following camickr's link. Basically I need to throw a WindowEvent.WINDOW_CLOSING at the application's event queue. Here's a synopsis of what the solution looks like
// closing down the window makes sense as a method, so here are
// the salient parts of what happens with the JFrame extending class ..
public class FooWindow extends JFrame {
public FooWindow() {
setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
setBounds(5, 5, 400, 300); // yeah yeah, this is an example ;P
setVisible(true);
}
public void pullThePlug() {
WindowEvent wev = new WindowEvent(this, WindowEvent.WINDOW_CLOSING);
Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getSystemEventQueue().postEvent(wev);
}
}
// Here's how that would be employed from elsewhere -
// someplace the window gets created ..
FooWindow fooey = new FooWindow();
...
// and someplace else, you can close it thusly
fooey.pullThePlug();
If you do not want your application to terminate when a JFrame is closed,
use:
setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.DISPOSE_ON_CLOSE)
instead of:
setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
From the documentation:
DO_NOTHING_ON_CLOSE (defined in WindowConstants): Don't do anything; require the program to handle the operation in the windowClosing method of a registered WindowListener object.
HIDE_ON_CLOSE (defined in WindowConstants): Automatically hide the frame after invoking any registered WindowListener objects.
DISPOSE_ON_CLOSE (defined in WindowConstants): Automatically hide and dispose the frame after invoking any registered WindowListener objects.
EXIT_ON_CLOSE (defined in JFrame): Exit the application using the System exit method. Use this only in applications.
might still be useful:
You can use setVisible(false) on your JFrame if you want to display the same frame again.
Otherwise call dispose() to remove all of the native screen resources.
copied from Peter Lang
https://stackoverflow.com/a/1944474/3782247