This document contains information relevant to all 1.4.* releases. For information specific to 1.4.1 and 1.4.2, see Swing Changes Since Java 2 SDK, Standard Edition, v 1.4.
Certain features, typically ones that have a large impact on Swing, have been extensively written up in separate documents. The following link to these documents:
JTabbedPane
with
scrollable tabsJSpinner
JFormattedTextField
Popup
and
PopupFactory
Each section contains changes for a set of related classes. Most
of the sections are focused on the classes that are part of a
single Swing component like JEditorPane
or
JTable
. Each API change is associated with a link to a
report on the Bug Database ,
where you'll find the original bug or RFE ("request for
enhancement") that motivated the change. In this document you'll
also find the following information for each API change:
Box
JButton
JComboBox
JFileChooser
JInternalFrame
JList
JOptionPane
JPopupMenu
JPanel
JRootPane
JScrollBar
JScrollPane
JTabbedPane
JTable
JTextComponent
JTree
RepaintManager
SpringLayout
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4304100.
Historically, the superclass for Box
has been
Component
. Since Box
did not descend from
JComponent
, you could not use it like a normal Swing
component, for example, you couldn't set the borders, or issue
revalidate
. Not only this, but changing visibility, or
other similiar visual properties, on a standard Swing component
typically triggers a repaint
or
revalidate
, but Box
did not conform to
this behavior. As of this release, Box
and
Box.Filler
now descend from the JComponent
superclass and
therefore behave more like standard Swing components.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4140833.
BoxLayout
did not consider the
ComponentOrientation
of the Container
it
is laying out. Other AWT layout managers were made to do this when
the ComponentOrientation
feature was added in JDK 1.2.
Adding this feature to BoxLayout
makes it useful for programs that support Middle East locales.
Because BoxLayout
is also used internally by other
Swing components, such as JOptionPane
,
JToolBar
and JMenuBar
, adding this
feature is also necessary for these components to support ComponentOrientation
.
To support this functionality, the constants LINE_AXIS
and PAGE_AXIS
,
and the constructor,
BoxLayout(Container, int)
, were added to BoxLayout
.
There were also changes to several methods in SizeRequirements
:
calculateTiledPositions(int,SizeRequirements,SizeRequirements[],int[],int[],boolean)
calculateTiledPositions(int,SizeRequirements,SizeRequirements[],int[],int[])
calculateAlignedPositions(int,SizeRequirements,SizeRequirements[],int[],int[],boolean)
calculateAlignedPositions(int,SizeRequirements,SizeRequirements[],int[],int[])
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4659800.
With this bug, introduced in 1.4.0, the default button did not always follow the focus. This has been fixed in 1.4.1.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4138746.
AbstractButton
and JLabel
both
allow the developer to set a character, called the mnemonic, that
can be used to perform an action when typed at the keyboard. The
javadoc for these methods states that the first case-insensitive
occurrence of the character is decorated. While this suits most
developers, often times a different occurrence of the character
needs to be highlighted. For example: in Notepad, 'a' is the
accelerator for Save As, but the second 'a' is decorated.
Developers need a way to be able to specify this.
This is solved with the new
AbstractButton.setDisplayedMnemonicIndex
and
JLabel.setDisplayedMnemonicIndex
methods. Once you
have specified a mnemonic, via the setMnemonic
or
setDisplayedMnemonic
methods, you can then change the
character that is highlighted via the
setDisplayedMnemonicIndex
method. There are also new
AbstractButton.getDisplayedMnemonicIndex
and
JLabel.getDisplayedMnemonicIndex
methods. Finally,
drawStringUnderlineCharAt
has been added to
javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicGraphicsUtils
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4457940.
Previously, the AbstractButton
methods
configurePropertiesFromAction(Action)
and
configurePropertiesFromAction(Action, String[])
did
not honor the ACTION_COMMAND_KEY
property. That has
now been addressed. This affects the javadoc for the
configurePropertiesFromAction
methods in the following
subclasses of AbstractButton
:
JButton.configurePropertiesFromAction(Action)
JMenu.configurePropertiesFromAction(Action)
JCheckBox.configurePropertiesFromAction(Action)
JRadioButton.configurePropertiesFromAction(Action)
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4287690.
Many developers have requested support for listeners to be notified when a combo box's drop down menu is popped up, dismissed, or canceled. Applications could use these listeners to lazily populate the combo box's model with items.
This feature wasn't provided in earlier versions of Swing because there was some, probably academic, concern about supporting a listener for a feature (the drop down menu) that some look and feel implementations might not provide. All of the look and feels that are shipped with Java, and all of the ones we've come across, do use a drop down menu to show all of the combo box items. Some developers have resorted to non-portable hacks to get the menu state change notifications.
For this release, we added a PopupMenuListener
to JComboBox
.
So long as the underlying look and feel supports an item menu, this
listener can be used to perform actions before and after the combo
box menu appears. Several new JComboBox
methods were
required to support this feature:
public void addPopupMenuListener(PopupMenuListener l) public void removePopupMenuListener(PopupMenuListener l) public void firePopupMenuWillBecomeVisible() public void firePopupMenuWillBecomeInvisible() public void firePopupMenuCanceled()
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4231298.
JComboBox
previously configured a renderer for every item it displayed. For
large lists this could take quite a while. Instead, developers
needed the ability to specify a prototype that all cells match, so
that the prototype is only checked once instead of every cell. For
this release,
getPrototypeDisplayValue
and
setPrototypeDisplayValue
have been added to
JComboBox
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is 4394300.
Previously, public API for JComboBox
and its UI
delegates contained javadoc which described the details of its
implementation. Refactoring and bug fixing over the course of its
history had made this javadoc out of date. The javadoc has been
checked and revised so that it describes the behavior of the method
rather than the implementation details. Also, some of the javadoc
for "protected" methods and fields which should really have been
private have been removed so that overriding or calling these
methods are not encouraged.
The doc has been changed for JComboBox
,
ComboBoxModel
,
MutableComboBoxModel
,
javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicComboBoxUI
,
javax.swing.plaf.basic.ComboPopup
,
and javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicComboPopup
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is 4290709.
Although Swing's JFileChooser
closely resembles the
Microsoft Windows common file dialog under the Windows look and
feel, there are several deficiencies for which we have received
complaints. In particular, the Microsoft Windows aesthetics guide
mentions the following:
If you cannot use the [common] Open and Save As dialog boxes, you should incorporate the following features into your open and save dialog boxes to ensure that they are consistent with the shell, the Windows accessories, and other applications:
The first four points are not possible in Swing without additional API support from the AWT. The AWT common file dialog is also currently an unacceptable solution for the following reasons:
The new functionality is accomplished by adding the following
public methods to the javax.swing.filechooser.FileSystemView
class, providing file and directory information beyond the scope of
the File
class:
public boolean isTraversable(File f) public String getSystemDisplayName(File f) public String getSystemTypeDescription public Icon getSystemIcon(File f) public boolean isParent(File folder, File file) public File getChild(File parent, String filename) public boolean isFileSystem(File f) public boolean isFileSystemRoot(File dir) public boolean isDrive(File dir) public boolean isFloppyDrive(File dir) public boolean isComputerNode(File dir) public File createFileSystemRoot(File f) public File[] getRoots()
The isTraversable
method has been removed from
javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicFileChooserUI.BasicFileView
so that the superclass's implementation is used.
createListSelectionListener
has been added to
javax.swing.plaf.metal.MetalFileChooserUI
.
Also,
javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicDirectoryModel
has the
following changes:
public void intervalAdded(ListDataEvent e) public void intervalRemoved(ListDataEvent e) public void renameFile(File oldFile, File newFile)
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is 4318785.
Look and feels need the ability to specify the text, tooltip
text, and mnemonic for the button used to open a directory in
JFileChooser
.
To support this, several constants and methods were added to
plaf.basic.BasicFileChooserUI
:
protected int directoryOpenButtonMnemonic = 0; protected String directoryOpenButtonText = null protected String directoryOpenButtonToolTipText = null protected boolean isDirectorySelected() protected void setDirectorySelected(boolean b) protected File getDirectory() protected void setDirectory(File f)
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is 4218431.
Multiple file selection was added to JFileChooser
in the 1.4 release, but the javadoc for
setMultiSelectionEnabled
wasn't updated until the
1.4.1 release.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is 4134077.
Previously, the title of an internal frame would not be clipped
if it was too long. This would lead to the title displaying over
parts of the icons, as well no visual feedback to the user that the
title had been clipped. To solve this,
BasicInternalFrameTitlePane.getTitle
was
added.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4389209.
To implement this correctly, we needed to create a class,
com.sun.java.swing.plaf.windows.WindowsInternalFrameTitlePane
,
which extended
javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicInternalFrameTitlePane
,
but overrode the paint routine to render the gradient when
appropriate. The best way to get code-reuse was to break out the
portion of the paint method which paints just the background and
override just that in WindowsInternalFrameTitlePane
.
The method
paintTitleBackground
was added to
javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicInternalFrameTitlePane
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4252169.
In previous releases it was not possible for ImageView
(the View
responsible for rendering images in a
JEditorPane
)
to show tooltip text because there was no way for a
View
to influence the tooltip text that is displayed
for a JTextComponent
.
In this release, if the JTextComponent
doesn't have a
tooltip, then the view under the mouse is asked to provide one. If
that View
corresponds to an HTML element with an ALT
attribute, then the tooltip text is the value of that
attribute.
To make it possible for View
s to affect the tooltip
text, a number of methods were needed.
getToolTipText
was added to javax.swing.plaf.TextUI
so that it is possible to get the tooltip text for a particular
location. JTextComponent
's
getToolTipText
method then forwards to the
TextUI
, assuming a tooltip was not set on the
JTextComponent
.
getToolTipText
was also added to javax.swing.text.View
.
The default implementation of View.getToolTipText
will
forward the request to the View
's child at the given
location. To make it easy to determine the child at a particular
location,
getViewIndex
was added to View
.
The View
implementation invokes
getViewIndex
and then getToolTipText
on
the child View
. ImageView
then overrides
getToolTipText
and returns the value from the ALT
attribute of its AttributeSet
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4233811.
The package private class javax.swing.text.html.ImageView
is now public so that it can be extended.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4182124.
The HTML package exposes a way for developers to determine when
the mouse moves over a link via the HyperlinkEvent
and HyperlinkListener
classes. Often times developers need a way to extract information
from the document when the HyperlinkListener
is
notified. There was previously no way for a developer to determine
the position in the document a HyperlinkEvent
represents. To remedy this the constructor
HyperlinkEvent(Object, EventType, URL, String,
Element)
and the method
getSourceElement
were added to HyperlinkEvent
.
HTMLFrameHyperlinkEvent
extends
HyperlinkEvent
, which already defines the method
getSourceElement
. Since the superclass now defines
this method, the getSourceElement
javadoc was removed
from HTMLFrameHyperlinkEvent
(the method is now
inherited):
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4241788.
The semantics of the HTML parser ( javax.swing.text.html.parser.Parser
)
have slightly changed to better match that of the browser
(NetscapeTM and Internet
Explorer). While no API was changed, those using the parser may
notice a slight difference in the reporting of whitespace. Here is
how things have changed: if strict
(an instance
variable of javax.swing.text.html.parser.Parser
) ==
false
(the default) an instance variable is used to
try and mimic the behavior of Netscape and Explorer.
The problematic scenarios are:
'<b>blah <i> <strike> foo'
which can be treated as:
'<b>blah <i><strike>foo'
as well as:
'<p><a href="xx"> <em>Using</em></a></p>'
which appears to be treated as:
'<p><a href="xx"><em>Using</em></a></p>'
When a tag that breaks flow, or trailing whitespace is encountered an instance variable is set to true. From then on, all whitespace is ignored. The instance variable is set back to false the first time a non whitespace character is encountered.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4200439.
The HTML support provided in the J2SE™ has never correctly supported writing out form
elements. This was due, in large part, to the way that forms were
modeled. To better match the document object model (see DOM at www.w3.org) we have changed how the forms
are modeled internally. Previously, any attributes of a form would
be stored in the attributeSet
of all of the children
character elements. As of this release, an element is created to
represent the form, better matching that of the HTML file itself.
This allows for better modeling of the form, as well as consistent
writing of the form.
This affects developers that relied on forms being handled loosely. As an example, we would previously treat the following invalid HTML:
<table> <form> </table> </form>
as:
<form> <table> </table> </form>
With this release, we instead treat it as:
<table> <form> </form> </table>
javax.swing.text.DefaultHighlighter
Class is Now
Final
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4328938.
Prior to this release, the static field
DefaultPainter
of javax.swing.text.DefaultHighlighter
was not final. This was a potential security problem. For this
release, it is now Final
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4220001.
Prior to this release, the
PlainDocument(AbstractDocument.Content)
constructor was protected. This meant that developers wishing to
use the constructor had to subclass. This constructor was intended
to be public, and is now public in this release.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4304676.
JEditorPane.scrollToReference
was protected for no
good reason. This method is intended to be useful without having to
subclass, as such it has been made public in this release.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4156650.
For efficiently accessing the content of a text document,
Document
defines the method
getText(int, int, Segment)
. Unfortunately, there
has been no way for the caller to determine if the receiver could
efficiently satisfy the request. For example, GapContent
could efficiently implement the request as long as the request
didn't span the last edited spot of the document (the gap). To
facilitate efficient access of the content, the methods
setPartialReturn
and
isPartialReturn
have been added to Segment
.
The current semantics of Document.getText
still hold,
but for more efficient use callers should invoke
segment.setPartialReturn(true)
and be prepared to get
back a portion of the document at a time.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4303259.
Assistive technologies for people with disabilities require
programmatic access to the contents of JEditorPane
using the Accessibility API. Previously, the only access was to
hypertext links. This API change provided accessibility to all HTML
components using the Accessibility API.
javax.swing.text.html.HTMLEditorKit
now implements javax.accessibility.Accessible
.
JEditorPane
now implements
getAccessibleContext()
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4458513.
As part of RFE 4431047, a
replace
method was added to AbstractDocument
.
In order to allow this method to call
remove
and
insertString
(the only methods defined in the
interface for mutating a Document
), the restrictions
on when
writeLock
may be invoked have been relaxed. This allows
replace
to be compatible with old versions of
AbstractDocument
that only override
remove
and insertString
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4226644.
Prior to this release, if programs wished to display a simple
input dialog containing a textfield with a default string, they had
to invoke the complex JOptionPane.showInputDialog
method which requires seven parameters. Two new methods,
showInputDialog(Object, Object)
, and
showInputDialog(Component, Object, Object)
, make
it more convenient to create and display simple input dialogs.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4265463.
JOptionPane
needed to support right-to-left layout. This was a bug fix and no
actual API was required, however, the class spec for JOptionPane
and javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicOptionPane
have been updated.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4829588.
As of release 1.4.0, JOptionPane
is changed to use
non-resizable dialogs. As a result, the dialogs displayed by many
JOptionPane
methods have slightly changed. The first
two changes are desirable:
As of this release, showing a JPopupMenu
causes
focus to transfer to the parent JRootPane
. This was
done so that JPopupMenu
s would support keyboard
traversal ( 4212563). This
may cause problems for applications that are doing validation on
focus lost. If this affects you, it is recommended that in the
focusLost
notification you check the temporary
property of the FocusEvent
and, if true
,
do nothing. In situations where you don't want
JPopupMenu
to grab focus, there is unfortunately no
way to disable this in the current release. In release 1.4.1 the
decision to transfer focus is based on the focusability of the
JPopupMenu
. Refer to bug 4632782 for
details.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4212563.
Previously, JPopupMenu
didn't support key bindings. The arrow keys, mnemonics, the enter
key, and escape did not work with a JPopupMenu
unless
it was used as part of a compound component (like a
JMenu
or a JComboBox
).
This behavior can be traced to the fact that
JPopupMenu
did not always gain focus, and could
therefore not get KeyEvents
. It was previously not
possible for light weight toolkits, such as Swing, to request focus
and indicate that the focus change was temporary. The new focus
architecture solved this problem, and Swing can now request a
temporary focus change. Fixing this bug required making the
JPopupMenu
get focus so that the key bindings can be
processed. Consumers that had previously not expected focus changes
need to update their code to check the temporary property of the
FocusEvent
s.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4401222.
When the new headless mode was introduced,
JPopupMenu.setVisible(true)
was implemented to throw
NullPointerException
when called in headless mode. It
has now been fixed to throw HeadlessException
instead,
to indicate that this operation cannot be performed in headless
mode.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4226238.
The
setUI
/getUI
methods were not implemented for JPanel
,
even though its look and feel is defined by pluggable look and feel
(plaf). See javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicPanelUI.java
,
for example.
The new focus specification states that focus requests on
components that are not showing will fail. This can have subtle
side effects. One such side effect is that requesting focus from a
ChangeListener
associated with a
JTabbedPane
may fail. At the same time, the
ChangeListener
is notified that the component is not
currently visible and therefore the focus request fails in the same
situation that it probably worked under the previous release. If
you are running into this situation with JTabbedPane
it is suggested you make the component visible before requesting
focus. Other situations may require different approaches.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4241787.
Prior to this change, there was no way for client programs to
convert a coordinate location to a particular tab in a tabbedpane.
This made it difficult to implement special event handling on a
JTabbedPane
(like popping up a menu over a tab).
The method
indexAtLocation has been added to JTabbedPane
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4284674.
The panes of a JTabbedPane
did not previously allow for mnemonics. To facilitate this, the
methods
getDisplayedMnemonicIndexAt
and
setDisplayedMnemonicIndexAt
have been added.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4287053.
The JTabbedPane
class is a container that has many methods which take an integer
index as a parameter. Unfortunately, these methods weren't
inconsistent with their approach to throwing exceptions (some
methods check/throw, some don't). Additionally, the javadoc was in
error - it stated that an IllegalParameterException
was thrown when in fact an
ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException
was thrown (by the
underlying Vector
).
Any method which takes an index that must be in the valid range
from 0 to tabCount-1 now documents that it throws an
IndexOutOfBoundsException
(note: the underlying code
continues to throw ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException
for
compatibility reasons).
The following doc change:
* @exception IndexOutOfBoundsException if index is out of range * (index < 0 || index >= tab count)will be applied to the following
JTabbedPane
methods:
public String getTitleAt(int index) public Icon getIconAt(int index) public Icon getDisabledIconAt(int index) public String getToolTipTextAt(int index) public Color getBackgroundAt(int index) public Color getForegroundAt(int index) public boolean isEnabledAt(int index) public Component getComponentAt(int index) public int getDisplayedMnemonicIndexAt(int index) public Rectangle getBoundsAt(int index) public void setTitleAt(int index, String title) public void setIconAt(int index, Icon icon) public void setDisabledIconAt(int index, Icon icon) public void setToolTipTextAt(int index, String toolTipText) public void setForegroundAt(int index, Color foreground) public void setBackgroundAt(int index, Color background) public void setEnabledAt(int index, boolean enabled) public void setComponentAt(int index, Component component) public void setDisplayedMnemonicIndexAt(int tabIndex, int mnemonicIndex)
The same exception handling will be added to the following methods which previously did nothing:
public void setSelectedIndex(int index) public void remove(int index)
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4144295.
In JDK 1.3, the moveRow
method in DefaultTableModel
was documented in such a way that it did not clearly define whether
the row at startIndex
or the row at
endIndex
row would end up at toIndex
. By
inference from the examples, it appears that the
startIndex
should end up at toIndex
when
moving rows downward and the endIndex
should end up at
toIndex
when moving rows upward.
That said, the implementation of
moveRow
had a bug such that whenever the number of
rows being moved was more than one - the rows would end up in
somewhat arbitrary positions and would not even be contiguous after
the move. Bug 4144295 noted that the implementation did not even
perform the example in its specification: the moveRow(1, 3,
5)
example in practice left the vector in the following
state:
a|C|e|B|D|f|g|h|i|j|kThe new implementation makes the observation that this operation is a simple rotation of elements between bounds that can be calculated from the inputs.
Since the previous implementation did not work we have taken the
opportunity to simplify the definition to one where the
startIndex
is always moved to the
toIndex
, with all other elements appearing after
toIndex
in the same order that they were originally.
Note that this performs the same operation as the previous
implementation in the only case where it worked - when a single row
was being moved.
The new implementation does not throw an exception when
endIndex
is less than startIndex
- it
does nothing instead having satisfied the implied contract to move
all rows, r
, where startIndex <= r <=
endIndex
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4274963.
The Excel application automatically gives focus to underlying
editors when a user presses an alphanumeric key. We have received
over 200 JDC votes requesting that we offer this behavior in
JTable
.
While we can't change the default behavior for reasons of backwards
compatibility, in this release we have added the new property,
surrendersFocusOnKeystroke
, to address this request.
The new methods
setSurrendersFocusOnKeystroke
and
getSurrendersFocusOnKeystrok
support this feature.
The default behavior remains unchanged.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4474094.
The methods
DefaultTableModel.addColumn(Object)
and
DefaultTableModel.addColumn(Object, Vector)
did
not previously allow null
for the name
argument - they threw an IllegalArgumentException
. As
it is possible to set the column name to null
via
other means (using constructors, or directly manipulating the
field), the addColumn
methods now also allows a
null
value.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4264897.
DefaultTreeModel
now allows a null
root node . Previously, the javadoc
for TreeModel
specified that a null
root
was valid, but DefaultTreeModel
would not allow one.
DefaultTreeModel
now allows setting a
null
root, as well as a null
root in the
constructor. The javadoc for
setRoot
has been revised to reflect the
change.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4284709.
Often times users wish to navigate to cells in a
JTree
using alphanumeric keys. To facilitate this, a
method named
getNextMatch
has been added to JTree
.
BasicTreeUI
installs a KeyListener
that invokes this method as
keys are typed on the keyboard.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4134085.
Developers often rely on the toString
method for
useful debugging information. Unfortunately ListDataEvent
's
toString
method did not really provide anything useful.
For this release, it has been changed to return something
useful.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4284709.
Often times users wish to navigate to cells in a JList
using
alphanumeric keys. To facilitate this,
getNextMatch
was added to JList
.
BasicListUI
will then install a KeyListener
that will invoke this
method as keys are typed to update the selection.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4460016.
JList
previously only allowed laying out its cells
vertically, that is:
1 2 3 4
Numerous users have asked for the ability to lay out the list horizontally, something like:
1 3 2 4or
1 2 3 4
To achieve this, three constants are added to
JList
, VERTICAL
,
VERTICAL_WRAP
,
and HORIZONTAL_WRAP
.
The methods getLayoutOrientation
and
setLayoutOrientation
are also added to JList
. The
javadoc for the JList
methods
getScrollableTracksViewportHeight
,
getScrollableTracksViewportWidth
,
getScrollableBlockIncrement
, and
getPreferredScrollableViewportSize
are updated
accordingly. Likewise, the javadoc for
getPreferredSize
in javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicListUI
is updated.
Two default settings have changed in the Metal look and feel:
JLabel
has changed from
dark blue to black.DefaultListCellRenderer
has changed
from normal to bold.The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4759306.
When calling this method the default PreviewPanel was not removed from the colorChooser, though the new panel was added. This resulted in strange artifacts. This has been fixed in release 1.4.2.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4668511.
This bug when encountered in 1.4.0, caused a deadlock that would hang the entire application. This has been fixed in 1.4.1.
As of release 1.4.1, the
setDefaultCloseOperation
method in
JFrame
may now throw
SecurityException
.
The bugtraq reports that correspond to this change are: 4419964 and 4668963.
Prior to this release, the DefaultMetalTheme
ignored the font size information from the Windows desktop. As of
release 1.4.1, DefaultMetalTheme
can use the font
sizes specified in the Windows desktop. This can be disabled using
the system property swing.useSystemFontSettings
. An
additional part of this bug is that our Windows look and feel was
picking up the wrong fonts for a handful of components; this has
been fixed.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4615396.
On Microsoft Windows, with the WindowsLookAndFeel
,
in certain locales we only honor font size from the desktop. This
has been addressed in 1.4.1.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4420209.
Some look and feel implementations may ignore certain properties
which affect the look and feel. With this release, the
documentation for certain methods has been modified to indicate
that these properties may be ignored by some look and feels. Also,
the class spec for UIManager
and the documentation for the javax.swing.plaf.metal
package were modified to specify that the Java look and feel is the
default look and feel. This modification affects only
documentation.
The affected methods are:
javax.swing.AbstractButton
javax.swing.JButton
javax.swing.JCheckBox
javax.swing.JColorChooser
javax.swing.JComboBox
javax.swing.JFileChooser
javax.swing.JInternalFrame
javax.swing.JList
javax.swing.JPopupMenu
javax.swing.JProgressBar
javax.swing.JSplitPane
javax.swing.JTable
javax.swing.text.JTextComponent
javax.swing.JToolBar
javax.swing.JTree
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4175466.
SwingConstants
defines constants that are used throughout Swing. A common UI
operation is to locate the next/previous item in a sequence; as
such, SwingConstants
now defines constants for
NEXT
and PREVIOUS
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4344900.
Swing has an elaborate infrastructure to support associating
actions with particular key strokes. This means that when the user
types a character the action executes. The processing of these
events is triggered from within
JComponent.processKeyEvent
(processKeyEvent
is overridden from
java.awt.Component
). As the processing of these
actions occurs within JComponent
, there was previously
no way for developers to process bindings from within
non-JComponent
subclasses that get focus. To
facilitate this, a
processKeyBindings
method was added to SwingUtilities
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4290988.
Note: Due to a handful of bugs in the sound package we default to playing no sounds. If you would like to turn on sounds, you can do the following:
UIManager.put("AuditoryCues.playList", UIManager.get("AuditoryCues.allAuditoryCues"));
Previously, Swing components did not provide the same auditory feedback as native components on many platforms. MALF2, a set of modifications to Swing's PLAFs, is primarily intended for use as an output-only, non-speech audio user feedback mechanism. The MALF2 project is important from the perspective of Swing/JFC and the Java platform's goal of tight user interface integration with the underlying platform. The MALF2 project ensures that a user's experience with a native application and a Swing/JFC application is identical with regard to the auditory user feedback.
The implementation centers around adding API to BasicLookAndFeel
to support loading an ActionMap
containing
Action
s that play sounds. Various
BasicComponentUI
implementations then invoke
actionPerformed
on the Action
at the
appropriate time to play the sound. For example, BasicMenuItemUI
uses
doClick
to perform the action. While
BasicLookAndFeel
plays sounds using the Java Sound
API, subclasses can use an alternative method. For example,
WindowsLookAndFeel
maps the Strings to
Runnable
s by way of
Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getDesktopProperty()
,
to provide integration with the sounds provided by Windows.
The ActionMap
containing the sounds can be accessed
via
BasicLookAndFeel.getAudioActionMap
. When
getAudioActionMap
is first invoked, it performs the
following:
auditoryCues.cueList
(an
Object[]
) is used to determine a list of sounds to
load.createAudioAction
to obtain the Action
responsible for playing the sound.Object
passed into
BasicLookAndFeel.createAudioAction
is used to look
up a path to a sound file from the defaults table that can be
loaded by Java Sound.BasicComponentUI
s classes wishes
to play a sound, it invokes
BasicLookAndFeel.playSound
, passing in the
Action
.BasicLookAndFeel.playSound
invokes
actionPerformed
on the Action
if the name
of the Action
is contained in the defaults entry
AuditoryCues.playList
.This architecture allows the developer numerous ways to customize the sounds that are played:
JComponent
can be manipulated by changing the Action
in the
ActionMap
associated with the JComponent
,
eg:
ActionMap map = menuItem.getActionMap(); map.put("MenuItem.commandSound", differentActionToPlaySound);
Component
s of a particular
type can be changed by manipulating the defaults table, eg:
UIManager.put("MenuItem.commandSound", "pathToNewSoundFild");
BasicLookAndFeel
methods to load the sounds in an
alternative manner, or perhaps play the sounds in a different
way.Alternatively, the set of sounds to be played can be manipulated
by way of the defaults entry AuditoryCues.playList
.
This Object
array contains the keys in the defaults
table indicating which sounds to play.
MetalLookAndFeel
defines this to be:
new Object[] {"OptionPane.errorSound",
"OptionPane.informationSound",
"OptionPane.questionSound",
"OptionPane.warningSound" }
This has the effect of turning on only the sounds that
JOptionPane
supports.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4371580.
The new focus architecture introduced via RFE 4290675 allows
for developers to request a temporary focus change. The request is
done through the protected Component
methods requestFocus(boolean)
or
requestFocusInWindow(boolean)
. These two methods
are protected as they are not meant for general use, but only for
implementors of lightweight toolkits, such as Swing. Swing is
architected in such a way that code in different packages needs to
temporarily request focus; as such, the parent class of all Swing
Components, JComponent
,
needs to expose
requestFocus(boolean)
and
requestFocusInWindow
as public.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4337186.
With the bulk of the Swing components paying attention to their
ComponentOrientation
property, we now need two features to make it easier to manage the
ComponentOrientation
settings of an entire hierarchy
of components. It should be easy to set entire hierarchies of
components to a consistent ComponentOrientation
setting using the new SwingUtilities
method applyComponentOrientation(Component c,
ComponentOrientation o)
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4290973.
As part of the Windows look and feel update, a method was added
to LookAndFeel
,
getDesktopPropertyValue
, to facilitate accessing
desktop properties.
This was actually added as part of the update to JProgressBar
to support an indeterminate state. The bugtraq report that
corresponds to this change is: 4290717.
The new method is
calculateInnerArea(Component, Rectangle)
has been
added to SwingUtilities
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4356268.
Wheel mice, with a scroll wheel as a middle mouse button, are increasingly popular. This proposal provides for built-in Java support for scrolling via the mouse wheel, as well as a new wheel event listener so developers can customize mouse wheel behavior.
A new class, MouseWheelListener
,
and a new interface, MouseWheelEvent
,
have been added. The constant, MOUSE_WHEEL_EVENT_MASK
has been added to AWTEvent
.
AWTEventMulticaster
has three new methods:
mouseWheelMoved
,
add
, and
remove
. Component
has two new methods:
addMouseWheelListener
, and
removeMouseWheelListener
. ScrollPane
also has two new methods:
setWheelScrollingEnabled
and
isWheelScrollingEnabled
. Finally, Robot
has the
new method mouseWheel
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4462408.
Swing supports the option of registering key bindings on
JComponent
s. In previous releases it was necessary for
Swing top level components ( JFrame
,
JDialog
,
and JApplet
)
to override processKeyEvent
(defined in java.awt.Component
)
to activate these bindings if the focus was ever on one of these
top level components. With the addition of java.awt.KeyEventPostProcessor
and Swing taking advantage of this ( RFE 4389332),
it is no longer necessary for these methods to be overridden in the
Swing top level components. As of this release, these methods have
been removed at the top level and are now inherited.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4483258.
Though the headless mode was added to this release, two JWindow
constructors did not indicate that HeadlessException
may be thrown. This has been fixed in the doc for
Window(Window, GraphicsConfiguration)
and
JWindow(GraphicsConfiguration)
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4532517.
We've recently found an input verifier bug that has been causing
problems for some of our users. Under 1.4, the
shouldYieldFocus
method does not allow side-effects
such as popping up an OptionPane
.
We do have the following workaround:
public boolean shouldYieldFocus(JComponent input) { if (verify(input)) { return true; } // According to the documentation, should yield focus is allowed to cause // side effects. So temporarily remove the input verifier on the text // field. input.setInputVerifier(null); System.out.println("Removed input verifier"); // Pop up the message dialog. String message = "Roll over the 'JButton1' with mouse pointer " + "after closing this dialog.\nIt sometimes behaves correctly " + "for the first time\n but repeating action brings incorrect " + "behaviour of button."; JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null, message , "invalid value", JOptionPane.WARNING_MESSAGE); System.out.println("Showed message."); // Reinstall the input verifier. input.setInputVerifier(this); System.out.println("Reinstalled input verifier"); // Tell whomever called us that we don't want to yield focus. return false; }
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4338458.
The classes in javax.swing.plaf.multi
are used to
multiplex between multiple look and feels. This is typically used
by assistive technologies that use an auxiliary look and feel to
provide additional information, such as auditory information. There
is currently no implementation in multi for RootPaneUI
which makes using an auxiliary look and feel problematic.
The new class javax.swing.plaf.multi.MultiRootPaneUI
has been added.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4290471.
AWT recently provided API such that Window
s may be
undecorated. That is, when undecorated is true, the Window
will
not render any widgets for closing, moving, or resizing. As such,
Swing has made it possible for the look and feel to render
decorations for Windows.
This feature is primarily supported in javax.swing.JRootPane
,
but we encourage developers to use the switches provided in
javax.swing.JFrame
and javax.swing.JDialog
.
The following changes were made to JRootPane
:
public static final int NONE; public static final int FRAME; public static final int PLAIN_DIALOG; public static final int INFORMATION_DIALOG; public static final int ERROR_DIALOG; public static final int COLOR_CHOOSER_DIALOG; public static final int FILE_CHOOSER_DIALOG; public static final int QUESTION_DIALOG; public static final int WARNING_DIALOG; public void setWindowDecorationStyle(int style) public int getWindowDecorationStyle()
Not all look and feels support the window decoration style; the
method
getSupportsWindowDecorations
has been added to
javax.swing.LookAndFeel
to provide a way for look and feels to indicate whether they
support this behavior.
The methods,
isDefaultLookAndFeelDecorated()
, and
setDefaultLookAndFeelDecorated have been added to JFrame
.
The methods,
isDefaultLookAndFeelDecorated()
, and
setDefaultLookAndFeelDecorated have also been added to JDialog
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4213298.
JScrollBar
did not previously override the
setUI
method. For this release, it has been
changed to conform to this behavior.
This was implemented as part of the mouse wheel support. This
section only documents the changes to JScrollPane
, for
details of the other changes refer to this section. The bugtraq report that corresponds to
this change is: 4356268.
The methods
isWheelScrollingEnabled
and
setWheelScrollingEnabled
were added to JScrollPane
.
A new protected inner class,
MouseWheelHandler
, was added to javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicScrollPaneUI
.
The relevant method in this inner class is
mouseWheelMoved
. Finally, the new method
createMouseWheelListener
has been added to
BasicScrollPaneUI
.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4363288.
The Java 2D team has implemented a new VolatileImage
mechanism that has the ability to take advantage of hardware
acceleration for Image
graphics and blit-to-screen
operations.
By default, Swing uses double-buffering to paint the contents of
GUI components (by rendering into an offscreen image and then
copying that image to the screen) and has been changed to take
advantage of the new VolatileImage
support.
The double buffer that Swing uses to do painting is obtained
from the RepaintManager
by using the method
getOffscreenBuffer
. Since a
VolatileImage
object requires special handling (to
test for failure conditions), we could not simply change this
method to return a VolatileImage
since there may be
existing code out there that invokes this method and does not
implement this additional handling. Therefore, we have added a
method,
getVolatileOffscreenBuffer
, to
javax.swing.RepaintManager
to specifically return a
VolatileImage
object.
The bugtraq report that corresponds to this change is: 4290203.
This release introduces the new layout manager, SpringLayout
.
See
How to Use SpringLayout in The Java Tutorial for
examples of using SpringLayout
.