How to add a timestamp in java on a pane - java

I am currently working on this assignment and I can not seem to get this program to run even though I don't have any errors really popping up ? I am trying to add a time stamp to the pane as well but every time I add the "ts" name for the time stamp to the Pane or Hbox's get children code it goes red.. I am not sure what exactly I'm doing wrong if anyone can point me in the right direction id greatly appreciate it...
package PCK1;
import javafx.event.ActionEvent;
import javafx.geometry.Insets;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.control.Button;
import javafx.scene.layout.Background;
import javafx.scene.layout.BackgroundFill;
import javafx.scene.layout.HBox;
import javafx.scene.layout.Pane;
import javafx.scene.layout.VBox;
import javafx.scene.paint.Color;
import javafx.scene.shape.Circle;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
import java.sql.Timestamp;
import java.util.Date;
import java.text.SimpleDateFormat;
public class MainClass
{
public static void start(Stage stage)
{
// Time Stamp
Date date = new Date();
Timestamp ts=new Timestamp(date.getTime());
SimpleDateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
System.out.println(formatter.format(ts));
//Create a Circle
Circle c1 = new Circle(75,100,20);
//Create a Pane
Pane p = new Pane();
p.setMinSize(100, 150);
p.setBackground(new Background(new BackgroundFill( Color.rgb(190, 220, 190), null, null)
));
p.getChildren().addAll(c1);
//Create a Button
Button btnUp = new Button("Up");
btnUp.setOnAction((ActionEvent e) -> {double y = c1.getCenterY();
y -= 20.0;
c1.setCenterY(y);
});
Button btnDown = new Button("Down");
btnDown.setOnAction((ActionEvent e) -> {double y = c1.getCenterY();
y += 20.0;
c1.setCenterY(y);
});
//Create a HBox
HBox hb = new HBox();
hb.getChildren().addAll(btnUp, btnDown, p, ts);
hb.setBackground(new Background(new BackgroundFill(Color.rgb(150,200,150),null,null)));
hb.setMinSize(100, 50);
hb.setPadding(new Insets(10,10,10,10));
Scene scene = new Scene(hb);
stage.setScene(scene);
stage.setTitle("JavaFx");
stage.setWidth(250);
stage.setHeight(250);
stage.show();
}
}

Answer for displaying a timestamp
Specifically, for the timestamp question, see the following example code:
private Label createTimestampLabel() {
LocalDateTime now = LocalDateTime.now();
String formattedTimestamp = now.format(DateTimeFormatter.ISO_LOCAL_DATE_TIME);
return new Label(formattedTimestamp);
}
It uses the java.time APIs explained in the Oracle Date Time tutorial to get the current time from LocalDateTime and format it as a String using a standard format.
It sets the formatted timestamp string as the text of a Label node.
Now that the returned element is a Node, it can be placed in the scene graph without generating the compile error you saw in your original example.
Using the java.time APIs is preferred over the java.sql.Timestamp and java.util.Date code in your question. You are not working with SQL, so you should not be using java.sql.Timestamp. The java.time classes also have many improvements over obsolete date and time functions used in other Java packages like java.util.
Answer in context with a re-write of your example code
There were a lot of things about the provided example application that were either wrong or annoyed me.
So I re-wrote it to match a bit more closely how I would normally write such an application.
There are maybe a hundred different small decisions made in the choices for how to implement the re-write and explaining them all here would be too verbose.
Hopefully, you can compare the re-write to your original code, note some of the differences, and learn some things from it.
GraphicControlApp.java
package org.example.javafx.demo.graphiccontrol;
import javafx.application.Application;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
public class GraphicControlApp extends Application {
public void start(Stage stage) {
GraphicController graphicController = new GraphicController();
Scene scene = new Scene(graphicController.getUI());
stage.setScene(scene);
stage.setTitle("JavaFX Interactive Graphic Control Demonstration");
stage.show();
}
}
GraphicController.java
import javafx.event.EventHandler;
import javafx.geometry.Insets;
import javafx.scene.control.Button;
import javafx.scene.control.Label;
import javafx.scene.input.KeyEvent;
import javafx.scene.layout.*;
import javafx.scene.paint.Color;
import javafx.scene.shape.Circle;
import javafx.scene.shape.Rectangle;
import java.time.LocalDateTime;
import java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter;
/**
* UI creator and controller for application logic.
*
* Normally, most UI elements would be defined externally in FXML,
* however, for a simple application, we define the UI via private functions in this class.
*/
public class GraphicController {
// amount to move the circle across the surface on interaction.
private static final double MOVEMENT_DELTA = 20.0;
// default spacing between UI elements.
private static final double SPACING = 10;
// normally the styles would be configured in an external css stylesheet,
// but we place the background definitions here for a simple application.
private static final Color SURFACE_COLOR = Color.rgb(190, 220, 190);
private static final Background surfaceBackground = createBackground(SURFACE_COLOR);
private static final Color APP_BACKGROUND_COLOR = Color.rgb(150, 200, 150);
private static final Background appBackground = createBackground(APP_BACKGROUND_COLOR);
private Button up;
private Button down;
/**
* #return the complete layout for the application with event handlers attached for logic control.
*/
public Pane getUI() {
Circle circle = new Circle(75, 100, 20);
Pane surface = createSurface(circle);
HBox controls = createControls(circle);
Label timestampLabel = createTimestampLabel();
Pane layout = createLayout(surface, controls, timestampLabel);
attachKeyboardHandlers(layout);
return layout;
}
/**
* Create a label formatted with the current time in ISO standard format (e.g. '2011-12-03T10:15:30')
*
* #return label with the current timestamp.
*/
private Label createTimestampLabel() {
LocalDateTime now = LocalDateTime.now();
String formattedTimestamp = now.format(DateTimeFormatter.ISO_LOCAL_DATE_TIME);
return new Label(formattedTimestamp);
}
/**
* Create a surface on which a circle can move.
*
* #param circle the circle which can move on the surface.
* #return the created surface.
*/
private Pane createSurface(Circle circle) {
Pane surface = new Pane();
surface.setMinSize(100, 150);
surface.setBackground(surfaceBackground);
surface.getChildren().addAll(circle);
// we must define a clip on the surface to ensure that elements
// in the surface do not render outside the surface.
Rectangle clip = new Rectangle();
clip.widthProperty().bind(surface.widthProperty());
clip.heightProperty().bind(surface.heightProperty());
surface.setClip(clip);
return surface;
}
private VBox createLayout(Pane surface, HBox controls, Label timestampLabel) {
VBox layout = new VBox(SPACING, controls, surface, timestampLabel);
layout.setBackground(appBackground);
layout.setPadding(new Insets(SPACING));
VBox.setVgrow(surface, Priority.ALWAYS);
return layout;
}
/**
* Create controls which can control the movement of a circle.
*
* #param circle the circle which can be controlled
* #return the created controls with handlers attached for circle movement control.
*/
private HBox createControls(Circle circle) {
up = new Button("Up");
up.setOnAction(e -> moveVertically(circle, -MOVEMENT_DELTA));
down = new Button("Down");
down.setOnAction(e -> moveVertically(circle, MOVEMENT_DELTA));
return new HBox(SPACING, up, down);
}
private void moveVertically(Circle circle, double delta) {
double y = circle.getCenterY();
// we only restrict movement in the up direction,
// but allow unlimited movement in the down direction
// (even if that movement would mean that the circle would extend totally
// outside the current visible boundary of the surface).
if ((y + delta) < 0) {
return;
}
circle.setCenterY(y + delta);
}
/**
* Adds standard keyboard handling logic to the UI.
*
* Handlers are attached to the relevant scene whenever
* the scene containing the UI changes.
*
* #param layout the UI which will respond to keyboard input.
*/
private void attachKeyboardHandlers(Pane layout) {
EventHandler<KeyEvent> keyEventHandler = event -> {
switch (event.getCode()) {
case UP -> { up.requestFocus(); up.fire(); }
case DOWN -> { down.requestFocus(); down.fire(); }
}
};
layout.sceneProperty().addListener((observable, oldScene, newScene) -> {
if (oldScene != null) {
oldScene.removeEventFilter(
KeyEvent.KEY_PRESSED,
keyEventHandler
);
}
if (newScene != null) {
newScene.addEventFilter(
KeyEvent.KEY_PRESSED,
keyEventHandler
);
}
});
}
private static Background createBackground(Color surfaceColor) {
return new Background(new BackgroundFill(surfaceColor, null, null));
}
}

You should show the timestamp as text with the TextField (Doc) :
TextField myText = new TextField();
myText.setText("Time: " + formatter.format(ts));
// set what you want to the TextField object: padding, size, color etc...
p.getChildren().addAll(myText);

Related

Java modifying array list and drawing it again [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
What is a NullPointerException, and how do I fix it?
(12 answers)
Avoiding NullPointerException in Java
(66 answers)
Closed 1 year ago.
I am working on a paint app project and am working on an "undo" function. I have created an undrawHandler ActionEvent method to handle this and when I run my code my whole canvas is cleared instead of removing the last shape in the array list and I am getting an error: Exception in thread "JavaFX Application Thread" java.lang.NullPointerException: Cannot invoke "Circle.draw(javafx.scene.canvas.GraphicsContext)" because "this.shape" is null
Here is my code:
import javafx.application.Application;
import javafx.css.Size;
import javafx.event.ActionEvent;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.canvas.Canvas;
import javafx.scene.canvas.GraphicsContext;
import javafx.scene.control.Button;
import javafx.scene.control.Label;
import javafx.scene.input.MouseEvent;
import javafx.scene.layout.Pane;
import javafx.scene.paint.Color;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
import javafx.scene.control.TextField;
import javafx.scene.text.*;
import java.util.ArrayList;
public class PaintApp extends Application {
// TODO: Instance Variables for View Components and Model
private ArrayList<GeometricObject> shapes;
private GraphicsContext gc;
private TextField rField;
private TextField gField;
private TextField bField;
private TextField brushSize;
boolean drawCircle = true;
private ActionEvent e;
private Circle shape;
// TODO: Private Event Handlers and Helper Methods
private void mouseEventHandler(MouseEvent me) {
int red = 0;
int blue = 0;
int green = 0;
int size = 10;
String col;
// location for drawing
double x = me.getX();
double y = me.getY();
// color for drawing
try {
red = Integer.parseInt(rField.getText());
blue = Integer.parseInt(bField.getText());
green = Integer.parseInt(gField.getText());
size = Integer.parseInt(brushSize.getText());
// Check all these values are between 0 and 255 - if not update error label
}catch(NumberFormatException e)
{
// Update error label on screen to notify user of problem
return; // exit the method, don't keep going
}
// going to draw
GeometricObject shape;
if (drawCircle)
shape = new Circle(x,y, Color.rgb(red, green, blue), size);
else
shape = new Square(x,y, Color.rgb(red, green, blue), size);
shape.draw(gc);
shapes.add(shape); // add the shape to my arraylist to keep track of order drawn
}
private void undrawHandler(ActionEvent e)
{
int index = shapes.size() - 1; // remove the last item from the arraylist
shapes.remove(index);
gc.setFill(Color.WHITE);
gc.fillRect(0,0,800,400); // redraw the white rectangle ( the background)
// redraw the canvas with everything else
// redraw all shapes in the arrayList (loop)
if (!shapes.isEmpty())
{
shape.draw(gc);
}
}
/**
* This is where you create your components and the model and add event
* handlers.
*
* #param stage The main stage
* #throws Exception
*/
#Override
public void start(Stage stage) throws Exception {
Pane root = new Pane();
Scene scene = new Scene(root, 800, 500); // set the size here
stage.setTitle("FX GUI Template"); // set the window title here
stage.setScene(scene);
// TODO: Add your GUI-building code here
// 1. Create the model
shapes = new ArrayList<>();
// 2. Create the GUI components
Canvas c = new Canvas(800,400); // used for Mouse events
gc = c.getGraphicsContext2D();
rField = new TextField();
gField = new TextField();
bField = new TextField();
brushSize = new TextField();
Label col = new Label("Color:");
Label size = new Label("Size:");
Button draw = new Button("Draw");
Button undraw = new Button("UnDraw");
Button circle = new Button("Circle");
circle.setOnMousePressed((event) -> {
drawCircle = true;
});
Button square = new Button("Square");
square.setOnMousePressed((event) -> {
drawCircle = false;
});
undraw.setOnMousePressed((event) -> {
undrawHandler(e);
});
// 3. Add components to the root
root.getChildren().addAll(rField, gField, bField,col,draw, circle, square,brushSize,size,undraw, c);
// 4. Configure the components (colors, fonts, size, location)
circle.relocate(10,430);
square.relocate(65,430);
rField.relocate(465,430);
rField.setPrefWidth(50);
bField.relocate(515,430);
bField.setPrefWidth(50);
gField.relocate(565,430);
gField.setPrefWidth(50);
size.relocate(340,430);
brushSize.relocate(370,430);
brushSize.setPrefWidth(50);
col.relocate(430,430);
draw.relocate(625,430);
undraw.relocate(675,430);
// 5. Add Event Handlers and do final setup
gc.setFill(Color.WHITE);
gc.fillRect(0,0,800,400);
c.addEventHandler(MouseEvent.MOUSE_PRESSED, this::mouseEventHandler);
c.addEventHandler(MouseEvent.MOUSE_DRAGGED, this::mouseEventHandler);
// 6. Show the stage
stage.show();
}
/**
* Make no changes here.
*
* #param args unused
*/
public static void main(String[] args) {
launch(args);
}
}

How to properly implement the Action Listener in a bullseye animation

This program first displays a bullseye created by three different sized circles.
Once the animate me button is clicked, the function animation() will make the existing circles shrink inwards until the size of the circles is zero.
Once the user presses the button named "Press to stop", the animation will then stop. If the user presses the button again, it will then keep going from the state it was stopped from, so on so forth.
Currently, this is not working as intended. It only creates about 9 circles (including the nine circles that the program began with). I know I will need to use the action listener in order to make the program run, but I'm having a hard time in terms of the documentation of the action listener. What am I supposed to put in the parameters of the listener? If you see any other ways around this, please feel free to let me know.
package target;
import javafx.animation.ScaleTransition;
import javafx.animation.Timeline;
import javafx.application.Application;
import static javafx.application.Application.launch;
import javafx.beans.value.ChangeListener;
import javafx.beans.value.ObservableValue;
import javafx.event.ActionEvent;
import javafx.event.EventHandler;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.control.Button;
import javafx.scene.layout.StackPane;
import javafx.scene.paint.Color;
import javafx.scene.shape.Circle;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
import javafx.util.Duration;
public class Target extends Application
{
Circle[] cir = new Circle[7];
Button btn = new Button("Animate me!");
StackPane root = new StackPane();
public static void main(String[] args)
{
launch(args);
}
/**
* start method will create the target and the start button first
* displayed on-screen to the user
*/
#Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage)
{
root.setStyle("-fx-border-color:black;");
cir[0] = new Circle(400, 250, 200);
cir[0].setFill(Color.RED);
cir[0].setStyle("-fx-border-color:black;");
cir[1] = new Circle(315, 165, 115);
cir[1].setFill(Color.WHITE);
cir[1].setStyle("-fx-border-color:black;");
cir[2] = new Circle(230, 80, 30);
cir[2].setFill(Color.RED);
cir[2].setStyle("-fx-border-color:black;");
root.getChildren().addAll(cir[0], cir[1], cir[2]);
root.getChildren().add(btn);
primaryStage.setScene(new Scene(root));
primaryStage.show();
btn.setOnAction(e ->
{
animation();
btn.setText("Press to Stop");
});
}
public void animation()
{
//Timeline animation = new Timeline(
//)
ScaleTransition[] st = new ScaleTransition[7];
boolean recycleCircles = false;
st[0]= new ScaleTransition(Duration.seconds(7), cir[0]);
st[0].setToX(0.0f);
st[0].setToY(0.0f);
st[0].play();
st[1] = new ScaleTransition(Duration.seconds(5.5), cir[1]);
st[1].setToX(0.0f);
st[1].setToY(0.0f);
st[1].play();
st[2] = new ScaleTransition(Duration.seconds(4), cir[2]);
st[2].setToX(0.0f);
st[2].setToY(0.0f);
st[2].play();
// int delayInc = 1;
int delay = 1;
//will create circles (will rotate between white and red) and then add
//to scaleTransitions
//while(btn.isPressed() == false)
{
for(int i = 3; i<st.length; i++)
{
if(recycleCircles == true)
{
i = 0;
recycleCircles = false;
}
if(i % 2 == 1)
{
cir[i] = new Circle(400,250,200);
cir[i].setFill(Color.WHITE);
cir[i].setStyle("-fx-border-color:black;");
root.getChildren().add(cir[i]);
cir[i].toBack();
st[i] = new ScaleTransition(Duration.seconds(7), cir[i]);
st[i].setDelay(Duration.seconds(delay));
delay++;
st[i].setToX(0.0f);
st[i].setToY(0.0f);
st[i].play();
}
else if(i%2==0)
{
cir[i] = new Circle(400, 250, 200);
cir[i].setFill(Color.RED);
cir[i].setStyle("-fx-border-color:black;");
root.getChildren().add(cir[i]);
cir[i].toBack();
st[i] = new ScaleTransition(Duration.seconds(7), cir[i]);
st[i].setDelay(Duration.seconds(delay));
delay++;
st[i].setToX(0.0f);
st[i].setToY(0.0f);
st[i].play();
}
if(i == 6)
recycleCircles = true;
}
}
//btn.pressedProperty().addListener(listener);
btn.setOnMousePressed(event ->
{
});
btn.setOnMouseReleased(event ->
{
for(int y = 0; y<st.length;y++)
{
}
});
}
}
Not sure whether you have any specific use case with each circle. If your are using the circles only for the purpose of alternating row colors, then you can get similar effect with radial gradient's repeat option.
To the extent I understand the question, below program is what I can think of. May be this can help you.
Just to let you know, the overall effect is slightly different from your program. The main difference in effects is, your program gives an effect/impression that each circle are shrinking towards center, as the distance between each circle is always same till it shrinked completely.
My program gives the effect/.impression like the entire board is moving away from your sight till it vanishes. In my program the distance between each circle decreases proportianally till it shrinks.
import javafx.animation.ScaleTransition;
import javafx.application.Application;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.control.Button;
import javafx.scene.layout.StackPane;
import javafx.scene.shape.Circle;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
import javafx.util.Duration;
public class TargetAnimation extends Application {
Button btn = new Button("Animate me!");
StackPane root = new StackPane();
public static void main(String[] args) {
launch(args);
}
#Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage) {
root.setPrefSize(400, 400);
root.setStyle("-fx-border-color:black;");
Circle board = new Circle();
board.setRadius(200);
board.setStyle("-fx-fill:radial-gradient(focus-angle 0deg , focus-distance 0% , center 50% 50% , radius 21% , repeat, red 44% , white 46% );-fx-stroke-width:1px;-fx-stroke:black;");
root.getChildren().addAll(board, btn);
primaryStage.setScene(new Scene(root));
primaryStage.show();
ScaleTransition transition = new ScaleTransition(Duration.seconds(7), board);
transition.setToX(0);
transition.setToY(0);
btn.setOnAction(e -> {
switch (transition.getStatus()) {
case RUNNING:
transition.pause();
break;
case PAUSED:
transition.play();
break;
default:
board.setScaleX(1);
board.setScaleY(1);
transition.playFromStart();
}
});
}
}
The code given to setOnAction is an EventHandler, which is a #FunctionalInterface with the single method handle. That means that you can give it a lambda expression instead. The method takes an argument, which is the ActionEvent of clicking the button (created for you by JavaFX), and runs the code you give it.
If you want to pause the animation, call Animation#pause, and if you want to resume it, call Animation#play. I suggest that you create a ParallelTransition with all of your ScaleTransitions as its children. Then call the above methods on the ParallelTransition in the event handler.
That means that the setup code, like naming the button and creates the animations, goes outside of the event handler.

Get single stage resize event when user releases left mouse button

I've googled enough but still can find solution to get only single resize event when user releases left mouse button. For example the following solution from here
stage.titleProperty().bind(
scene.widthProperty().asString().
concat(" : ").
concat(scene.heightProperty().asString()));
When user clicks mouse left button and starts resizing the stage we will get very many events (using property listeners) while he does resizing. However, I want to get only one event - when the user completes resizing and releases mouse left button.
Another solution is here This solution significantly decreases amount of events but still doesn't let to get only one.
How to get only one resize event after user releases mouse button?
As far as I know, the mouse event handlers that resize the stage are managed natively, and so there is no way to access those purely in JavaFX - to do this the way you describe would require writing native libraries and hooking into them.
If you are doing some heavy computation (or other work that takes a long time) in response to the change in size of the stage, your best bet is probably to write code that only processes one change at a time, and just processes the last known change when it can.
An example of this is:
import java.util.Random;
import java.util.concurrent.ArrayBlockingQueue;
import java.util.concurrent.BlockingQueue;
import javafx.application.Application;
import javafx.application.Platform;
import javafx.beans.value.ChangeListener;
import javafx.geometry.Point2D;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.layout.StackPane;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
public class StageResizeThrottling extends Application {
private Random rng = new Random();
#Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage) {
BlockingQueue<Point2D> dimensionChangeQueue = new ArrayBlockingQueue<>(1);
ChangeListener<Number> dimensionChangeListener = (obs, oldValue, newValue) -> {
dimensionChangeQueue.clear();
dimensionChangeQueue.add(new Point2D(primaryStage.getWidth(), primaryStage.getHeight()));
};
primaryStage.widthProperty().addListener(dimensionChangeListener);
primaryStage.heightProperty().addListener(dimensionChangeListener);
Thread processDimensionChangeThread = new Thread(() -> {
try {
while (true) {
System.out.println("Waiting for change in size");
Point2D size = dimensionChangeQueue.take();
System.out.printf("Detected change in size to [%.1f, %.1f]: processing%n", size.getX(), size.getY());
process(size, primaryStage);
System.out.println("Done processing");
}
} catch (InterruptedException letThreadExit) { }
});
processDimensionChangeThread.setDaemon(true);
processDimensionChangeThread.start();
Scene scene = new Scene(new StackPane(), 600, 600);
primaryStage.setScene(scene);
primaryStage.show();
}
private void process(Point2D stageDimension, Stage stage) throws InterruptedException {
// simulate slow process:
Thread.sleep(500 + rng.nextInt(1000));
final String title = String.format("Width: %.0f Height: %.0f", stageDimension.getX(), stageDimension.getY());
Platform.runLater(() -> stage.setTitle(title));
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
launch(args);
}
}
Note that this will always process the very first change immediately, and then process the latest change when each previously-processed change has finished processing. If no further changes have occurred, it will wait until one does occur and then process it immediately. If you like, you can combine this with the timer-based technique you linked for coalescing the changes in the listener, which will typically remove the very first change that is processed (which is usually redundant as it is almost always followed by subsequent changes). The following changes will wait until no resizes have occurred for 300ms before submitting one to the queue for processing (the thread still behaves the same way - it will process the latest change, and when that processing is complete, wait for another one):
BlockingQueue<Point2D> dimensionChangeQueue = new ArrayBlockingQueue<>(1);
PauseTransition coalesceChanges = new PauseTransition(Duration.millis(300));
coalesceChanges.setOnFinished(e -> {
dimensionChangeQueue.clear();
dimensionChangeQueue.add(new Point2D(primaryStage.getWidth(), primaryStage.getHeight()));
});
ChangeListener<Number> dimensionChangeListener = (obs, oldValue, newValue) ->
coalesceChanges.playFromStart();
primaryStage.widthProperty().addListener(dimensionChangeListener);
primaryStage.heightProperty().addListener(dimensionChangeListener);
There's some tuning here, which is a tradeoff between latency and over-eagerness in processing changes. You probably want the pause transition to last something shorter than the average processing time of the change in screen size, but not an order of magnitude shorter.
The code guarantees that no more than one change will be processed at a time and that the latest change will eventually be processed if no more changes occur. This is probably about as good as you can get without accessing native user events. (And it would also handle programmatic changes in the stage size, which a mouse handler would not handle.)
I tried to create an example to achieve what you are looking for, I ended up with this, it is not perfect but when I tested it, it looked like it could help:
import javafx.animation.KeyFrame;
import javafx.animation.Timeline;
import javafx.application.Application;
import javafx.beans.property.BooleanProperty;
import javafx.beans.property.SimpleBooleanProperty;
import javafx.beans.value.ChangeListener;
import javafx.beans.value.ObservableValue;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.layout.Pane;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
import javafx.util.Duration;
public class OneEventJavaFX extends Application{
double originalWidth = 400; // the initial width of Scene when the program starts
double originalHeight = 400; // the initial height of Scene when the program starts
// boolean property to be observed in order to know the completion of stage resize
BooleanProperty completedProperty = new SimpleBooleanProperty(false);
Timeline timeline;
#Override
public void start(Stage stage) throws Exception {
Pane root = new Pane(); // simple root as example just for test purpose
Scene scene = new Scene(root, 400,400);
stage.setScene(scene);
stage.setTitle("OneEventJavaFX");
stage.show();
// because I could not find a way to implement MouseEvent.MOUSE_RELEASED
// on the stage to notify the completion on resizing, I had to use a TimeLine
// the duration should consider the time the user usually take to finish every resize
// duration is tricky, Very Slow Resizing V.S Very Fast Resizing!
timeline = new Timeline(new KeyFrame(Duration.seconds(1), e ->{
System.out.println("Resizing Should Be Completed By Now!");
originalWidth = scene.getWidth(); // record the new scene size
originalHeight = scene.getHeight();
completedProperty.setValue(false);
}));
// change listener, to be added to and removed from the scene
ChangeListener<Number> changeListener= (observable, oldValue, newValue) ->{
System.out.println("I am Detecting an Event!"); // test
// once the size changed
if(originalWidth-scene.getWidth()>1 || scene.getWidth()-originalWidth>1 ||
originalHeight-scene.getHeight()>1 || scene.getHeight()-originalHeight>1){
completedProperty.set(true); // notify that completion should be considered
System.out.println("I Stopped! No More Events!");
timeline.play(); // and start counting the time
}};
// add the change listener when the program starts up
scene.widthProperty().addListener(changeListener);
scene.heightProperty().addListener(changeListener);
System.out.println("ChangeListener Added At Startup!");
// now listen to the change of the boolean property value
// instead of the size changes, it should NOT take a lot of work
// then accordingly add and remove change listener!
completedProperty.addListener(new ChangeListener<Boolean>() {
#Override
public void changed(ObservableValue<? extends Boolean> observable,
Boolean notComplete, Boolean complete) {
if (complete) {
scene.widthProperty().removeListener(changeListener);
scene.heightProperty().removeListener(changeListener);
System.out.println("ChangeListener Removed!");
}
else{
scene.widthProperty().addListener(changeListener);
scene.heightProperty().addListener(changeListener);
System.out.println("ChangeListener Added Back!");
}
}
});
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
launch();
}
}
Test While Resizing
ChangeListener Added At Startup!
I am Detecting an Event!
I am Detecting an Event!
ChangeListener Removed!
I Stopped! No More Events!
Resizing Should Be Completed By Now!
ChangeListener Added Back!
UPDATE:
I have been working on solving this question, I believe this approach can achieve what you want.
The idea is as follows:
Create UNDECORATED Stage and Make it Resizable.
Create a Title Bar and add it to the Stage.
Now the Mouse Events can be detected on the Border of the Stage (because basically it happens on the Scene).
Create Double Property for both the Width and Height of Stage and add Change Listener to listen to the Changes.
The changes in the Stage Width & Height will only be recorded at the beginning of the drag and when user RELEASES the Mouse.
Explanations in Comments.
The whole solution can be found here as an archive file (Why? Because I tried to post it here fully but the Body Limit is 30000 Character!) .
OneEventStage Class:
import javafx.application.Platform;
import javafx.beans.property.DoubleProperty;
import javafx.beans.property.SimpleDoubleProperty;
import javafx.beans.value.ChangeListener;
import javafx.concurrent.Task;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.layout.BorderPane;
import javafx.stage.Screen;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
import javafx.stage.StageStyle;
/**
* This class customize a given Stage to record the changes
* of its size only when user starts and finishes resizing (recording one event)
* #author Yahya Almardeny
* #version 28/05/2017
*/
public class OneEventStage{
private double originalWidth; // the initial width of Scene when the program starts
private double originalHeight; // the initial height of Scene when the program starts
private TitleBar titleBar; // can be customized by the setter method (by default I made it for Windows 10 style)
private boolean started, alreadyFullScreen;
private DoubleProperty widthChange, heightChange; // record the changes in size
public Scene s;
public BorderPane scene; // this will be considered as a Scene when used in the program
public OneEventStage(Stage stage, double width, double height){
originalWidth = width; originalHeight = height;
widthChange = new SimpleDoubleProperty(originalWidth);
heightChange = new SimpleDoubleProperty(originalHeight);
started = false;
titleBar = new TitleBar("");
scene = new BorderPane();
scene.setTop(titleBar.getTitleBar());
s = new Scene(scene, originalWidth,originalHeight);
stage.initStyle(StageStyle.UNDECORATED);
stage.setScene(s);
ResizeHelper.addResizeListener(stage);
Task<Void> task = new Task<Void>(){
#Override
protected Void call() throws Exception {
Platform.runLater(new Runnable(){
#Override
public void run() {
// change listener, to be added to and removed from the scene
ChangeListener<Number> changeListener= (observable, oldValue, newValue) ->{
if(isFullScreen()){
widthChange.setValue(stage.getWidth());
heightChange.setValue(stage.getHeight());
alreadyFullScreen=true;
}
else if (alreadyFullScreen){ // coming from full screen mode
widthChange.setValue(Screen.getPrimary().getVisualBounds().getWidth());
heightChange.setValue(Screen.getPrimary().getVisualBounds().getHeight());
widthChange.setValue(originalWidth);
heightChange.setValue(originalHeight);
alreadyFullScreen = false;
}
else if(!alreadyFullScreen && !started){
started = true; // to inform the detecting Mouse Release Event is required
}
};
s.setOnMouseReleased(e->{
if(started){ // if this happens particularly after changing the size/dragging
originalWidth = stage.getWidth(); // record the new scene size
originalHeight = stage.getHeight();
widthChange.setValue(originalWidth); // add it
heightChange.setValue(originalHeight);
started = false;
}
});
// add the change listener when the program starts up
s.widthProperty().addListener(changeListener);
s.heightProperty().addListener(changeListener);
}
});
return null;
}};
new Thread(task).start();
}
/*
* to detected if user clicked on maximize button or double click on the title bar
*/
private boolean isFullScreen(){
return this.s.getWindow().getWidth()==Screen.getPrimary().getVisualBounds().getWidth() &&
this.s.getWindow().getHeight()==Screen.getPrimary().getVisualBounds().getHeight();
}
public DoubleProperty getWidthChange() {
return widthChange;
}
public DoubleProperty getHeightChange() {
return heightChange;
}
public TitleBar getTitleBar() {
return titleBar;
}
public void setTitleBar(TitleBar titleBar) {
this.titleBar = titleBar;
}
public void setTitle(String title){
titleBar.getTitle().setText(title);
}
}
OneEventStageTest Class:
import javafx.application.Application;
import javafx.application.Platform;
import javafx.beans.property.DoubleProperty;
import javafx.geometry.Insets;
import javafx.geometry.Pos;
import javafx.scene.control.Label;
import javafx.scene.control.TextField;
import javafx.scene.layout.HBox;
import javafx.scene.layout.StackPane;
import javafx.scene.layout.VBox;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
/**
* Implementing an Example of OneEventStage to test it
* #author Yahya Almardeny
* #version 28/05/2017
*/
public class OneEventStageTest extends Application{
#Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage) throws Exception {
// create stage
OneEventStage stage = new OneEventStage(primaryStage, 400,400);
stage.setTitle("One Event Stage");
// simple containers and its components for testing purpose
VBox container = new VBox();
container.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER);
HBox widthInfoContainer = new HBox();
widthInfoContainer.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER);
Label widthChangeL = new Label("Width Changes");
TextField widthChangeV = new TextField();
widthChangeV.setEditable(false);
widthInfoContainer.getChildren().addAll(widthChangeL, widthChangeV);
HBox.setMargin(widthChangeL, new Insets(10));
HBox.setMargin(widthChangeV, new Insets(10));
HBox heightInfoContainer = new HBox();
heightInfoContainer.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER);
Label heightChangeL = new Label("Height Changes");
TextField heightChangeV = new TextField();
heightChangeV.setEditable(false);
heightInfoContainer.getChildren().addAll(heightChangeL, heightChangeV);
HBox.setMargin(heightChangeL, new Insets(10));
HBox.setMargin(heightChangeV, new Insets(10));
container.getChildren().addAll(widthInfoContainer, heightInfoContainer);
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
DoubleProperty widthChange = stage.getWidthChange();
DoubleProperty heightChange = stage.getHeightChange();
// listen to the changes (Testing)
widthChange.addListener((obs, old, newV)->{
Platform.runLater(new Runnable(){
#Override
public void run() {
widthChangeV.setText("From(" + old.doubleValue() + ") To(" + newV.doubleValue() + ")");
}
});
});
heightChange.addListener((obs, old, newV)->{
Platform.runLater(new Runnable(){
#Override
public void run() {
heightChangeV.setText("From(" + old.doubleValue() + ") To(" + newV.doubleValue() + ")");
}
});
});
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// represent a root but in fact it's inside the real root (BorderPane in the OneEventStage Class!).
StackPane root = new StackPane();
root.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER);
root.getChildren().add(container);
stage.scene.setCenter(root);
primaryStage.show();
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
launch();
}
}
TitleBar Class:
import javafx.geometry.Insets;
import javafx.geometry.Pos;
import javafx.scene.Cursor;
import javafx.scene.control.Label;
import javafx.scene.image.Image;
import javafx.scene.image.ImageView;
import javafx.scene.layout.Background;
import javafx.scene.layout.BackgroundFill;
import javafx.scene.layout.HBox;
import javafx.scene.layout.Pane;
import javafx.scene.layout.Priority;
import javafx.scene.layout.StackPane;
import javafx.scene.paint.Color;
import javafx.scene.shape.Rectangle;
import javafx.scene.text.Font;
import javafx.stage.Screen;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
/**
* This class to create a default/customized Title Bar
* to be added to Undecorated Stage in JavaFX Application
* #author Yahya Almardeny
* #version 27/05/2017
*/
public class TitleBar {
private HBox titleBar;
private ImageView icon;
private StackPane close, minimize, maximize; // represent customized components for the title bar (by using the second constructor)
private Image maximizeBefore, maximizeAfter; // for changing maximize icon when it's full screen
private Label title;
private double height, stageWidth, stageHeight, x,y, offsetX, offsetY;
private double screenWidth = Screen.getPrimary().getVisualBounds().getWidth(),
screenHeight = Screen.getPrimary().getVisualBounds().getHeight();
private Color backgroundColor;
private StackPane maximizeButton; // for default title bar
private Label minimizeButton, closeButton; // for default title bar
private Stage stage;
private boolean intialized = false, fromMax = false;
public static enum Components {ICON,TITLE,MINIMIZE,MAXIMIZE,CLOSE;}
/**
* the default constructor, appearance of Windows 10
* #param title
*/
public TitleBar(String title){
titleBar = new HBox();
icon = new ImageView(new Image(TitleBar.class.getResourceAsStream("/icon/icon.png")));
icon.setFitWidth(15); this.icon.setFitHeight(13);
closeButton = new Label("×");
closeButton.setFont(Font.font("Times New Roman", 25));
closeButton.setPrefWidth(46);
closeButton.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER);
minimizeButton = new Label("—");
minimizeButton.setFont(Font.font(10));
minimizeButton.setPrefWidth(46);
minimizeButton.setPrefHeight(29);
minimizeButton.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER);
maximizeButton = maximiazeButton();
this.title = new Label(title);
final Pane space = new Pane();
HBox.setHgrow(space,Priority.ALWAYS);
titleBar.getChildren().addAll(this.icon, this.title,space,this.minimizeButton, this.maximizeButton, this.closeButton);
titleBar.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER_RIGHT);
HBox.setMargin(this.icon, new Insets(0,5,0,10)); // top,right, bottom, left
initalize(); // private method to get the Stage for first time
setDefaultControlsFunctionality(); // private method to add the default controls functionality
}
/**
* This is constructor to create a custom title bar
* #param icon
* #param minimize
* #param maximize
* #param close
* #param title
*/
public TitleBar(Image icon, Image minimize, Image maximizeBefore, Image maximizeAfter, Image close, String title){
titleBar = new HBox();
this.icon = new ImageView(icon);
this.icon.setFitWidth(15); this.icon.setFitHeight(14); // values can be changed via setters
this.close = new StackPane();
this.close.setPrefSize(25, 20);
this.close.getChildren().add(new ImageView(close));
((ImageView) this.close.getChildren().get(0)).setFitWidth(20);
((ImageView) this.close.getChildren().get(0)).setFitHeight(20);
this.minimize = new StackPane();
this.minimize.setPrefSize(25, 20);
this.minimize.getChildren().add(new ImageView(minimize));
((ImageView) this.minimize.getChildren().get(0)).setFitWidth(20);
((ImageView) this.minimize.getChildren().get(0)).setFitHeight(20);
this.maximizeBefore = maximizeBefore;
this.maximize = new StackPane();
this.maximize.setPrefSize(25, 20);
this.maximize.getChildren().add(new ImageView(maximizeBefore));
((ImageView) this.maximize.getChildren().get(0)).setFitWidth(20);
((ImageView) this.maximize.getChildren().get(0)).setFitHeight(20);
this.maximizeAfter = maximizeAfter;
this.title = new Label(title);
final Pane space = new Pane();
HBox.setHgrow(space,Priority.ALWAYS);
titleBar.getChildren().addAll(this.icon, this.title,space,this.minimize, this.maximize, this.close);
titleBar.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER_RIGHT);
HBox.setMargin(this.icon, new Insets(0,5,0,10)); // top,right, bottom, left
HBox.setMargin(this.close, new Insets(0,5,0,0));
initalize();
setCustomizedControlsFunctionality();
}
/**
* create the default maximize button
* #return container
*/
private StackPane maximiazeButton(){
StackPane container = new StackPane();
Rectangle rect = new Rectangle(8,8);
rect.setFill(Color.TRANSPARENT);
rect.setStroke(Color.BLACK);
container.setPrefWidth(46);
container.getChildren().add(rect);
return container;
}
/**
* To get the Stage of the application for one time only
* as well as adding listener to iconifiedProperty()
*/
private void initalize(){
titleBar.setOnMouseEntered(e->{ // the entire block will be executed only once
if(!intialized){
// get the stage and assign it to the Stage field
stage = ((Stage)titleBar.getScene().getWindow());
// add listener toiconifiedProperty()
stage.iconifiedProperty().addListener(ee->{
if(!stage.isIconified()){
stage.setMaximized(true);
if(fromMax){ // if already maximized
stage.setWidth(screenWidth);
stage.setHeight(screenHeight);
stage.setX(0);
stage.setY(0);
}
else{
stage.setWidth(stageWidth);
stage.setHeight(stageHeight);
stage.setX(x);
stage.setY(y);
}
try { // to remove the flash
Thread.sleep(10);
} catch (InterruptedException ex) {
ex.printStackTrace();
}
stage.setOpacity(1.0);
}
});
intialized=true;
}
});
}
/**
* To add functionality to title bar controls
* via event listeners
*/
private void setDefaultControlsFunctionality(){
// Double-Click on Title Bar
titleBar.setOnMouseClicked(e->{
if(e.getClickCount()==2){
maximizefunctonality();
}
});
//Maximize Control
maximizeButton.setOnMouseEntered(e->{// highlight when hover
maximizeButton.setBackground(
new Background(new BackgroundFill(Color.LIGHTGRAY,null,null)));
((Rectangle)maximizeButton.getChildren().get(0)).setFill(Color.LIGHTGRAY);
if(maximizeButton.getChildren().size()==2){
((Rectangle)maximizeButton.getChildren().get(1)).setFill(Color.LIGHTGRAY);
}
});
maximizeButton.setOnMouseExited(e->{ // remove highlight
maximizeButton.setBackground(
new Background(new BackgroundFill(Color.TRANSPARENT,null,null)));
((Rectangle)maximizeButton.getChildren().get(0)).setFill(Color.TRANSPARENT);
if(maximizeButton.getChildren().size()==2){
((Rectangle)maximizeButton.getChildren().get(1)).setFill(Color.WHITE);
}
});
maximizeButton.setOnMouseClicked(e->{
maximizefunctonality();
});
//Close Control
closeButton.setOnMouseEntered(e->{
closeButton.setBackground(
new Background(new BackgroundFill(Color.CRIMSON,null,null)));
closeButton.setTextFill(Color.WHITE);
});
closeButton.setOnMouseExited(e->{
closeButton.setBackground(
new Background(new BackgroundFill(Color.TRANSPARENT,null,null)));
closeButton.setTextFill(Color.BLACK);
});
closeButton.setOnMouseClicked(e->{
stage.close();
});
//Minimize Control
minimizeButton.setOnMouseEntered(e->{
minimizeButton.setBackground(
new Background(new BackgroundFill(Color.LIGHTGRAY,null,null)));
});
minimizeButton.setOnMouseExited(e->{
minimizeButton.setBackground(
new Background(new BackgroundFill(Color.TRANSPARENT,null,null)));
});
minimizeButton.setOnMouseClicked(e->{
if(!stage.isIconified()){ // if it's not minimized
if(fromMax){ // check if it's already full screen(maximized)
stage.setOpacity(0.0);
stage.setIconified(true); // minimize it
}
else{ // if it's not -> record the size and position
stageWidth = stage.getWidth();
stageHeight = stage.getHeight();
x = stage.getX();
y = stage.getY();
stage.setOpacity(0.0);
stage.setIconified(true); // minimize it
}
}
});
// to make title bar movable
titleBar.setOnMousePressed(e->{
if(stage.getWidth()<screenWidth || stage.getHeight()<screenHeight){
offsetX = e.getScreenX() - stage.getX();
offsetY = e.getScreenY() - stage.getY();
}
});
titleBar.setOnMouseDragged(e->{
if(stage.getWidth()<screenWidth || stage.getHeight()<screenHeight){
stage.setX(e.getScreenX() - offsetX);
stage.setY(e.getScreenY() - offsetY);
}
});
}
private void maximizefunctonality(){
Rectangle rect = (Rectangle) maximizeButton.getChildren().get(0);
if(stage.getWidth()<screenWidth||stage.getHeight()<screenHeight){
// get the previous size + position
stageWidth = stage.getWidth();
stageHeight = stage.getHeight();
x = stage.getX();
y = stage.getY();
// maximize it
stage.setWidth(screenWidth);
stage.setHeight(screenHeight);
stage.centerOnScreen();
// change the maximize button appearance
rect.setTranslateX(2);
rect.setTranslateY(-2);
Rectangle rect1 = new Rectangle(8,8);
rect1.setFill(Color.WHITE);
rect1.setStroke(Color.BLACK);
maximizeButton.getChildren().add(rect1);
fromMax = true;
}
else{ // if already maximized -> return to previous size + position
stage.setWidth(stageWidth);
stage.setHeight(stageHeight);
stage.setX(x);
stage.setY(y);
fromMax = false;
// change the maximize button appearance
rect.setTranslateX(0);
rect.setTranslateY(0);
maximizeButton.getChildren().remove(1);
}
}
private void setCustomizedControlsFunctionality(){
//Maximize Control
maximize.setOnMouseClicked(e->{
if(stage.getWidth()<screenWidth||stage.getHeight()<screenHeight){
// get the previous size + position
stageWidth = stage.getWidth();
stageHeight = stage.getHeight();
x = stage.getX();
y = stage.getY();
// maximize it
stage.setWidth(screenWidth);
stage.setHeight(screenHeight);
stage.centerOnScreen();
// change the maximize button appearance
((ImageView) maximize.getChildren().get(0)).setImage(maximizeAfter);
fromMax = true;
}
else{ // if already maximized -> return to previous size + position
stage.setWidth(stageWidth);
stage.setHeight(stageHeight);
stage.setX(x);
stage.setY(y);
fromMax = false;
// change the maximize button appearance
((ImageView) maximize.getChildren().get(0)).setImage(maximizeBefore);
}
});
close.setOnMouseClicked(e->{
stage.close();
});
//Minimize Control
minimize.setOnMouseClicked(e->{
if(!stage.isIconified()){ // if it's not minimized
if(fromMax){ // check if it's already full screen(maximized)
stage.setOpacity(0.0);
stage.setIconified(true); // minimize it
}
else{ // if it's not -> record the size and position
stageWidth = stage.getWidth();
stageHeight = stage.getHeight();
x = stage.getX();
y = stage.getY();
stage.setOpacity(0.0);
stage.setIconified(true); // minimize it
}
}
});
// to make title bar movable
titleBar.setOnMousePressed(e->{
if(stage.getWidth()<screenWidth || stage.getHeight()<screenHeight){
offsetX = e.getScreenX() - stage.getX();
offsetY = e.getScreenY() - stage.getY();
}
});
titleBar.setOnMouseDragged(e->{
if(stage.getWidth()<screenWidth || stage.getHeight()<screenHeight){
stage.setX(e.getScreenX() - offsetX);
stage.setY(e.getScreenY() - offsetY);
}
});
}
/**
* To change margins/insets to the Title Bar components
* #param component
* #param top
* #param right
* #param bottom
* #param left
*/
public void setInsets(Components component, double top, double right, double bottom, double left){
switch(component){
case TITLE:
HBox.setMargin(title, new Insets(top, right, bottom ,left));
break;
case ICON:
HBox.setMargin(icon, new Insets(top, right, bottom ,left));
break;
case CLOSE:
HBox.setMargin(close, new Insets(top, right, bottom ,left));
break;
case MAXIMIZE:
HBox.setMargin(maximize, new Insets(top, right, bottom ,left));
break;
case MINIMIZE:
HBox.setMargin(minimize, new Insets(top, right, bottom ,left));
break;
}
}
public void setControlsSpace(Components component, double width, double height){
switch(component){
case CLOSE:
close.setPrefSize(width, height);
break;
case MAXIMIZE:
maximize.setPrefSize(width, height);
break;
case MINIMIZE:
minimize.setPrefSize(width, height);
break;
case TITLE:
//do nothing
break;
case ICON:
// do nothing
break;
}
}
public void addHoverEffect(Components component, Color defaultColor, Color onHover, Cursor cursor){
}
//reset of the class
{...}
}
ResizeHelper Class:
{....}
Test

JavaFX 3D depth rendering incorrectly

Setup:
The following code, renders a 3D scene with a visible co-ordinate axis positioned at the origin, from a camera displaced by -156 units in the Z direction. Also, the camera's Z position is a function of mouse scroll, such that scrolling up/down will move the camera further/closer from the origin.
Problem:
upon initial startup of the program, the red and green axis are rendered at/near the origin, when in the physical world, it would be impossible to see them there from the current camera view. (blue axis blocking them). Also, when you scroll backwards and forwards, you can see glitches/flashes where the red/green axis are visible behind the blue axis, which should not occur.
Screenshot of result (with my manual adding of issue description):
initial_screenshot
Question:
1) Is this a problem with my setup? or JavaFX?
2) if this is a problem with my setup, then can someone please explain what I can do to remedy this issue?
Code:
/*
* To change this license header, choose License Headers in Project Properties.
* To change this template file, choose Tools | Templates
* and open the template in the editor.
*/
package testproblemjavafx01;
/**
*
* #author ad
*/
import javafx.application.Application;
import static javafx.application.Application.launch;
import javafx.event.EventHandler;
import javafx.scene.Camera;
import javafx.scene.Group;
import javafx.scene.PerspectiveCamera;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.SceneAntialiasing;
import javafx.scene.input.ScrollEvent;
import javafx.scene.paint.Color;
import javafx.scene.paint.PhongMaterial;
import javafx.scene.shape.Box;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
public class TestProblemJavaFX01 extends Application {
#Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage) {
Group root = new Group();
buildAxes(root);
Scene scene = new Scene(root, 600, 400, true, SceneAntialiasing.BALANCED);
PerspectiveCamera camera = new PerspectiveCamera(true);
scene.setFill(Color.WHITE);
camera.setNearClip(0);
camera.setFarClip(1000.0);
camera.setTranslateX(0);
camera.setTranslateY(0);
camera.setTranslateZ(-156);
scene.setCamera(camera);
setMouseEvents(scene);
primaryStage.setResizable(false);
primaryStage.setTitle("TestProblemJavaFX01");
primaryStage.setScene(scene);
primaryStage.show();
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
launch(args);
}
private void buildAxes(Group root) {
final PhongMaterial redMaterial = new PhongMaterial();
redMaterial.setDiffuseColor(Color.DARKRED);
redMaterial.setSpecularColor(Color.RED);
final PhongMaterial greenMaterial = new PhongMaterial();
greenMaterial.setDiffuseColor(Color.DARKGREEN);
greenMaterial.setSpecularColor(Color.GREEN);
final PhongMaterial blueMaterial = new PhongMaterial();
blueMaterial.setDiffuseColor(Color.DARKBLUE);
blueMaterial.setSpecularColor(Color.BLUE);
final Box xAxis = new Box(240.0, 1, 1);
final Box yAxis = new Box(1, 240.0, 1);
final Box zAxis = new Box(1, 1, 240.0);
xAxis.setMaterial(redMaterial);
yAxis.setMaterial(greenMaterial);
zAxis.setMaterial(blueMaterial);
root.getChildren().addAll(xAxis, yAxis, zAxis);
}
private void setMouseEvents(final Scene scene) {
scene.setOnScroll(
new EventHandler<ScrollEvent>() {
#Override
public void handle(ScrollEvent event) {
double deltaY = event.getDeltaY();
Camera camera = scene.getCamera();
camera.setTranslateZ(camera.getTranslateZ() + deltaY);
event.consume();
}
});
}
}
I think the problem is within the line camera.setNearClip(0);
From the documentation of setNearClip:
Specifies the distance from the eye of the near clipping plane of this
Camera in the eye coordinate space. Objects closer to the eye than
nearClip are not drawn. nearClip is specified as a value greater than
zero. A value less than or equal to zero is treated as a very small
positive number.
Try to set the value to its default value of 0.1. Or just remove the line.

Disable all MouseEvents on the Children of a Pane

I have a Pane in which i add and remove nodes during a computation. Therefor i save a boolean which is set to true if the computation is running. of course i do some handling on starting and terminating a computation.
What i want to do now is: disable all MouseEvents on the children of the Pane if the computation starts and reenable them if the computation is terminated.
My tries until now where limited to completly remove the EventHandlers, but then i can't add them again later.
unfortunately i couldn't find a way to do this, so i hope for help here :)
Thanks in advance
Assuming you have implemented the long-running computation as a Task or Service (and if you haven't, you should probably consider doing so), you can just do something along the following lines:
Pane pane ;
// ...
Task<ResultType> computation = ... ;
pane.disableProperty().bind(computation.runningProperty());
new Thread(computation).start();
Calling setDisable(true) on a node will disable all its child nodes, so this will disable all the children of the pane, and re-enable them when the task is no longer running.
Here's an SSCCE:
import javafx.application.Application;
import javafx.concurrent.Service;
import javafx.concurrent.Task;
import javafx.geometry.HPos;
import javafx.geometry.Insets;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.control.Button;
import javafx.scene.control.Label;
import javafx.scene.control.TextField;
import javafx.scene.layout.ColumnConstraints;
import javafx.scene.layout.GridPane;
import javafx.scene.layout.Priority;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
public class ComputationSimulation extends Application {
#Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage) {
// text fields for input:
TextField xInput = new TextField();
TextField yInput = new TextField();
// Service for performing the computation.
// (For demo here, the computation just computes the sum of
// the two input values. Obviously this doesn't take long, so
// a random pause is inserted.)
Service<Integer> service = new Service<Integer>() {
#Override
protected Task<Integer> createTask() {
final int x = readTextField(xInput);
final int y = readTextField(yInput);
return new Task<Integer>() {
#Override
public Integer call() throws Exception {
// simulate long-running computation...
Thread.sleep((int)(Math.random() * 2000) + 1000);
// this doesn't really take much time(!):
return x + y ;
}
};
}
};
// Label to show result. Just use binding to bind to value of computation:
Label result = new Label();
result.textProperty().bind(service.valueProperty().asString());
// Button starts computation by restarting service:
Button compute = new Button("Compute");
compute.setOnAction(e -> service.restart());
// Pane to hold controls:
GridPane pane = new GridPane();
// Disable pane (and consequently all its children) when computation is running:
pane.disableProperty().bind(service.runningProperty());
// layout etc:
pane.setHgap(5);
pane.setVgap(10);
pane.addRow(0, new Label("x:"), xInput);
pane.addRow(1, new Label("y:"), yInput);
pane.addRow(2, new Label("Total:"), result);
pane.add(compute, 1, 3);
ColumnConstraints left = new ColumnConstraints();
left.setHalignment(HPos.RIGHT);
left.setHgrow(Priority.NEVER);
pane.getColumnConstraints().addAll(left, new ColumnConstraints());
pane.setPadding(new Insets(10));
Scene scene = new Scene(pane);
primaryStage.setScene(scene);
primaryStage.show();
}
// converts text in text field to an int if possible
// returns 0 if not valid text, and sets text accordingly
private int readTextField(TextField text) {
try {
return Integer.parseInt(text.getText());
} catch (NumberFormatException e) {
text.setText("0");
return 0 ;
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
launch(args);
}
}

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