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Does disposing a JFrame cause memory leakage?

I am writing a test program as follows:

  1. When a user clicks button A, it opens 50 JFrames.
  2. When the user clicks button B it disposes all JFrames shown by clicking button A.

I find that the memory does not decrease after clicking button B. I determined this using the Task Manager, ctrl+alt+del in Windows, and checking the memory usage of "java".

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Bear Avatar asked Sep 11 '11 07:09

Bear


2 Answers

That's right, no way, not able to solve that (not only in Java PL),

1) really don't create lots of Top-Level Containers on Runtime/Fly, because they are never finalized, and until current JVM instance exits, and these Object never been GC'ed only their Grapfics2D

2) myContainer#dispose() on Runtime is same for current JVM instance as myContainer#setVisible(false) in connections with JVM available and used Memory

3) create only few Top-Level Containers (maximum simultaneously displayed ), re-use that, but put there JPanel as 1.st JComponent and call myPanel#removeAll(), otherwise you'll remove RootPane and from your Container stays only Borders :-) would be translucent

4) partialy is possible to reduce JVM used Memory by call GC, but just returs amount from Graphics2D and Garbage doesn't works immediatelly,

5) more here usefull info here

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mKorbel Avatar answered Nov 03 '22 02:11

mKorbel


Without any code we can't help you much... are you calling jFrame.dispose()?

public void dispose()

Releases all of the native screen resources used by this Window, its subcomponents, and all of its owned children. That is, the resources for these Components will be destroyed, any memory they consume will be returned to the OS, and they will be marked as undisplayable.

More information available here

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npinti Avatar answered Nov 03 '22 00:11

npinti