I just started learning GUI with Swing and don't exactly understand how the actionPerformed
method works. Consider the following code:
//code to create a button and change its text when clicked
public class simplegui implements ActionListener {
JButton button;
public static void main(String[] args) {
simplegui gui=new simplegui();
gui.go();
}
public void go() {
JFrame frame=new Frame();
button=new JButton("click Me");
button.addActionListener(this);
frame.getContentPane().add(button);
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
frame.setSize(300,300);
frame.setVisible(true);
}
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent event) {
button.setText("I've been clicked!");
}
}
Shouldn't an object be created for a class before a method on it is evoked (except for static methods)?
When the button is clicked the actionPerformed
method is called, but how? Where is the call made? I've implemented the interface ActionListener
, but where is the code that knows that when an action occurs the 'ActionEvent' Object should be sent to the 'actionPerformed' method? Is it present in the Button class? Is the addActionListener
method present in the Button class?
When I click the button, how is the system call action performed and where is the code that executes gui.actionPerformed()
?
I followed Java concepts of OO, static etc. until now but this whole event driven programming is confusing.
Step 1: Create an event handler class and specify that the class either implements an ActionListener interface or extends a class that implements an ActionListener interface. Step 2: Register an instance of the event handler class as a listener on one or more components.
The method actionPerformed handles all the actions of a component, and inside this method, you will define or write your own codes that will be executed when an action occurred. Here's an example on how to implement ActionListener in Java.
The ActionListener interface is found in java. awt. event package. It has only one method: actionPerformed().
But there is a specific call to this method, only it's not occurring in your code but rather in the JVM. A button push instigates internal events that leads the JVM to tell the button to notify all of its listeners that it has been pushed. This will cause the actionPerformed methods of all attached ActionListeners to be called.
To see information on how this works, first look at the Java API for the AbstractButton class where you'll find the method
protected void fireActionPerformed(ActionEvent event)
Where
Notifies all listeners that have registered interest for notification on this event type. The event instance is lazily created using the event parameter.
Then for further information, you will want to go beyond the Java API to the source code which can be found here. If you check out the Java 8.0 source code there, and look up javax then swing, then AbstractButton, you'll find a fireActionPerformed(ActionEvent event)
method:
2002 protected void More ...fireActionPerformed(ActionEvent event) {
2003 // Guaranteed to return a non-null array
2004 Object[] listeners = listenerList.getListenerList();
2005 ActionEvent e = null;
2006 // Process the listeners last to first, notifying
2007 // those that are interested in this event
2008 for (int i = listeners.length-2; i>=0; i-=2) {
2009 if (listeners[i]==ActionListener.class) {
2010 // Lazily create the event:
2011 if (e == null) {
2012 String actionCommand = event.getActionCommand();
2013 if(actionCommand == null) {
2014 actionCommand = getActionCommand();
2015 }
2016 e = new ActionEvent(AbstractButton.this,
2017 ActionEvent.ACTION_PERFORMED,
2018 actionCommand,
2019 event.getWhen(),
2020 event.getModifiers());
2021 }
2022 ((ActionListener)listeners[i+1]).actionPerformed(e);
2023 }
2024 }
2025 }
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