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JDialog cancel button

Tags:

java

swing

hig

How can I set a cancel button in a Swing JDialog, i.e. a button whose action is performed automatically if the user presses the “Cancel” key on the keyboard?

The counterpart is offered for a default action via the setDefaultButton method of the dialog's root pane.

If that's helping, I'm searching for an analogue to the WinForms Form.CancelButton property.

like image 617
Konrad Rudolph Avatar asked Aug 16 '09 13:08

Konrad Rudolph


3 Answers

The best way I can see is to add an Action to the action map of the root pane, and link that action to the escape key using the root pane's input map.

For this, you need an Action. If your cancel button's behaviour is implemented as an action (ie. cancelButton.getAction() != null), then this will work:

getRootPane().getInputMap(JComponent.WHEN_ANCESTOR_OF_FOCUSED_COMPONENT).put(KeyStroke.getKeyStroke(KeyEvent.VK_ESCAPE, 0), "CANCEL");
getRootPane().getActionMap().put("CANCEL", cancelButton.getAction());

Otherwise, if the cancel button's logic is implemented via an ActionListener, you could have the actionPerformed() method of the ActionListener call a private void onCancel() method that implements the logic, and register a "cancel" action that calls the same method.

getRootPane().getInputMap(JComponent.WHEN_ANCESTOR_OF_FOCUSED_COMPONENT).put(KeyStroke.getKeyStroke(KeyEvent.VK_ESCAPE, 0), "CANCEL");
getRootPane().getActionMap().put("CANCEL", new AbstractAction(){
    @Override
    public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e)
    {
        onCancel();
    }
});
like image 152
Jesse Avatar answered Oct 08 '22 04:10

Jesse


Single line solution

t.getInputMap(JComponent.WHEN_IN_FOCUSED_WINDOW)
   .put(KeyStroke.getKeyStroke("ESCAPE"), btnCancel.getAction());

where t is any component(except JButton) like JTextField in the dialog.

like image 23
Prabu Avatar answered Oct 08 '22 05:10

Prabu


I don't think this is possible with JDialog without extending it.

You could use JOptionPane.showOptionDialog() (or possibly one of the other show methods), passing the JButtons you want to be used.

If the options passed are components, they'll be rendered as normal, so you can do something like this:

int optionType = JOptionPane.DEFAULT_OPTION;
int messageType = JOptionPane.PLAIN_MESSAGE; // no standard icon

JButton ok = new JButton("ok");
JButton cancel = new JButton("cancel");
//add any handlers to the buttons
...
//construct options
Object[] selValues = { ok, cancel };

//show dialog as normal, selected index will be returned.
int res = JOptionPane.showOptionDialog(null, "message",
        "title", optionType, messageType, null, selValues,
        selValues[0]);
like image 31
Rich Seller Avatar answered Oct 08 '22 04:10

Rich Seller