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Documentation

The Java™ Tutorials
Trail: Creating a GUI With Swing
Lesson: Using Other Swing Features
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The Java Tutorials have been written for JDK 8. Examples and practices described in this page don't take advantage of improvements introduced in later releases and might use technology no longer available.
See Dev.java for updated tutorials taking advantage of the latest releases.
See Java Language Changes for a summary of updated language features in Java SE 9 and subsequent releases.
See JDK Release Notes for information about new features, enhancements, and removed or deprecated options for all JDK releases.

Solving Common Problems Using Other Swing Features

Problem: My application is not showing the look and feel I have requested via UIManager.setLookAndFeel.

You probably either set the look and feel to an invalid look and feel or set it after the UI manager loaded the default look and feel. If you are sure that the look and feel you specified is valid and setting the look and feel is the first thing your program does (at the top of its main method, for example), check whether you have a static field that references a Swing class. This reference can cause the default look and feel to be loaded if none has been specified. For more information, including how to set a look and feel after the GUI has been created, see the look and feel section.

Problem: Why is not my component getting the focus?

  • Is it a custom component (for example, a direct subclass of JComponent) that you created? If so, you may need to give your component an input map and mouse listener. See How to Make a Custom Component Focusable for more information and a demo.
  • Is the component inside of a JWindow object? The focus system requires a JWindow's owning frame to be visible for any components in the JWindow object to get the focus. By default, if you do not specify an owning frame for a JWindow object, an invisible owning frame is created for it. The solution is to either specify a visible and focusable owning frame when creating the JWindow object or to use JDialog or JFrame objects instead.

Problem: Why cannot my dialog receive the event generated when the user hits the Escape key?

If your dialog contains a text field, it may be consuming the event.

  • If you want to get the Escape event regardless of whether a component consumes it, you should use a KeyEventDispatcher.
  • If you want to get the Escape event only if a component has not consumed it, then register a key binding on any JComponent component in the JDialog object, using the WHEN_IN_FOCUSED_WINDOW input map. For more information, see the How to Use Key Bindings page.

Problem: Why I cannot apply Swing components to a tray icon? Current implementation of the TrayIcon class supports the PopupMenu component, but not its Swing counterpart JPopupMenu. This limitation narrows capabilities to employ additional Swing features, for example, menu icons. See the Bug ID 6285881.

  • A new JTrayIcon class will be created to eliminate this inconvenience. Until then, use AWT components to add a menu item, check box menu item, or submenu.

If you do not find your problem in this section, consult Solving Common Component Problems.

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