java.lang.Object | +--java.awt.Graphics | +--javax.swing.SwingGraphics
void
clearRect(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height)
void
clipRect(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height)
void
copyArea(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height,
int dx,
int dy)
dx and dy.
Graphics
create(int x,
int y,
int w,
int h)
Graphics object based on this
Graphics object, but with a new translation and clip area.
(package private) static Graphics
createSwingGraphics(Graphics g,
int x,
int y,
int width,
int height)
void
dispose()
void
draw3DRect(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height,
boolean raised)
void
drawArc(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height,
int startAngle,
int arcAngle)
void
drawBytes(byte[] data,
int offset,
int length,
int x,
int y)
void
drawChars(char[] data,
int offset,
int length,
int x,
int y)
boolean
drawImage(Image img,
int x,
int y,
Color bgcolor,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
boolean
drawImage(Image img,
int x,
int y,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
boolean
drawImage(Image img,
int x,
int y,
int width,
int height,
Color bgcolor,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
boolean
drawImage(Image img,
int x,
int y,
int width,
int height,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
boolean
drawImage(Image img,
int dx1,
int dy1,
int dx2,
int dy2,
int sx1,
int sy1,
int sx2,
int sy2,
Color bgcolor,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
boolean
drawImage(Image img,
int dx1,
int dy1,
int dx2,
int dy2,
int sx1,
int sy1,
int sx2,
int sy2,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
void
drawLine(int x1,
int y1,
int x2,
int y2)
(x1, y1) and (x2, y2)
in this graphics context's coordinate system.
void
drawPolygon(int[] xPoints,
int[] yPoints,
int nPoints)
void
drawPolygon(Polygon p)
Polygon object.
void
drawPolyline(int[] xPoints,
int[] yPoints,
int nPoints)
void
drawRect(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height)
void
drawRoundRect(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height,
int arcWidth,
int arcHeight)
void
drawString(java.text.AttributedCharacterIterator iterator,
int x,
int y)
void
drawString(String str,
int x,
int y)
void
fill3DRect(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height,
boolean raised)
void
fillArc(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height,
int startAngle,
int arcAngle)
void
fillOval(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height)
void
fillPolygon(int[] xPoints,
int[] yPoints,
int nPoints)
void
fillPolygon(Polygon p)
void
fillRoundRect(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height,
int arcWidth,
int arcHeight)
void
setClip(int x,
int y,
int width,
int height)
void
setPaintMode()
void
setXORMode(Color c1)
void
translate(int x,
int y)
Graphics graphics
Graphics originalGraphics
Rectangle clipRect
Color currentColor
Font currentFont
Color currentXORMode
int translateX
int translateY
SwingGraphics previous
private static final boolean TRACE
private static final boolean VERBOSE
private static final boolean DEBUG
private static Stack pool
SwingGraphics(Graphics g)
public Graphics create()
GraphicsGraphics object that is
a copy of this Graphics object.
public Graphics create(int x, int y, int w, int h)
GraphicsGraphics object based on this
Graphics object, but with a new translation and clip area.
The new Graphics object has its origin
translated to the specified point (x, y).
Its clip area is determined by the intersection of the original
clip area with the specified rectangle. The arguments are all
interpreted in the coordinate system of the original
Graphics object. The new graphics context is
identical to the original, except in two respects:
0, 0) in the
new graphics context is the same as (x, y) in
the original graphics context.
0, 0), and its size
is specified by the width and height
arguments.
x - the x coordinate.y - the y coordinate.w - the width of the clipping rectangle.h - the height of the clipping rectangle.
java.awt.Graphics#translate,
java.awt.Graphics#clipRectpublic Graphics subGraphics()
subGraphics in interface GraphicsWrappervoid init(Graphics g)
public static Graphics createSwingGraphics(Graphics g)
static Graphics createSwingGraphics(Graphics g, int x, int y, int width, int height)
public void translate(int x, int y)
Graphics
x - the x coordinate.y - the y coordinate.public Color getColor()
Graphics
java.awt.Color,
java.awt.Graphics#setColor(Color)public void setColor(Color c)
Graphics
c - the new rendering color.java.awt.Color,
java.awt.Graphics#getColorpublic void setPaintMode()
Graphics
setPaintMode in class Graphicspublic void setXORMode(Color c1)
GraphicsWhen drawing operations are performed, pixels which are the current color are changed to the specified color, and vice versa.
Pixels that are of colors other than those two colors are changed in an unpredictable but reversible manner; if the same figure is drawn twice, then all pixels are restored to their original values.
setXORMode in class Graphicsc1 - the XOR alternation colorpublic Font getFont()
Graphics
java.awt.Font,
java.awt.Graphics#setFont(Font)public void setFont(Font font)
Graphics
font - the font.java.awt.Graphics#getFont,
java.awt.Graphics#drawString(java.lang.String, int, int),
java.awt.Graphics#drawBytes(byte[], int, int, int, int),
java.awt.Graphics#drawChars(char[], int, int, int, int)public FontMetrics getFontMetrics()
Graphics
getFontMetrics in class Graphicsjava.awt.Graphics#getFont,
java.awt.FontMetrics,
java.awt.Graphics#getFontMetrics(Font)public FontMetrics getFontMetrics(Font f)
Graphics
getFontMetrics in class Graphicsf - the specified font
java.awt.Graphics#getFont,
java.awt.FontMetrics,
java.awt.Graphics#getFontMetrics()public Rectangle getClipBounds()
GraphicssetClip(null), this method returns
null.
The coordinates in the rectangle are relative to the coordinate
system origin of this graphics context.
getClipBounds in class Graphicsnull if no clip is set.java.awt.Graphics#getClip,
java.awt.Graphics#clipRect,
java.awt.Graphics#setClip(int, int, int, int),
java.awt.Graphics#setClip(Shape)public boolean isClipIntersecting(Rectangle r)
isClipIntersecting in interface GraphicsWrapperpublic int getClipX()
getClipX in interface GraphicsWrapperpublic int getClipY()
getClipY in interface GraphicsWrapperpublic int getClipWidth()
getClipWidth in interface GraphicsWrapperpublic int getClipHeight()
getClipHeight in interface GraphicsWrapperpublic void clipRect(int x, int y, int width, int height)
GraphicssetClip(null),
the specified rectangle becomes the new clip.
This method sets the user clip, which is independent of the
clipping associated with device bounds and window visibility.
This method can only be used to make the current clip smaller.
To set the current clip larger, use any of the setClip methods.
Rendering operations have no effect outside of the clipping area.
x - the x coordinate of the rectangle to intersect the clip withy - the y coordinate of the rectangle to intersect the clip withwidth - the width of the rectangle to intersect the clip withheight - the height of the rectangle to intersect the clip withGraphics.setClip(int, int, int, int),
Graphics.setClip(Shape)public void setClip(int x, int y, int width, int height)
Graphics
x - the x coordinate of the new clip rectangle.y - the y coordinate of the new clip rectangle.width - the width of the new clip rectangle.height - the height of the new clip rectangle.java.awt.Graphics#clipRect,
java.awt.Graphics#setClip(Shape),
java.awt.Graphics#getClippublic Shape getClip()
GraphicssetClip(null), this method returns
null.
Shape object representing the
current clipping area, or null if
no clip is set.java.awt.Graphics#getClipBounds,
java.awt.Graphics#clipRect,
java.awt.Graphics#setClip(int, int, int, int),
java.awt.Graphics#setClip(Shape)public void setClip(Shape clip)
GraphicsShape
interface can be used to set the clip. The only
Shape objects that are guaranteed to be
supported are Shape objects that are
obtained via the getClip method and via
Rectangle objects. This method sets the
user clip, which is independent of the clipping associated
with device bounds and window visibility.
clip - the Shape to use to set the clipjava.awt.Graphics#getClip(),
java.awt.Graphics#clipRect,
java.awt.Graphics#setClip(int, int, int, int)public void copyArea(int x, int y, int width, int height, int dx, int dy)
Graphicsdx and dy. From the point specified
by x and y, this method
copies downwards and to the right. To copy an area of the
component to the left or upwards, specify a negative value for
dx or dy.
If a portion of the source rectangle lies outside the bounds
of the component, or is obscured by another window or component,
copyArea will be unable to copy the associated
pixels. The area that is omitted can be refreshed by calling
the component's paint method.
x - the x coordinate of the source rectangle.y - the y coordinate of the source rectangle.width - the width of the source rectangle.height - the height of the source rectangle.dx - the horizontal distance to copy the pixels.dy - the vertical distance to copy the pixels.public void drawLine(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2)
Graphics(x1, y1) and (x2, y2)
in this graphics context's coordinate system.
x1 - the first point's x coordinate.y1 - the first point's y coordinate.x2 - the second point's x coordinate.y2 - the second point's y coordinate.public void fillRect(int x, int y, int width, int height)
Graphicsx and x + width - 1.
The top and bottom edges are at
y and y + height - 1.
The resulting rectangle covers an area
width pixels wide by
height pixels tall.
The rectangle is filled using the graphics context's current color.
x - the x coordinate
of the rectangle to be filled.y - the y coordinate
of the rectangle to be filled.width - the width of the rectangle to be filled.height - the height of the rectangle to be filled.java.awt.Graphics#clearRect,
java.awt.Graphics#drawRectpublic void drawRect(int x, int y, int width, int height)
Graphicsx and x + width.
The top and bottom edges are at
y and y + height.
The rectangle is drawn using the graphics context's current color.
x - the x coordinate
of the rectangle to be drawn.y - the y coordinate
of the rectangle to be drawn.width - the width of the rectangle to be drawn.height - the height of the rectangle to be drawn.java.awt.Graphics#fillRect,
java.awt.Graphics#clearRectpublic void clearRect(int x, int y, int width, int height)
Graphics
Beginning with Java 1.1, the background color
of offscreen images may be system dependent. Applications should
use setColor followed by fillRect to
ensure that an offscreen image is cleared to a specific color.
x - the x coordinate of the rectangle to clear.y - the y coordinate of the rectangle to clear.width - the width of the rectangle to clear.height - the height of the rectangle to clear.java.awt.Graphics#fillRect(int, int, int, int),
java.awt.Graphics#drawRect,
java.awt.Graphics#setColor(java.awt.Color),
java.awt.Graphics#setPaintMode,
java.awt.Graphics#setXORMode(java.awt.Color)public void drawRoundRect(int x, int y, int width, int height, int arcWidth, int arcHeight)
Graphicsx and x + width,
respectively. The top and bottom edges of the rectangle are at
y and y + height.
drawRoundRect in class Graphicsx - the x coordinate of the rectangle to be drawn.y - the y coordinate of the rectangle to be drawn.width - the width of the rectangle to be drawn.height - the height of the rectangle to be drawn.arcWidth - the horizontal diameter of the arc
at the four corners.arcHeight - the vertical diameter of the arc
at the four corners.java.awt.Graphics#fillRoundRectpublic void fillRoundRect(int x, int y, int width, int height, int arcWidth, int arcHeight)
Graphicsx and x + width - 1,
respectively. The top and bottom edges of the rectangle are at
y and y + height - 1.
fillRoundRect in class Graphicsx - the x coordinate of the rectangle to be filled.y - the y coordinate of the rectangle to be filled.width - the width of the rectangle to be filled.height - the height of the rectangle to be filled.arcWidth - the horizontal diameter
of the arc at the four corners.arcHeight - the vertical diameter
of the arc at the four corners.java.awt.Graphics#drawRoundRectpublic void draw3DRect(int x, int y, int width, int height, boolean raised)
Graphics
The colors used for the highlighting effect are determined
based on the current color.
The resulting rectangle covers an area that is
width + 1 pixels wide
by height + 1 pixels tall.
draw3DRect in class Graphicsx - the x coordinate of the rectangle to be drawn.y - the y coordinate of the rectangle to be drawn.width - the width of the rectangle to be drawn.height - the height of the rectangle to be drawn.raised - a boolean that determines whether the rectangle
appears to be raised above the surface
or sunk into the surface.java.awt.Graphics#fill3DRectpublic void fill3DRect(int x, int y, int width, int height, boolean raised)
Graphics
fill3DRect in class Graphicsx - the x coordinate of the rectangle to be filled.y - the y coordinate of the rectangle to be filled.width - the width of the rectangle to be filled.height - the height of the rectangle to be filled.raised - a boolean value that determines whether the
rectangle appears to be raised above the surface
or etched into the surface.java.awt.Graphics#draw3DRectpublic void drawOval(int x, int y, int width, int height)
Graphicsx, y,
width, and height arguments.
The oval covers an area that is
width + 1 pixels wide
and height + 1 pixels tall.
x - the x coordinate of the upper left
corner of the oval to be drawn.y - the y coordinate of the upper left
corner of the oval to be drawn.width - the width of the oval to be drawn.height - the height of the oval to be drawn.java.awt.Graphics#fillOvalpublic void fillOval(int x, int y, int width, int height)
Graphics
x - the x coordinate of the upper left corner
of the oval to be filled.y - the y coordinate of the upper left corner
of the oval to be filled.width - the width of the oval to be filled.height - the height of the oval to be filled.java.awt.Graphics#drawOvalpublic void drawArc(int x, int y, int width, int height, int startAngle, int arcAngle)
Graphics
The resulting arc begins at startAngle and extends
for arcAngle degrees, using the current color.
Angles are interpreted such that 0 degrees
is at the 3 o'clock position.
A positive value indicates a counter-clockwise rotation
while a negative value indicates a clockwise rotation.
The center of the arc is the center of the rectangle whose origin
is (x, y) and whose size is specified by the
width and height arguments.
The resulting arc covers an area
width + 1 pixels wide
by height + 1 pixels tall.
The angles are specified relative to the non-square extents of the bounding rectangle such that 45 degrees always falls on the line from the center of the ellipse to the upper right corner of the bounding rectangle. As a result, if the bounding rectangle is noticeably longer in one axis than the other, the angles to the start and end of the arc segment will be skewed farther along the longer axis of the bounds.
x - the x coordinate of the
upper-left corner of the arc to be drawn.y - the y coordinate of the
upper-left corner of the arc to be drawn.width - the width of the arc to be drawn.height - the height of the arc to be drawn.startAngle - the beginning angle.arcAngle - the angular extent of the arc,
relative to the start angle.java.awt.Graphics#fillArcpublic void fillArc(int x, int y, int width, int height, int startAngle, int arcAngle)
Graphics
The resulting arc begins at startAngle and extends
for arcAngle degrees.
Angles are interpreted such that 0 degrees
is at the 3 o'clock position.
A positive value indicates a counter-clockwise rotation
while a negative value indicates a clockwise rotation.
The center of the arc is the center of the rectangle whose origin
is (x, y) and whose size is specified by the
width and height arguments.
The resulting arc covers an area
width + 1 pixels wide
by height + 1 pixels tall.
The angles are specified relative to the non-square extents of the bounding rectangle such that 45 degrees always falls on the line from the center of the ellipse to the upper right corner of the bounding rectangle. As a result, if the bounding rectangle is noticeably longer in one axis than the other, the angles to the start and end of the arc segment will be skewed farther along the longer axis of the bounds.
x - the x coordinate of the
upper-left corner of the arc to be filled.y - the y coordinate of the
upper-left corner of the arc to be filled.width - the width of the arc to be filled.height - the height of the arc to be filled.startAngle - the beginning angle.arcAngle - the angular extent of the arc,
relative to the start angle.java.awt.Graphics#drawArcpublic void drawPolyline(int[] xPoints, int[] yPoints, int nPoints)
Graphics
drawPolyline in class GraphicsxPoints - an array of x pointsyPoints - an array of y pointsnPoints - the total number of pointsjava.awt.Graphics#drawPolygon(int[], int[], int)public void drawPolygon(int[] xPoints, int[] yPoints, int nPoints)
Graphics
This method draws the polygon defined by nPoint line
segments, where the first nPoint - 1
line segments are line segments from
(xPoints[i - 1], yPoints[i - 1])
to (xPoints[i], yPoints[i]), for
1 ≤ i ≤ nPoints.
The figure is automatically closed by drawing a line connecting
the final point to the first point, if those points are different.
drawPolygon in class GraphicsxPoints - a an array of x coordinates.yPoints - a an array of y coordinates.nPoints - a the total number of points.java.awt.Graphics#fillPolygon,
java.awt.Graphics#drawPolylinepublic void drawPolygon(Polygon p)
GraphicsPolygon object.
drawPolygon in class Graphicsp - the polygon to draw.java.awt.Graphics#fillPolygon,
java.awt.Graphics#drawPolylinepublic void fillPolygon(int[] xPoints, int[] yPoints, int nPoints)
Graphics
This method draws the polygon defined by nPoint line
segments, where the first nPoint - 1
line segments are line segments from
(xPoints[i - 1], yPoints[i - 1])
to (xPoints[i], yPoints[i]), for
1 ≤ i ≤ nPoints.
The figure is automatically closed by drawing a line connecting
the final point to the first point, if those points are different.
The area inside the polygon is defined using an even-odd fill rule, also known as the alternating rule.
fillPolygon in class GraphicsxPoints - a an array of x coordinates.yPoints - a an array of y coordinates.nPoints - a the total number of points.java.awt.Graphics#drawPolygon(int[], int[], int)public void fillPolygon(Polygon p)
GraphicsThe area inside the polygon is defined using an even-odd fill rule, also known as the alternating rule.
fillPolygon in class Graphicsp - the polygon to fill.java.awt.Graphics#drawPolygon(int[], int[], int)public void drawString(String str, int x, int y)
Graphics
drawString in class Graphicsstr - the string to be drawn.x - the x coordinate.y - the y coordinate.java.awt.Graphics#drawBytes,
java.awt.Graphics#drawCharspublic void drawString(java.text.AttributedCharacterIterator iterator, int x, int y)
Graphics
drawString in class Graphicsiterator - the iterator whose text is to be drawnx - the x coordinate.y - the y coordinate.java.awt.Graphics#drawBytes,
java.awt.Graphics#drawCharspublic void drawChars(char[] data, int offset, int length, int x, int y)
Graphics
data - the array of characters to be drawnoffset - the start offset in the datalength - the number of characters to be drawnx - the x coordinate of the baseline of the texty - the y coordinate of the baseline of the textjava.awt.Graphics#drawBytes,
java.awt.Graphics#drawStringpublic void drawBytes(byte[] data, int offset, int length, int x, int y)
Graphics
data - the data to be drawnoffset - the start offset in the datalength - the number of bytes that are drawnx - the x coordinate of the baseline of the texty - the y coordinate of the baseline of the textjava.awt.Graphics#drawChars,
java.awt.Graphics#drawStringpublic boolean drawImage(Image img, int x, int y, java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
GraphicsThis method returns immediately in all cases, even if the complete image has not yet been loaded, and it has not been dithered and converted for the current output device.
If the image has not yet been completely loaded, then
drawImage returns false. As more of
the image becomes available, the process that draws the image notifies
the specified image observer.
img - the specified image to be drawn.x - the x coordinate.y - the y coordinate.observer - object to be notified as more of
the image is converted.
true if the image is completely loaded;
false otherwise.java.awt.Image,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver#imageUpdate(java.awt.Image, int, int, int, int, int)public boolean drawImage(Image img, int x, int y, int width, int height, java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
GraphicsThe image is drawn inside the specified rectangle of this graphics context's coordinate space, and is scaled if necessary. Transparent pixels do not affect whatever pixels are already there.
This method returns immediately in all cases, even if the
entire image has not yet been scaled, dithered, and converted
for the current output device.
If the current output representation is not yet complete, then
drawImage returns false. As more of
the image becomes available, the process that draws the image notifies
the image observer by calling its imageUpdate method.
A scaled version of an image will not necessarily be available immediately just because an unscaled version of the image has been constructed for this output device. Each size of the image may be cached separately and generated from the original data in a separate image production sequence.
img - the specified image to be drawn.x - the x coordinate.y - the y coordinate.width - the width of the rectangle.height - the height of the rectangle.observer - object to be notified as more of
the image is converted.
true if the current output representation
is complete; false otherwise.java.awt.Image,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver#imageUpdate(java.awt.Image, int, int, int, int, int)public boolean drawImage(Image img, int x, int y, Color bgcolor, java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
GraphicsThis operation is equivalent to filling a rectangle of the width and height of the specified image with the given color and then drawing the image on top of it, but possibly more efficient.
This method returns immediately in all cases, even if the complete image has not yet been loaded, and it has not been dithered and converted for the current output device.
If the image has not yet been completely loaded, then
drawImage returns false. As more of
the image becomes available, the process that draws the image notifies
the specified image observer.
img - the specified image to be drawn.x - the x coordinate.y - the y coordinate.bgcolor - the background color to paint under the
non-opaque portions of the image.observer - object to be notified as more of
the image is converted.
true if the image is completely loaded;
false otherwise.java.awt.Image,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver#imageUpdate(java.awt.Image, int, int, int, int, int)public boolean drawImage(Image img, int x, int y, int width, int height, Color bgcolor, java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
GraphicsThe image is drawn inside the specified rectangle of this graphics context's coordinate space, and is scaled if necessary. Transparent pixels are drawn in the specified background color. This operation is equivalent to filling a rectangle of the width and height of the specified image with the given color and then drawing the image on top of it, but possibly more efficient.
This method returns immediately in all cases, even if the
entire image has not yet been scaled, dithered, and converted
for the current output device.
If the current output representation is not yet complete then
drawImage returns false. As more of
the image becomes available, the process that draws the image notifies
the specified image observer.
A scaled version of an image will not necessarily be available immediately just because an unscaled version of the image has been constructed for this output device. Each size of the image may be cached separately and generated from the original data in a separate image production sequence.
img - the specified image to be drawn.x - the x coordinate.y - the y coordinate.width - the width of the rectangle.height - the height of the rectangle.bgcolor - the background color to paint under the
non-opaque portions of the image.observer - object to be notified as more of
the image is converted.
true if the current output representation
is complete; false otherwise.java.awt.Image,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver#imageUpdate(java.awt.Image, int, int, int, int, int)public boolean drawImage(Image img, int dx1, int dy1, int dx2, int dy2, int sx1, int sy1, int sx2, int sy2, java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
Graphics
This method returns immediately in all cases, even if the
image area to be drawn has not yet been scaled, dithered, and converted
for the current output device.
If the current output representation is not yet complete then
drawImage returns false. As more of
the image becomes available, the process that draws the image notifies
the specified image observer.
This method always uses the unscaled version of the image to render the scaled rectangle and performs the required scaling on the fly. It does not use a cached, scaled version of the image for this operation. Scaling of the image from source to destination is performed such that the first coordinate of the source rectangle is mapped to the first coordinate of the destination rectangle, and the second source coordinate is mapped to the second destination coordinate. The subimage is scaled and flipped as needed to preserve those mappings.
img - the specified image to be drawndx1 - the x coordinate of the first corner of the
destination rectangle.dy1 - the y coordinate of the first corner of the
destination rectangle.dx2 - the x coordinate of the second corner of the
destination rectangle.dy2 - the y coordinate of the second corner of the
destination rectangle.sx1 - the x coordinate of the first corner of the
source rectangle.sy1 - the y coordinate of the first corner of the
source rectangle.sx2 - the x coordinate of the second corner of the
source rectangle.sy2 - the y coordinate of the second corner of the
source rectangle.observer - object to be notified as more of the image is
scaled and converted.
true if the current output representation
is complete; false otherwise.java.awt.Image,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver#imageUpdate(java.awt.Image, int, int, int, int, int)public boolean drawImage(Image img, int dx1, int dy1, int dx2, int dy2, int sx1, int sy1, int sx2, int sy2, Color bgcolor, java.awt.image.ImageObserver observer)
GraphicsTransparent pixels are drawn in the specified background color. This operation is equivalent to filling a rectangle of the width and height of the specified image with the given color and then drawing the image on top of it, but possibly more efficient.
This method returns immediately in all cases, even if the
image area to be drawn has not yet been scaled, dithered, and converted
for the current output device.
If the current output representation is not yet complete then
drawImage returns false. As more of
the image becomes available, the process that draws the image notifies
the specified image observer.
This method always uses the unscaled version of the image to render the scaled rectangle and performs the required scaling on the fly. It does not use a cached, scaled version of the image for this operation. Scaling of the image from source to destination is performed such that the first coordinate of the source rectangle is mapped to the first coordinate of the destination rectangle, and the second source coordinate is mapped to the second destination coordinate. The subimage is scaled and flipped as needed to preserve those mappings.
img - the specified image to be drawndx1 - the x coordinate of the first corner of the
destination rectangle.dy1 - the y coordinate of the first corner of the
destination rectangle.dx2 - the x coordinate of the second corner of the
destination rectangle.dy2 - the y coordinate of the second corner of the
destination rectangle.sx1 - the x coordinate of the first corner of the
source rectangle.sy1 - the y coordinate of the first corner of the
source rectangle.sx2 - the x coordinate of the second corner of the
source rectangle.sy2 - the y coordinate of the second corner of the
source rectangle.bgcolor - the background color to paint under the
non-opaque portions of the image.observer - object to be notified as more of the image is
scaled and converted.
true if the current output representation
is complete; false otherwise.java.awt.Image,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver,
java.awt.image.ImageObserver#imageUpdate(java.awt.Image, int, int, int, int, int)private void resetGraphics()
public void dispose()
GraphicsGraphics object cannot be used after
disposehas been called.
When a Java program runs, a large number of Graphics
objects can be created within a short time frame.
Although the finalization process of the garbage collector
also disposes of the same system resources, it is preferable
to manually free the associated resources by calling this
method rather than to rely on a finalization process which
may not run to completion for a long period of time.
Graphics objects which are provided as arguments to the
paint and update methods
of components are automatically released by the system when
those methods return. For efficiency, programmers should
call dispose when finished using
a Graphics object only if it was created
directly from a component or another Graphics object.
java.awt.Graphics#finalize,
java.awt.Component#paint,
java.awt.Component#update,
java.awt.Component#getGraphics,
java.awt.Graphics#createpublic void finalize()
Graphics
Graphics.dispose()public String toString()
GraphicsString object representing this
Graphics object's value.
public Rectangle getClipRect()
Graphics
getClipRect in class Graphicsnull if no clip is set.private void _changeClip(int x, int y, int w, int h, boolean set)
private static void recycleSwingGraphics(SwingGraphics g)
private static SwingGraphics getRecycledSwingGraphics()