CS计算机代考程序代写 Java gui Topic 7 Inheritance and Introduction to Event-driven Programming

Topic 7 Inheritance and Introduction to Event-driven Programming
ICT167 Principles of Computer Science

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Objectives
§ Define inheritance and polymorphism
§ Be able to give examples of uses of
inheritance
§ Be able to use the correct terminology for
inheritance (base class and derived class)
§ Understand inheritance between Java
classes
§ Explain the concept of overriding of methods
§ Distinguish between overriding and overloading
3

Objectives
§ Explain the use of the term super in a constructor
§ Understand a class hierarchy
§ Know that a derived class object can have a
super class reference
§ Be able to define and use derived classes in Java
§ Understand the concept of multiple inheritance
§ Understand Java interfaces
4

Objectives
§ Understand the basics of event-driven programming
§ Explain the term GUI
§ Give a brief description of the Java Swing
event-driven programming
§ Be able to determine and explain the behaviour of simple Java GUI programs
Reading Savitch: Chapters 8.1, 8.2, 8.3 and Chapter 13 (see textbook website)
5

Inheritance
§ Inheritance enables us to define a new class based on a (general) class that already exists
§ The new class will be similar to the existing class, it will be able to use all the facilities of the existing class, but will have some new characteristics
§ This makes programming easier, because you can build upon your previous work instead of starting out from scratch
6

Inheritance
§ In Java it is easy to code the more specialized class without having to re-write any of the code which it inherits from the more general class
§ Inheritance is a powerful and very useful feature of OOP
§ Graphical user interfaces (GUIs) define each visual component by using inheritance with a “toolkit” of basic components
7

Inheritance
§ For example in the libraries:
§ Buttons inherit from Components
§ Labels inherit from Components
§ FileNotFoundException inherits from
IOException
§ HttpURLConnection inherits from URLConnection
§ Time inherits from Date
§ Set inherits from Collection
8

Inheritance
§ Example in possible applications,
§ ReferenceBook inherits from LibraryBook
§ UnderGraduateStudent inherits from Student § Secretary inherits from Employee
§ CreditCardCustomer inherits from Customer
9

Terminology
§ The class that is used as a basis for defining a new class is called the base class (or super class or parent class)
§ The new class based on the base class is called a derived class (or sub- class or child class)
§ We say, the derived class inherits from the base class
10

Terminology
§ In Java, (unlike with humans) child classes inherit characteristics from just one parent
§ This is called single inheritance
§ Some languages allow child classes to inherit from more than one parent
§ This is called multiple inheritance
11

Terminology
§ With multiple inheritance, it is
sometimes hard to tell which parent class will contribute what characteristics to the child class
§ Java avoids these problems by using single inheritance
12

Example: Base Class
// A Base Class: Person.java (from Savitch chapter 8)
public class Person {
private String name; // instance variable public Person() { // constructor
name = “No name yet.”; }
// another constructor
public Person(String initialName) {
name = initialName; }
public String getName() { // get method return name;
}
13

Example: Base Class
// set method
public void setName(String newName) {
name = newName; }
public void writeOutput(){ // output method System.out.println(“Name: ” + name);
}
// equal method
public boolean sameName(Person otherPerson) {
return (this.name.equalsIgnoreCase( otherPerson.name));
}
} // end class Person
14

Example: Derived Class
// A Derived Class: Student.java from Savitch chapter 8
public class Student extends Person {
private int studentNumber; // instance variable public Student() { // default constructor
//call to default constructor of super class Person
super();
studentNumber = 0; // Indicating no number yet }
15

Example: Derived Class
// Another constructor
public Student(String initialName,
int initialStudentNumber) {
// call to other constructor of super class Person
super(initialName);
studentNumber = initialStudentNumber; }
public void reset(String newName,
int newStudentNumber) {
// call to the super class method setName(newName);
studentNumber = newStudentNumber;
}
16

Example: Derived Class
public int getStudentNumber() { return studentNumber;
}
public void setStudentNumber(int newStudentNumber) {
studentNumber = newStudentNumber; }
public void writeOutput() { System.out.println(“Name: ” + getName()); System.out.println(“Student Number : ” +
17
}
studentNumber);

Example: Derived Class
public boolean equals(Student otherStudent) { return (this.sameName(otherStudent)
&& (this.studentNumber == otherStudent.studentNumber));
}
} // end class Student
18

Example: Client Class
// InheritanceDemo.java – a client program
public class InheritanceDemo {
public static void main(String[] args) { Student s = new Student();
s.writeOutput();
// setName is inherited from the Person class s.setName(“Jason Bourne”); s.setStudentNumber(12345678); s.writeOutput();
19

Example: Client Class
Student s1 = new Student(“James Bond”, 007); s1.writeOutput();
if (s.equals(s1))
System.out.println(“Same”); else
System.out.println(“Not Same”); }
} // end class InheritanceDemo
20

Example: Output
/* OUTPUT
Name: No name yet. Student Number : 0
Name: Jason Bourne Student Number : 12345678 Name: James Bond
Student Number: 7
Not Same
*/
21

Overriding Methods and
super Constructors
§ In the above example (consisting of two useful classes and a client) notice the following:
§ Person is the base class (or super class)
§ Student is derived from the base class
§ We also say, Student inherits from Person, or, Student extends Person
§ The most important thing to note is that each Student object (like any other Person object) has a name and has methods such as setName(…) and getName() available to it
§ This is inheritance
22

Overriding Methods and super Constructors
§ Each Student object also has an extra instance variable studentNumber
§ An object of type Student has the following members in it:
23

Overriding Methods and super Constructors
24
Member
Explanation
name
inherited from Person
studentNumber
defined in Student
setName(…)
inherited from Person
getName()
inherited from Person
sameName(…)
inherited from Person
reset(…)
defined in Student
getStudentNumber()
defined in Student
setStudentNumber (…)
defined in Student
writeOutput()
redefined in Student
equals(…)
defined in Student

Overriding Methods and super Constructors
25
§ Also note that where the derived class has
a method with exactly the same name and the same number, order and types of parameters as a method in the base class
then the derived class method will be used for a derived class object
§ Eg: the method writeOutput() in Student class above
§ This is called overriding

Overriding Methods and super Constructors
26
§ Also note that since a Student is a type of Person then a new Student object must be set up properly as a Person first
§ In general, a constructor for the super class must be
called as part of the activity of a constructor for the derived class. If you do not specify which super constructor to call by writing super(arg1, …, argn) in the derived class constructor then the
default constructor is called automatically

Overriding Methods and super Constructors
27
§ The class definition for Person has two constructors, one of which will initialise the
member data of Person objects
§ The class Student also has two
constructors that initialise the data of Student objects
§ The second constructor for class Student looks like following:

Overriding Methods and super Constructors
// another constructor
public Student(String initialName,
int initialStudentNumber) { // call to the constructor of superclass
super(initialName);
// initialise the member that only Student has
studentNumber = initialStudentNumber; }
28

Overriding Methods and super Constructors
29
§ The statement super(initialName) invokes the super class’s constructor to initialize some of the data
§ The next statement initializes the member that only the Student has
§ Note that when super is used as above, it must be the first statement in the derived class’s constructor

Overriding Methods and
super Constructors
§ Sometimes you want a derived class to
have its own method, but that method includes everything the base class does
§ You can use the super reference in this case
§ For example, here is class Person’s method: WriteOutput()
public void writeOutput(){
System.out.println(“Name: ” + name);
}
30

Overriding Methods and super Constructors
§ And here is Student’s method: public void writeOutput(){
System.out.println(“Name: “+getName()); System.out.println(“Student Number:”
31
}
+ studentNumber);

Overriding Methods and super Constructors
32
§ Student’s method can better be written using super:
public void writeOutput(){ super.writeOutput(); System.out.println(“StudentNumber:”
}
+ studentNumber);

Overriding Methods and super Constructors
33
§ Note: Unlike the case when super is used in a constructor, inside a method super does
not have to be used in the first statement § Note that you can form a new class from a
derived class and can build inheritance to multiple levels
§ Eg: class Undergraduate is derived from Student (see textbook Listing 8.4)

The final Modifier
§ It is possible to specify that a method cannot be overridden in a sub-class by adding the final modifier to the method heading
§ Eg:
public final void specialMethod() {
// method body
}
34

The final Modifier
§ An entire class may be declared as final, which means it cannot be used as a base class to derive another class
§ Eg: the Java API class String is declared as final
public final class String extends Object
{
….. }
35

Class Hierarchies
Figure 8.1 A class hierarchy
36

UML Inheritance Diagrams
• Figure 8.2 A class hierarchy in
UML notation

UML Inheritance Diagrams
• Figure 8.3 Some details of UML class hierarchy from
figure 8.2

Class Hierarchies
39

Using Inheritance
§ The diagram on the previous slide shows a hierarchy of classes
§ In this class hierarchy, many methods and instance variables may be inherited downwards from super class to derived
class
§ Java supports this easily
§ In a hierarchy, each class has at most one base class (super or parent), but can have several derived (sub or child) classes
40

Using Inheritance
§ Now in the above hierarchy, every driller or a first-aid person is also an employee
§ Thus every object of the class Driller is also an object of the class Employee
§ One of the most useful aspects of inheritance is that a derived class object
can be used wherever a super class object can be
41

Using Inheritance
§ Eg:
Date today = new Date();
Employee emp = new Employee();
emp = userChooseEmployee(); System.out.println(“You have chosen to retire
the following employee”);
emp.writeName();
System.out.println(“Are you sure(yes/no)?”); Scanner kb = new Scanner (System.in);
String reply = kb.next();
42

Using Inheritance
if (reply.equals(“yes”)){ emp.FinalizeRecords(today);
} else {
System.out.println(“Request ignored.”);
}
System.out.println(“End of this request.”);
§This will work no matter whether emp refers to a Driller or a FirstAid object etc.
43

Polymorphism
• Inheritance allows you to define a base class and derive classes from the base class
• Polymorphism allows you to make changes in the method definition for the derived classes and have those changes apply to methods written in the base class
• You will need to read more in the textbook under Chapter 8.3

Polymorphism
• Consider a program uses Person, Student, and Undergraduate classes
• E.g.ifwewanttosetupalistof
committee members (can be a
person who are student or
employee), it is better make an array of type Person
• Array of type Person can accommodate any class derived from it

Polymorphism
• Consider an array of Person
Person[] people = new Person[4];
• Since Student and
Undergraduate are types of
Person, we can assign them to
Person variables
people[0] = new Student(“DeBanque, Robin”, 8812);
people[1] = new Undergraduate(“Cotty, Manny”, 8812, 1);

Polymorphism
• Given:
Person[] people = new Person[4];
people[0] = new Student(“DeBanque, Robin”, 8812);
• When invoking: people[0].writeOutput();
• WhichwriteOutput()isinvoked,theonedefined for Student or the one defined for Person?
• Answer:TheonedefinedforStudent

An Inheritance as a Type
• The method can substitute one object for another
– Called polymorphism
• This is made possible by mechanism – Dynamic binding
– Also known as late binding

Dynamic Binding and Inheritance • When an overridden method invoked
– Action matches method defined in class used to create object using new
– Not determined by type of variable naming the object
• Variable of any ancestor class can reference object of descendant class
– Object always remembers which method actions to use for each method name

Polymorphism Example – listing 8.6
public class PolymorphismDemo
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
Person[] people = new Person[4];
people[0] = new Undergraduate(“Cotty, Manny”, 4910, 1); people[1] = new Undergraduate(“Kick, Anita”, 9931, 2); people[2] = new Student(“DeBanque, Robin”, 8812); people[3] = new Undergraduate(“Bugg, June”, 9901, 4);
for (Person p : people)
{
p.writeOutput();
System.out.println(); }
} }
Dynamic binding Polymorphism
Even though p is type Person, the writeOutput method associated with Undergraduate or Student is invoked depending upon which class was used to create the object

Polymorphism Example • Output

Multiple Inheritance
§ Occasionally, the natural description of a problem suggests a different form of inheritance, not like an upside down tree
§ For example, a postgraduate tutor may be both a staff member and a student
§ We may need methods to deal with paying them for taking lab classes, and methods for dealing with their student number, HECS fees and unit results
§ We want to inherit these methods from different super classes
§ This is called multiple inheritance
52

Multiple Inheritance
53

Java Interfaces
§ O-O languages get confused with multiple inheritance
§ Eg: if a postgrad tutor changes their office phone number, do we use the changeOfficePhone method supplied in the Staff class or in the Postgrad class?
§ Some O-O languages provide ways to deal with this
54

Java Interfaces
§ Java does not allow multiple inheritance except in a very special case:
§ One of the super classes must be an interface, which is like a class with methods with no bodies. (Do not confuse two uses of the word in this topic)
§ A Java interface is a collection of constants and method declarations
§ The method declarations do not include an implementation (i.e. there is no method body)
55

Java Interfaces
§ A derived class that extends a base class can also implement an interface to gain some additional behaviour
§ An interface definition has the following general form:
// File: InterfaceName.java
public interface InterfaceName { constant definitions
method declarations (without
56
}
implementations)

Java Interfaces
§ A class definition then implements an interface as follows:
public class SomeClass extends SomeParent implements
InterfaceName
{
// body of the class SomeClass
}
§ You will know that an interface is involved if you see the word implements which is used instead of extends for interfaces
57

Java Interfaces
§ Eg:
public class ButtonDemo extends JFrame
implements ActionListener
§ Here we do not inherit any code from ActionListener except the ability to treat ButtonDemo objects as ActionListener Objects
58

The Swing Package and GUI Programming
59
§ A Graphical User Interface (GUI) is a system of visible components (such as windows, menus, buttons, text fields) which allow a program to interact with a user
§ Modern programs use these windowing interfaces to allow the user to make choices with a mouse
§ Swing is a package that comes with Java 2, and contains classes for creating these sorts of components (graphics) and other classes which help them to be used (GUI programming)

The Swing Package and GUI Programming
60
§ GUI programming, i.e. writing programs that set up and use GUIs, is complicated (but made much easier by the swing library)
§ The swing library makes extensive use of inheritance
§ Swing can be viewed as an improved version of an older package called the Abstract Windows Toolkit (AWT)

The Swing Package and GUI Programming
61
§ Also, designing and implementing a GUI using the swing (and AWT) requires skill at event-driven programming
§ That is, a certain way of programming which makes use of objects representing events such as mouse click, keyboard press, windows becoming visible, etc.
§ GUI programming is advanced and we just give a brief overview here

The Swing Package and GUI Programming
62
§ GUIs in Java are often managed by special programs called Applets which run in Internet browsers
§ Setting up an applet is easy (and you will see this in many other units)
§ Programming the working of an applet is much the same as programming a GUI application (i.e. a non-applet GUI program) and needs the same understanding of inheritance, the swing library and event-handling

Brief Overview of Java Event Handling
63
§ What the user sees is determined by what visible swing components the programmer “adds” to a frame (JFrame object).
§ In Java, a frame is a window that has a border, a place for a title, various buttons along the top border (eg: close button), and other built-in things
§ What we usually call a “window” Java calls a “frame”

Brief Overview of Java Event Handling
64
§ The layout of the frame (window) is controlled by the programmer and a layout manager object
§ The user interacts with the application by:
§ Clicking on a window’s close button
§ Clicking on a button to choose one of the program’s options
§ Making a choice from a menu
§ Entering text in a text field

Brief Overview of Java Event Handling
65
§ When you perform an action (like mouse- clicking, keyboard presses) on a graphical component you generate an event
§ In event-driven programming the program responds to events
§ The program responds to events that occur: § Whenever the user chooses, and
§ In whatever order the user chooses

Brief Overview of
Java Event Handling
§ Events are said to be fired by the component which they happen to
§ The events will not cause anything else to happen unless a listener object has been added to the firing component
§ Zero, one or more listening objects can be added
§ Eg: in swing every object that can fire events, such as a button that might be clicked, can have one or more listener objects
66

Brief Overview of Java Event Handling
§ If an event is fired then all the listening objects attached to the firing object are notified
67
§ The listening object can have a method which says what to do if that particular event is fired
§ This method is called an event handler
§ The programmer defines these event- handler methods

Brief Overview of Java Event Handling
68
§ Most swing objects have methods for getting or setting their properties like what text is written on them or whether they are clickable etc.
§ Check on-line documentation for details
§ Event handlers can change the component’s properties, or remove or add components, or listeners, or do some calculation, or change the whole look of the GUI or close the whole program down

Brief Overview of Java Event Handling
69
§ Thus a GUI program consists of three types of software:
§ Components that make up the Graphical User Interface
§ Listeners that receive the events and respond to them
§ Application code that does useful work for the user

Brief Overview of Java Event Handling
70
§ A GUI program consists of a collection of graphical components that are all placed inside one or more windows – called container objects
§ A frame (JFrame) object is a container object, so GUI components can be placed in it

Brief Overview of Java Event Handling
71
§ Like all software objects, a frame-object is actually a section of main memory that holds information and methods
§ The Java system, with the help of the operating system and the graphics board, paints a picture on the computer monitor that represents the frame

GUI Components
§ The GUI components are – windows, labels, text fields or text areas, buttons, etc.
§ The components (labels, text areas/text fields and buttons) are added to the content pane (the area below the title bar and inside border) of a window and not to the window itself
§ All GUI components are objects in Java and therefore are instances of a particular class type
72

GUI Components
§ Below are some of the GUI components which can be created from swing classes (contained in package javax.swing):
§ JLabel – an area where un-editable text or icons can be displayed
§ JTextField – an area in which the user inputs data from the keyboard
§It can also display information §It can have only one line of text
73

GUI Components
§ JTextArea – an area as in JTextField above
§It can have many lines of text
§ JButton – an area that triggers an event when
clicked with the mouse
§ JPanel – a container in which components can be placed and organized
74

Windows
§ The GUI component window can be created using an instance of JFrame class
§ The swing library class JFrame provides various methods to control attributes of a window
§ The attributes associated with windows are: § Title
§ Width and height (in pixels)
75

Windows
§ Some methods provided by the JFrame class:
§ JFrame(String title)
§Constructor for creating a JFrame with a title
§ Container getContentPane()
§Returns the content pane of the JFrame, which has
the add method for adding components
§ void setSize(int width, int height) §Method to set the size of the window §Eg: myWindow.setSize(500, 300);
§ void setTitle(String title)
§Method to set the title of the window
76

Windows
§ Some methods provided by the JFrame class: § void setVisible(boolean b)
§Method to display window in the program §Displays window on the screen if b is true
§ public void addWindowListener(WindowEvent e) §Method to register a window listener object to a
Jframe
§ public void setDefaultCloseOperation (int operation)
§Method to determine action to be taken when the user clicks on window closing button, x, to close the window
§Eg: setDefaultCloseOperation(EXIT_ON_CLOSE) ;
77

Windows
§ Some methods provided by the JFrame class:
§ void setBackgroundColor(Color c) § void setForegroundColor(Color c)
78

Windows
§ There are two ways to create a window in an application:
§ The first way:
§ Declare object of type JFrame
§ Instantiate the object using new
§ Use various methods to manipulate window
79

Windows
§ Alternatively:
§ Create the class containing the application program by extending definition of class JFrame using inheritance
§ The new class can use features such as methods it inherits from the existing class
(JFrame), and can add some functionality of it own
80

Control Pane
§ Content Pane is the inner area of GUI a window (below the title bar and inside the border)
§ GUI components are added to the content pane through a container class
§ To access the content pane:
§ Declare reference variable of type Container
§ Use method getContentPane of class JFrame
81

Control Pane
§ Eg:
Container c1;
c1 = getContentPane();
§ or,
Container c1 = getContentPane();
§ In order to design the layout to decide where to place the GUI components in the content pane, the class Container provides the method setLayout
82

Control Pane
§ The components can be added/attached to the content pane by using method add of the Container class
§ The class Container is contained in the package java.awt
§ To use this class in your program, you need to include either the statement:
import java.awt.*;
§or
import java.awt.Container;
83

Labels
§ A label is a special kind of text that can be added to a JFrame (or to any of a number of
other kinds of objects)
§ It provides instruction or information on a GUI
§ It displays a single line of read-only text, an image or a mixture of both
§ Labels are created by instantiating objects of class Jlabel (which is contained in the package java.swing)
84

Labels
§ Eg: Give a string as an argument to the constructor for the JLabel class:
JLabel label1;
label1 = new JLabel(“Please don’t
click that button!”);
c1.add(label1,BorderLayout.CENTER);
§ Eg: set string describing label2 as right- justified
JLabel label2;
label2 = new JLabel(“Enter your
name:”,
SwingConstants.RIGHT);
85

Text Fields and Text Areas
§ Text fields (objects of class JTextField) are single-line areas in which the user can enter text (via keyboard) or the program can display text
§ When the user enters data into a text field and presses the Enter key, an action event (ActionEvent) occurs
§ If the program has registered an event listener, the listener will process the event enabling the program to use the data entered in the text field
86

Text Fields and Text Areas
JTextField mytext;
mytext = new JTextField(50);
§ This statement instantiates the object mytext and sets the width of this text field to
50 characters
§ The object mytext will be added to the content pane using the add method of Container class
87

Text Fields and Text Areas
§ Some methods provided by JTextfield class:
88
§ §
§
§ §
public JTextField(int size)
§Constructor to set the size of the text field
public JTextField(String str)
§Constructor to initialise object with text specified by str
public void setText(String str)
§Method to set text of text field to string specified by str
public String getText()
§Method to return the text contained in the text field
public void addActionListener(ActionListener e) §Method to register a listener object to a JTextField

Text Fields and Text Areas
§ Text areas (objects of class JTextArea) are areas in which the many lines of text can be entered and/or displayed
§ Eg:
JTextArea text2 = new JTextArea(10,
50);
§ text2 is big enough to hold 10 lines, where each line can hold up to 50 characters
89

Text Fields and Text Areas
§ Similar methods, as those in JTextField class, are also available in JTextArea class
§ Eg: getText(), setText(String str), addActionListener(ActionListener e)
§ The text fields/areas are then added to the content pane of a window using the add method and a layout manager
90

Buttons
§ A button (created with class JButton) is a component the user clicks to trigger an
action (ActionEvent). The text on the face of a button is called button label
§ An ActionEvent can be processed by any ActionListener object
§ To create a button, we use the same techniques as creating labels and text fields
91

Buttons
§ Some methods provided by the class JButton:
§ public JButton(String str)
§Constructor to initialise the object to text specified
by str
§ public void setText(String str)
§method to set text of the button to string specified by str
§ public String getText()
§method to return the text contained in button
§ public void addActionListener(ActionListener e)
§method to register a listener object to the button object
92

Layout Managers
§ Layout Managers are objects that decides how components will be arranged in a container
§ Some types of layout managers: § BorderLayout
§ FlowLayout
§ GridLayout
§ Each type of layout manager has rules about how to rearrange components when the size or shape of the container changes
93

The Border Layout Manager
§ It has five regions that can each have one component added to them:
94
BorderLayout.NORTH
BorderLayout.WEST
BorderLayout.CENTE R
BorderLayout.EAST
BorderLayout.SOUTH
c1.setLayout(new BorderLayout()); …
c1.add(label1, BorderLayout.NORTH);

The Flow Layout Manager
§ Flow is the simplest layout manager; it display’s components from left to right in the order they are added to the container
§ The add method has one parameter which is the component to add
Container c2 = getContentPane(); C2.setLayout(new FlowLayout());
JLabel label1=new JLabel(“1st label here”); C2.add(label1);
JLabel label2=new JLabel(“2nd label there”); C2.add(label2);
95

The Grid Layout Manager
§ The programmer specifies the number of rows and columns in the grid
§ All regions in the grid are of equal size
§ When the container changes size, each region grows or shrinks by the same amount
96

The Grid Layout Manager
§ The following example creates a grid layout with two rows and three columns:
Container c3 = getContentPane(); c3.setLayout(new GridLayout(2, 3)); …
c3.add(label1);
c3.add(label2);
§ Note that the rows are filled before columns in the grid
97

Handling an Event
§ When button (JButton) is clicked, an event is created – called action event
§ Action event sends a signal to another object, known as action listener
§ When the listener receives the message, it performs some action
§ Sending a message or an event to a listener simply means that some method (eg,
actionedPerformed) in the listener object is invoked with the event as the argument
98

Handling an Event
§ This invocation happens automatically – there is no code corresponding to the method call
§ However, you must specify two things:
§ For each JButton, you must specify a corresponding listener object – called registering the listener
§ You must define the methods that will be called when the event is fired (i.e., sent to the listener)
§ Java does not allow us to instantiate an object of type ActionListener
99

Class ActionListener
§ The class ActionListener (part of the package java.awt.event) handles action
events
§ It is a special type of class called an
interface and contains the method actionPerformed
§ An interface is a class that only contains the method headings (terminated with a semicolon) and not their definitions/implementations
§ Java does not allow us to instantiate an object of type ActionListener
100

Class ActionListener
§ One way to register an event is to create a class on top of ActionListener so that the
required object can be instantiated
§ Eg:
private class MyButtonHandler implements
ActionListener {
public void actionedPerformed
(ActionEvent e){ //Code for tasks to be performed go here
}// end actionedPerformed }// end class MyButtonHandler
101

Example: SimpleApp
//SimplApp.java – a simple example of a GUI program //You should be able to give a brief description of what //such a program will do and the steps involved
import javax.swing.*; //for JFrame, JButton, JLabel import java.awt.*; //for Container, BorderLayout import java.awt.event.*; //for WindowAdapter,
ActionListner, ActionEvent public class SimplApp extends Jframe {
// define window’s width and height in pixels private static final int WIDTH = 400;
private static final int HEIGHT = 200;
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Example: SimpleApp
// used for displaying text in the window private JLabel infoLabel;
private class ButtonAction implements
ActionListener { public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e){
infoLabel.setText(“You fool !!”); } //end of actionPerformed
} //end of class ButtonAction
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Example: SimpleApp
// used to destroy/close the window
private class WindowDestroyer extends
WindowAdapter {
public void windowClosing(WindowEvent e){ dispose();
System.exit(0);
} //end of windowClosing()
} //end of class WindowDestroyer
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Example: SimpleApp
// Below is the constructor for the class SimplApp public SimplApp(String windowTitle) {
super(windowTitle);
setSize(WIDTH, HEIGHT);
// create content pane to add components to window
Container c1 = getContentPane();
c1.setLayout( new BorderLayout());
// create a label component with the String centred
infoLabel = new JLabel( “Initial”, JLabel.CENTER);
c1.add( infoLabel, BorderLayout.CENTER);
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Example: SimpleApp
// create a button component
JButton button1=new JButton(“Don’t Press
Me!”);
c1.add( button1, BorderLayout.NORTH); //goes at top
// add an action event to button ButtonAction myAction = new ButtonAction(); button1.addActionListener(myAction);
// add action event to window close button WindowDestroyer myListener = new
WindowDestroyer(); addWindowListener( myListener);
} //end of SimplApp constructor
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Example: SimpleApp
public static void main(String[] args) { // calls constructor
SimplApp app = new SimplApp(“Zzzz”); // display window on the screen app.setVisible(true);
System.out.println(“Finished SimplApp.main()”);
} //end of SimplApp.main() } //end of SimplApp class
107

Example: BinarySearch
// BinarySearch.java revised (by P S Dhillon) from Deitel and Deitel
// Binary search of an array import java.awt.*;
import java.awt.event.*; import javax.swing.*;
import java.text.*;
public class BinarySearch extends JFrame
implements ActionListener { JLabel enterLabel, resultLabel;
JTextField enterField, resultField;
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Example: BinarySearch
JTextArea initial, output; int arr[];
String display = “”;
public static void main (String[] args) {
BinarySearch myApplication = new BinarySearch(“Binary Search”);
myApplication.setVisible(true);
myApplication.setDefaultCloseOperation( EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
} // end main
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Example: BinarySearch
// constructor for BinarySearch public BinarySearch(String title) {
super (title);
setSize(800, 300);
Container c = getContentPane();
c.setLayout( new FlowLayout() );
// set up JLabel and JTextField for user input
enterLabel = new JLabel( “Enter an integer
key to search” );
c.add( enterLabel );
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Example: BinarySearch
enterField = new JTextField( 5 ); enterField.addActionListener( this ); c.add( enterField );
// set up JLabel and JTextField for displaying results
resultLabel = new JLabel( “Result” ); c.add( resultLabel );
resultField = new JTextField(20); resultField.setEditable( false ); c.add( resultField );
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Example: BinarySearch
// create array and fill with odd integers 1 to 29 arr = new int[ 15 ];
for (int i = 0;i < arr.length;i++) arr[ i ] = 2 * i + 1; // set up JTextArea for displaying the array contents JTextArea initial = new JTextArea(3,60 ); c.add( initial ); 112 Example: BinarySearch // build the initial array for displaying String arrayContents=“Contents of array:\n"; for (int i = 0;i < arr.length;i++) arrayContents = arrayContents + (arr[i]) +" "; initial.setText(arrayContents); // set up JTextArea for displaying comparison output = new JTextArea(10,60); c.add( output ); } //end of constructor 113 Example: BinarySearch // obtain user input and call method binSearch public void actionPerformed(actionEvent e) { String searchKey = e.getActionCommand(); // initialize display string for the new search display = "Portions of array searched:\n"; // perform the binary search int index = binarySearch(arr, Integer.parseInt(searchKey)); output.setText( display ); 114 Example: BinarySearch if ( index != -1 ) resultField.setText("Value found at index " + index); else resultField.setText("Value not found"); }//end of actionPerformed method 115 Example: BinarySearch public int binarySearch(int ar[], int key) { int first = 0; int last = ar.length - 1; int mid; while (first <= last) { mid = (first + last)/2; // The following line is used to display the part // of the array currently being manipulated // during each iteration of the binary search loop. buildOutput( first, mid, last ); 116 Example: BinarySearch if (key == ar[mid]) // match found return mid; // exit else if(key < ar[mid]) // search low end of array last = mid - 1; else //search high end of array first = mid + 1; }// end while return -1; // match not found }// end binarySearch 117 Example: BinarySearch // Build one row of output showing the current // part of the array being processed. void buildOutput(int low,int mid,int high) { DecimalFormat twoDigits = new DecimalFormat( "00" ); for (int i = 0;i < arr.length;i++) { 118 Example: BinarySearch if ( i < low || i > high ) display = display + ” “;
else if ( i == mid ) //mark middle element
display = display + twoDigits.format( arr[ i ] ) + “* “;
else
display = display + twoDigits.format( arr[i])+” “;
} // end for
display = display + “\n”; }// end of buildOutput
}//end of class
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End of Topic 7