Reputation: 14510
I would like to create an application wide keyboard shortcut for a Java Swing application. Looping over all components and adding the shortcut on each, has focus related side effects, and seems like a brute force solution.
Anyone has a cleaner solution?
Upvotes: 36
Views: 36445
Reputation: 2151
A little simplified example:
import java.awt.KeyboardFocusManager;
import java.awt.KeyEventDispatcher;
import java.awt.event.KeyEvent;
KeyboardFocusManager keyManager;
keyManager = KeyboardFocusManager.getCurrentKeyboardFocusManager();
keyManager.addKeyEventDispatcher(new KeyEventDispatcher() {
@Override
public boolean dispatchKeyEvent(KeyEvent e) {
if (e.getID() == KeyEvent.KEY_PRESSED && e.getKeyCode() == 27) {
System.out.println("Esc");
return true;
}
return false;
}
});
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 9357
Use the following piece of code
ActionListener a=new ActionListener(){
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent ae)
{
// your code
}
};
getRootPane().registerKeyboardAction(a,KeyStroke.getKeyStroke("ctrl D"),JComponent.WHEN_IN_FOCUSED_WINDOW);
Replace "ctrl D" with the shortcut you want.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 147164
For each window, use JComponent.registerKeyboardAction
with a condition of WHEN_IN_FOCUSED_WINDOW
. Alternatively use:
JComponent.getInputMap(WHEN_IN_FOCUSED_WINDOW).put(keyStroke, command);
JComponent.getActionMap().put(command,action);
as described in the registerKeyboardAction API docs.
Upvotes: 44
Reputation: 14023
For people wondering (like me) how to use KeyEventDispatcher, here is an example that I put together. It uses a HashMap for storing all global actions, because I don't like large if (key == ..) then .. else if (key == ..) then .. else if (key ==..) ..
constructs.
/** map containing all global actions */
private HashMap<KeyStroke, Action> actionMap = new HashMap<KeyStroke, Action>();
/** call this somewhere in your GUI construction */
private void setup() {
KeyStroke key1 = KeyStroke.getKeyStroke(KeyEvent.VK_A, KeyEvent.CTRL_DOWN_MASK);
actionMap.put(key1, new AbstractAction("action1") {
@Override
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
System.out.println("Ctrl-A pressed: " + e);
}
});
// add more actions..
KeyboardFocusManager kfm = KeyboardFocusManager.getCurrentKeyboardFocusManager();
kfm.addKeyEventDispatcher( new KeyEventDispatcher() {
@Override
public boolean dispatchKeyEvent(KeyEvent e) {
KeyStroke keyStroke = KeyStroke.getKeyStrokeForEvent(e);
if ( actionMap.containsKey(keyStroke) ) {
final Action a = actionMap.get(keyStroke);
final ActionEvent ae = new ActionEvent(e.getSource(), e.getID(), null );
SwingUtilities.invokeLater( new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
a.actionPerformed(ae);
}
} );
return true;
}
return false;
}
});
}
The use of SwingUtils.invokeLater() is maybe not necessary, but it is probably a good idea not to block the global event loop.
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 14023
When you have a menu, you can add global keyboard shortcuts to menu items:
JMenuItem item = new JMenuItem(action);
KeyStroke key = KeyStroke.getKeyStroke(
KeyEvent.VK_R, KeyEvent.CTRL_DOWN_MASK);
item.setAccelerator(key);
menu.add(item);
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 3216
Install a custom KeyEventDispatcher. The KeyboardFocusManager class is also a good place for this functionality.
Upvotes: 22