Reputation: 13
So, I have an object that extends JPanel and displays dots in a matrix via paintComponent. The dots of the matrix can move, disappear or multiply given certain conditions, and I want to show their evolution over time automatically like so:
for(int i = 0; i < 100; ++i){
matrix = calculateNextMatrix(); //Calculate possible movements, deaths or births of dots
myGraphic.updateMatrix(matrix); //Pass new dots to the JPanel object
myGraphic.repaint(); //Draw new dots
Thread.sleep(100); //Wait 0.1 seconds for next iteration (yes, this should be in a
//try-catch)
}
However, I only get drawn the last iteration after the loop is finished, and all the previous calls to repaint() are basically ignored. If I do the iterations only one at a time (for example, via a manual button press), I have no problem.
Is there any way to get multiple, periodic repaint calls automatically?
Upvotes: 1
Views: 312
Reputation: 1645
I had a simile problem with JComponent in my library and I found a solution with swing timer, I reported the java description of timer
In general, we recommend using Swing timers rather than general-purpose timers for GUI-related tasks because Swing timers all share the same, pre-existing timer thread and the GUI-related task automatically executes on the event-dispatch thread. However, you might use a general-purpose timer if you don't plan on touching the GUI from the timer, or need to perform lengthy processing.
You can use Swing timers in two ways:
- To perform a task once, after a delay. For example, the tool tip manager uses Swing timers to determine when to show a tool tip and when to hide it.
- To perform a task repeatedly. For example, you might perform animation or update a component that displays progress toward a goal.
I think you are in one of this cases.
Without a minimal example reproducible, I can use the my code.
You should create the Swing action listener, like this:
public class UpdateComponentListener implements ActionListener {
@Override
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
count += 10;
timeLabel.setText(count + "");
//The label call repaint
//in your app you should be call the repaint
//In your cases
/*
matrix = calculateNextMatrix(); //Calculate possible movements, deaths or births of dots
myGraphic.updateMatrix(matrix); //Pass new dots to the JPanel object
myGraphic.repaint();
*/
}
}
The timer constructor get in input the delay and the action listener, so you can build your timer, with this code:
Timer timer = new Timer(1000, new UpdateComponentListener());
timer.start();
You can stop, restart your timer, so you should be set how propriety the timer.
The GUI example:
I wrote the post and after I see the @camickr comment. I post the answer because my work is finished but, the comment answered your question.
I hope to have to build a food example
Upvotes: 3