Rick Hodgin
Rick Hodgin

Reputation: 677

Detect screen resolution change made by user (Java Listener?)

I have a Java app that launches, creates a GUI and works great. If the user changes the screen resolution (switches from 1440x900 to 1280x768), I'd like to be able to listen for that event.

Any ideas?

PS - I'd like to do this in event/listener mode, not in poll mode, so that extra CPU cycles aren't wasted on something like a timer constantly polling the screen size every N seconds to see if it's changed.

Upvotes: 11

Views: 4578

Answers (5)

acimutal
acimutal

Reputation: 2245

You can create a global PAINT listener to detect screen resize.

// screen resize listener
    Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().addAWTEventListener(new AWTEventListener() {

        @Override
        public void eventDispatched(AWTEvent event) {
// take a look at http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10123735/get-effective-screen-size-from-java
            Rectangle newSize = getEffectiveScreenSize(); 
            if (newSize.width != windowSize.width || newSize.height != windowSize.height)
                resize();

        }
    }, AWTEvent.PAINT_EVENT_MASK);

Upvotes: 2

JayC
JayC

Reputation: 41

This post is old, but: - polling the screen size once every second will not have any impact on performance - when the screen is resized, every window should receive a repaint() call (you need to test this for the OSs you target)

Upvotes: 4

Santosh
Santosh

Reputation: 17893

Here is my suggestion for this problem,

  1. Every swing object can implement an interface called java.awt.event.ComponentListener.
  2. One of its method is componentResized(ComponentEvent e).
  3. Your main application frame should implement this interface and override the resize event method. This is how you listen to the resize event, Checkout this link . I hope this helps you.

Upvotes: -1

user330315
user330315

Reputation:

Apart from Hovercrafts's suggestion you might consider a background thread that checks the current screen resolution using Toolkit.getScreenSize().

You would need to test this to find out how big the performance impact of that thread to the system is. How often it checks for changes depends on your requirements (how quick your application needs to react to the change)

Upvotes: 2

Hovercraft Full Of Eels
Hovercraft Full Of Eels

Reputation: 285403

I don't think that Java can do this by itself. You would have to have a "hook" into the operating system that detects this change and may wish to consider using JNA, JNI, or a separate utility such as perhaps Sigar that reports to your Java program. Out of curiosity, why do you wish to do this? Is it for a game you're making or so that you can re-size a GUI application?

Upvotes: 2

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