public class EventHandler extends Objectimplements InvocationHandler
EventHandler class provides support for dynamically generating event listeners whose methods execute a simple statement involving an incoming event object and a target object.
The EventHandler class is intended to be used by interactive tools, such as application builders, that allow developers to make connections between beans. Typically connections are made from a user interface bean (the event source) to an application logic bean (the target). The most effective connections of this kind isolate the application logic from the user interface. For example, the EventHandler for a connection from a JCheckBox to a method that accepts a boolean value can deal with extracting the state of the check box and passing it directly to the method so that the method is isolated from the user interface layer.
Inner classes are another, more general way to handle events from user interfaces. The EventHandler class handles only a subset of what is possible using inner classes. However, EventHandler works better with the long-term persistence scheme than inner classes. Also, using EventHandler in large applications in which the same interface is implemented many times can reduce the disk and memory footprint of the application.
The reason that listeners created with EventHandler have such a small footprint is that the Proxy class, on which the EventHandler relies, shares implementations of identical interfaces. For example, if you use the EventHandler create methods to make all the ActionListeners in an application, all the action listeners will be instances of a single class (one created by the Proxy class). In general, listeners based on the Proxy class require one listener class to be created per listener type (interface), whereas the inner class approach requires one class to be created per listener (object that implements the interface).
You don't generally deal directly with EventHandler instances. Instead, you use one of the EventHandler create methods to create an object that implements a given listener interface. This listener object uses an EventHandler object behind the scenes to encapsulate information about the event, the object to be sent a message when the event occurs, the message (method) to be sent, and any argument to the method. The following section gives examples of how to create listener objects using the create methods.
EventHandler is to install a listener that calls a method on the target object with no arguments. In the following example we create an
ActionListener that invokes the
toFront method on an instance of
javax.swing.JFrame.
myButton.addActionListener(
(ActionListener)EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, frame, "toFront"));
When
myButton is pressed, the statement
frame.toFront() will be executed. One could get the same effect, with some additional compile-time type safety, by defining a new implementation of the
ActionListener interface and adding an instance of it to the button:
//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler.
myButton.addActionListener(new ActionListener() {
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
frame.toFront();
}
});
The next simplest use of
EventHandler is to extract a property value from the first argument of the method in the listener interface (typically an event object) and use it to set the value of a property in the target object. In the following example we create an
ActionListener that sets the
nextFocusableComponent property of the target (myButton) object to the value of the "source" property of the event.
This would correspond to the following inner class implementation:EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, myButton, "nextFocusableComponent", "source")
//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler.
new ActionListener() {
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
myButton.setNextFocusableComponent((Component)e.getSource());
}
}
It's also possible to create an
EventHandler that just passes the incoming event object to the target's action. If the fourth
EventHandler.create argument is an empty string, then the event is just passed along:
This would correspond to the following inner class implementation:EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, target, "doActionEvent", "")
//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler.
new ActionListener() {
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
target.doActionEvent(e);
}
}
Probably the most common use of
EventHandler is to extract a property value from the
source of the event object and set this value as the value of a property of the target object. In the following example we create an
ActionListener that sets the "label" property of the target object to the value of the "text" property of the source (the value of the "source" property) of the event.
This would correspond to the following inner class implementation:EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, myButton, "label", "source.text")
//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler.
new ActionListener {
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
myButton.setLabel(((JTextField)e.getSource()).getText());
}
}
The event property may be "qualified" with an arbitrary number of property prefixes delimited with the "." character. The "qualifying" names that appear before the "." characters are taken as the names of properties that should be applied, left-most first, to the event object.
For example, the following action listener
might be written as the following inner class (assuming all the properties had canonical getter methods and returned the appropriate types):EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, target, "a", "b.c.d")
//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler.
new ActionListener {
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
target.setA(e.getB().getC().isD());
}
}
The target property may also be "qualified" with an arbitrary number of property prefixs delimited with the "." character. For example, the following action listener:
EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, target, "a.b", "c.d")might be written as the following inner class (assuming all the properties had canonical getter methods and returned the appropriate types):
//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler.
new ActionListener {
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
target.getA().setB(e.getC().isD());
}
}
As EventHandler ultimately relies on reflection to invoke a method we recommend against targeting an overloaded method. For example, if the target is an instance of the class MyTarget which is defined as:
public class MyTarget {
public void doIt(String);
public void doIt(Object);
}
Then the method
doIt is overloaded. EventHandler will invoke the method that is appropriate based on the source. If the source is null, then either method is appropriate and the one that is invoked is undefined. For that reason we recommend against targeting overloaded methods.
Proxy,
EventObject
| Constructor and Description |
|---|
EventHandler(Object
Creates a new
EventHandler object; you generally use one of the
create methods instead of invoking this constructor directly.
|
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
static <T> T |
create(Class
Creates an implementation of
listenerInterface in which
all of the methods in the listener interface apply the handler's
action to the
target.
|
static <T> T |
create(Class
/** Creates an implementation of
listenerInterface in which
all of the methods pass the value of the event expression,
eventPropertyName, to the final method in the statement,
action, which is applied to the
target.
|
static <T> T |
create(Class
Creates an implementation of
listenerInterface in which the method named
listenerMethodName passes the value of the event expression,
eventPropertyName, to the final method in the statement,
action, which is applied to the
target.
|
String |
getAction()
Returns the name of the target's writable property that this event handler will set, or the name of the method that this event handler will invoke on the target.
|
String |
getEventPropertyName()
Returns the property of the event that should be used in the action applied to the target.
|
String |
getListenerMethodName()
Returns the name of the method that will trigger the action.
|
Object |
getTarget()
Returns the object to which this event handler will send a message.
|
Object |
invoke(Object
Extract the appropriate property value from the event and pass it to the action associated with this
EventHandler.
|
@ConstructorProperties(value={"target","action","eventPropertyName","listenerMethodName"}) public EventHandler(Objecttarget, String action, String eventPropertyName, String listenerMethodName)
EventHandler object; you generally use one of the
create methods instead of invoking this constructor directly. Refer to
the general version of create for a complete description of the
eventPropertyName and
listenerMethodName parameter.
target - the object that will perform the action
action - the name of a (possibly qualified) property or method on the target
eventPropertyName - the (possibly qualified) name of a readable property of the incoming event
listenerMethodName - the name of the method in the listener interface that should trigger the action
NullPointerException - if
target is null
NullPointerException - if
action is null
EventHandler,
create(Class, Object, String, String, String),
getTarget(),
getAction(),
getEventPropertyName(),
getListenerMethodName()
public ObjectgetTarget()
EventHandler(Object, String, String, String)
public StringgetAction()
EventHandler(Object, String, String, String)
public StringgetEventPropertyName()
EventHandler(Object, String, String, String)
public StringgetListenerMethodName()
null signifies that all methods in the listener interface trigger the action.
EventHandler(Object, String, String, String)
public Objectinvoke(Object proxy, Method method, Object [] arguments)
EventHandler.
invoke in interface
InvocationHandler
proxy - the proxy object
method - the method in the listener interface
arguments - an array of objects containing the values of the arguments passed in the method invocation on the proxy instance, or
null if interface method takes no arguments. Arguments of primitive types are wrapped in instances of the appropriate primitive wrapper class, such as
java.lang.Integer or
java.lang.Boolean.
EventHandler
public static <T> T create(Class<T> listenerInterface, Object target, String action)
listenerInterface in which
all of the methods in the listener interface apply the handler's
action to the
target. This method is implemented by calling the other, more general, implementation of the
create method with both the
eventPropertyName and the
listenerMethodName taking the value
null. Refer to
the general version of create for a complete description of the
action parameter.
To create an ActionListener that shows a JDialog with dialog.show(), one can write:
EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, dialog, "show")
T - the type to create
listenerInterface - the listener interface to create a proxy for
target - the object that will perform the action
action - the name of a (possibly qualified) property or method on the target
listenerInterface
NullPointerException - if
listenerInterface is null
NullPointerException - if
target is null
NullPointerException - if
action is null
create(Class, Object, String, String)
public static <T> T create(Class<T> listenerInterface, Object target, String action, String eventPropertyName)
listenerInterface in which
all of the methods pass the value of the event expression,
eventPropertyName, to the final method in the statement,
action, which is applied to the
target. This method is implemented by calling the more general, implementation of the
create method with the
listenerMethodName taking the value
null. Refer to
the general version of create for a complete description of the
action and
eventPropertyName parameters.
To create an ActionListener that sets the the text of a JLabel to the text value of the JTextField source of the incoming event, you can use the following code:
This is equivalent to the following code:EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, label, "text", "source.text");
//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler.
new ActionListener() {
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent event) {
label.setText(((JTextField)(event.getSource())).getText());
}
};
T - the type to create
listenerInterface - the listener interface to create a proxy for
target - the object that will perform the action
action - the name of a (possibly qualified) property or method on the target
eventPropertyName - the (possibly qualified) name of a readable property of the incoming event
listenerInterface
NullPointerException - if
listenerInterface is null
NullPointerException - if
target is null
NullPointerException - if
action is null
create(Class, Object, String, String, String)
public static <T> T create(Class<T> listenerInterface, Object target, String action, String eventPropertyName, String listenerMethodName)
listenerInterface in which the method named
listenerMethodName passes the value of the event expression,
eventPropertyName, to the final method in the statement,
action, which is applied to the
target. All of the other listener methods do nothing.
The eventPropertyName string is used to extract a value from the incoming event object that is passed to the target method. The common case is the target method takes no arguments, in which case a value of null should be used for the eventPropertyName. Alternatively if you want the incoming event object passed directly to the target method use the empty string. The format of the eventPropertyName string is a sequence of methods or properties where each method or property is applied to the value returned by the preceding method starting from the incoming event object. The syntax is: propertyName{.propertyName}* where propertyName matches a method or property. For example, to extract the point property from a MouseEvent, you could use either "point" or "getPoint" as the eventPropertyName. To extract the "text" property from a MouseEvent with a JLabel source use any of the following as eventPropertyName: "source.text", "getSource.text" "getSource.getText" or "source.getText". If a method can not be found, or an exception is generated as part of invoking a method a RuntimeException will be thrown at dispatch time. For example, if the incoming event object is null, and eventPropertyName is non-null and not empty, a RuntimeException will be thrown.
The action argument is of the same format as the eventPropertyName argument where the last property name identifies either a method name or writable property.
If the listenerMethodName is null all methods in the interface trigger the action to be executed on the target.
For example, to create a MouseListener that sets the target object's origin property to the incoming MouseEvent's location (that's the value of mouseEvent.getPoint()) each time a mouse button is pressed, one would write:
This is comparable to writing aEventHandler.create(MouseListener.class, target, "origin", "point", "mousePressed");
MouseListener in which all of the methods except
mousePressed are no-ops:
//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler.
new MouseAdapter() {
public void mousePressed(MouseEvent e) {
target.setOrigin(e.getPoint());
}
};
T - the type to create
listenerInterface - the listener interface to create a proxy for
target - the object that will perform the action
action - the name of a (possibly qualified) property or method on the target
eventPropertyName - the (possibly qualified) name of a readable property of the incoming event
listenerMethodName - the name of the method in the listener interface that should trigger the action
listenerInterface
NullPointerException - if
listenerInterface is null
NullPointerException - if
target is null
NullPointerException - if
action is null
EventHandler