I'm in the process of creating a GUI in Netbeans 6.1 for my senior design project but i've run into an annoying snag. Temporary Windows like my login PopUp and others wont disappear when i tell it. I've been researching how to solve this for about 2 months on an off. I've even mad a separate thread for my Pop Up but it still wont work....the only way it will disappear if i literally dont mess with any of the other GUI components....my sample code should help describe my anger...dont mind the shadow code, it was for testing purposes, which obviously didnt help.
//This method is called once a user presses the "first" login button on the main GUI
public synchronized void loginPopUpThread() {
doHelloWorld = new Thread(){
@Override
public synchronized void run()
{
try
{
loginPopUpFrame.pack();
loginPopUpFrame.setVisible(true);
System.out.println("waitin");
doHelloWorld.wait();
System.out.println("Not Sleepin..");
loginPopUpFrame.pack();
loginPopUpFrame.setVisible(false);
}
catch (InterruptedException e)
{
}
}
};
doHelloWorld.start();
//This is called when the "second" loginB is pressed and the password is correct...
public synchronized void notifyPopUp() {
synchronized(doHelloWorld) {
doHelloWorld.notifyAll();
System.out.println("Notified");
}
}
I've also tried Swing Utilities but maybe i implemented it wrong as it's my first time using them. It essentially does the same thing as the code above except the window freezes when it gets to wait, which the above code doesnt do:
javax.swing.SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
public synchronized void run() {
try
{
loginPopUpFrame.pack();
loginPopUpFrame.setVisible(true);
System.out.println("waitin");
wait();
System.out.println("Not Sleepin.");
loginPopUpFrame.pack();
loginPopUpFrame.setVisible(false);
}
catch (InterruptedException e)
{
}
}
});
PLEASE HELP ME!!!
Rules of thumb:
So the answer to how you solve this problem is "some other way"...
Standing back from the problem a bit, what is it you're actually trying to do? If you just want a login dialog to wait for the user to enter user name and password, is there a reason not to just use a modal JDialog (after all, that's what it's there for...).
If you really do want some arbitrary thread to wait for a signal to close the window/manipulate the GUI, then you need to do the waiting in the other thread, and then make that thread call SwingUtilities.invokeLater() with the actual GUI manipulation code.
P.S. There are actually some GUI manipulation methods that it is safe to call from other threads, e.g. calls that are "just setting a label" are often safe. But which calls are safe isn't terribly well-defined, so it's best just to avoid the issue in practice.