T
- the result type returned by this SwingWorker's
doInBackground
and get
methodsV
- the type used for carrying out intermediate results by this
SwingWorker's
publish
and process
methodspublic abstract class SwingWorker<T,V> extends Object implements RunnableFuture<T>
SwingWorker
is unspecified and should not be relied on.
When writing a multi-threaded application using Swing, there are two constraints to keep in mind: (refer to How to Use Threads for more details):
These constraints mean that a GUI application with time intensive computing needs at least two threads: 1) a thread to perform the lengthy task and 2) the Event Dispatch Thread (EDT) for all GUI-related activities. This involves inter-thread communication which can be tricky to implement.
SwingWorker
is designed for situations where you need to have a long
running task run in a background thread and provide updates to the UI
either when done, or while processing.
Subclasses of SwingWorker
must implement
the doInBackground()
method to perform the background computation.
Workflow
There are three threads involved in the life cycle of a
SwingWorker
:
Current thread: The execute()
method is
called on this thread. It schedules SwingWorker
for the execution on a
worker
thread and returns immediately. One can wait for the SwingWorker
to
complete using the get
methods.
Worker thread: The doInBackground()
method is called on this thread.
This is where all background activities should happen. To notify
PropertyChangeListeners
about bound properties changes use the
firePropertyChange
and
getPropertyChangeSupport()
methods. By default there are two bound
properties available: state
and progress
.
Event Dispatch Thread: All Swing related activities occur
on this thread. SwingWorker
invokes the
process
and done()
methods and notifies
any PropertyChangeListeners
on this thread.
Often, the Current thread is the Event Dispatch Thread.
Before the doInBackground
method is invoked on a worker thread,
SwingWorker
notifies any PropertyChangeListeners
about the
state
property change to StateValue.STARTED
. After the
doInBackground
method is finished the done
method is
executed. Then SwingWorker
notifies any PropertyChangeListeners
about the state
property change to StateValue.DONE
.
SwingWorker
is only designed to be executed once. Executing a
SwingWorker
more than once will not result in invoking the
doInBackground
method twice.
Sample Usage
The following example illustrates the simplest use case. Some processing is done in the background and when done you update a Swing component.
Say we want to find the "Meaning of Life" and display the result in
a JLabel
.
final JLabel label; class MeaningOfLifeFinder extends SwingWorker<String, Object> {@Override
public String doInBackground() { return findTheMeaningOfLife(); }@Override
protected void done() { try { label.setText(get()); } catch (Exception ignore) { } } } (new MeaningOfLifeFinder()).execute();
The next example is useful in situations where you wish to process data as it is ready on the Event Dispatch Thread.
Now we want to find the first N prime numbers and display the results in a
JTextArea
. While this is computing, we want to update our
progress in a JProgressBar
. Finally, we also want to print
the prime numbers to System.out
.
class PrimeNumbersTask extends SwingWorker<List<Integer>, Integer> { PrimeNumbersTask(JTextArea textArea, int numbersToFind) { //initialize }@Override
public List<Integer> doInBackground() { while (! enough && ! isCancelled()) { number = nextPrimeNumber(); publish(number); setProgress(100 * numbers.size() / numbersToFind); } } return numbers; }@Override
protected void process(List<Integer> chunks) { for (int number : chunks) { textArea.append(number + "\n"); } } } JTextArea textArea = new JTextArea(); final JProgressBar progressBar = new JProgressBar(0, 100); PrimeNumbersTask task = new PrimeNumbersTask(textArea, N); task.addPropertyChangeListener( new PropertyChangeListener() { public void propertyChange(PropertyChangeEvent evt) { if ("progress".equals(evt.getPropertyName())) { progressBar.setValue((Integer)evt.getNewValue()); } } }); task.execute(); System.out.println(task.get()); //prints all prime numbers we have got
Because SwingWorker
implements Runnable
, a
SwingWorker
can be submitted to an
Executor
for execution.
Modifier and Type | Class and Description |
---|---|
static class |
SwingWorker.StateValue
Values for the
state bound property. |
Constructor and Description |
---|
SwingWorker()
Constructs this
SwingWorker . |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
void |
addPropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener listener)
Adds a
PropertyChangeListener to the listener list. |
boolean |
cancel(boolean mayInterruptIfRunning)
Attempts to cancel execution of this task.
|
protected abstract T |
doInBackground()
Computes a result, or throws an exception if unable to do so.
|
protected void |
done()
Executed on the Event Dispatch Thread after the
doInBackground
method is finished. |
void |
execute()
Schedules this
SwingWorker for execution on a worker
thread. |
void |
firePropertyChange(String propertyName,
Object oldValue,
Object newValue)
Reports a bound property update to any registered listeners.
|
T |
get()
Waits if necessary for the computation to complete, and then
retrieves its result.
|
T |
get(long timeout,
TimeUnit unit)
Waits if necessary for at most the given time for the computation
to complete, and then retrieves its result, if available.
|
int |
getProgress()
Returns the
progress bound property. |
PropertyChangeSupport |
getPropertyChangeSupport()
Returns the
PropertyChangeSupport for this SwingWorker . |
SwingWorker.StateValue |
getState()
Returns the
SwingWorker state bound property. |
boolean |
isCancelled()
Returns true if this task was cancelled before it completed
normally.
|
boolean |
isDone()
Returns true if this task completed.
|
protected void |
process(List<V> chunks)
Receives data chunks from the
publish method asynchronously on the
Event Dispatch Thread. |
protected void |
publish(V... chunks)
Sends data chunks to the
process(java.util.List<V>) method. |
void |
removePropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener listener)
Removes a
PropertyChangeListener from the listener list. |
void |
run()
Sets this
Future to the result of computation unless
it has been cancelled. |
protected void |
setProgress(int progress)
Sets the
progress bound property. |
protected abstract T doInBackground() throws Exception
Note that this method is executed only once.
Note: this method is executed in a background thread.
Exception
- if unable to compute a resultpublic final void run()
Future
to the result of computation unless
it has been cancelled.run
in interface Runnable
run
in interface RunnableFuture<T>
Thread.run()
@SafeVarargs protected final void publish(V... chunks)
process(java.util.List<V>)
method. This method is to be
used from inside the doInBackground
method to deliver
intermediate results
for processing on the Event Dispatch Thread inside the
process
method.
Because the process
method is invoked asynchronously on
the Event Dispatch Thread
multiple invocations to the publish
method
might occur before the process
method is executed. For
performance purposes all these invocations are coalesced into one
invocation with concatenated arguments.
For example:
publish("1"); publish("2", "3"); publish("4", "5", "6");might result in:
process("1", "2", "3", "4", "5", "6")
Sample Usage. This code snippet loads some tabular data and
updates DefaultTableModel
with it. Note that it safe to mutate
the tableModel from inside the process
method because it is
invoked on the Event Dispatch Thread.
class TableSwingWorker extends SwingWorker<DefaultTableModel, Object[]> { private final DefaultTableModel tableModel; public TableSwingWorker(DefaultTableModel tableModel) { this.tableModel = tableModel; }@Override
protected DefaultTableModel doInBackground() throws Exception { for (Object[] row = loadData(); ! isCancelled() && row != null; row = loadData()) { publish((Object[]) row); } return tableModel; }@Override
protected void process(List<Object[]> chunks) { for (Object[] row : chunks) { tableModel.addRow(row); } } }
chunks
- intermediate results to processprocess(java.util.List<V>)
protected void process(List<V> chunks)
publish
method asynchronously on the
Event Dispatch Thread.
Please refer to the publish(V...)
method for more details.
chunks
- intermediate results to processpublish(V...)
protected void done()
doInBackground
method is finished. The default
implementation does nothing. Subclasses may override this method to
perform completion actions on the Event Dispatch Thread. Note
that you can query status inside the implementation of this method to
determine the result of this task or whether this task has been cancelled.doInBackground()
,
isCancelled()
,
get()
protected final void setProgress(int progress)
progress
bound property.
The value should be from 0 to 100.
Because PropertyChangeListener
s are notified asynchronously on
the Event Dispatch Thread multiple invocations to the
setProgress
method might occur before any
PropertyChangeListeners
are invoked. For performance purposes
all these invocations are coalesced into one invocation with the last
invocation argument only.
For example, the following invokations:
setProgress(1); setProgress(2); setProgress(3);might result in a single
PropertyChangeListener
notification with
the value 3
.progress
- the progress value to setIllegalArgumentException
- is value not from 0 to 100public final int getProgress()
progress
bound property.public final void execute()
SwingWorker
for execution on a worker
thread. There are a number of worker threads available. In the
event all worker threads are busy handling other
SwingWorkers
this SwingWorker
is placed in a waiting
queue.
Note:
SwingWorker
is only designed to be executed once. Executing a
SwingWorker
more than once will not result in invoking the
doInBackground
method twice.
public final boolean cancel(boolean mayInterruptIfRunning)
After this method returns, subsequent calls to Future.isDone()
will
always return true. Subsequent calls to Future.isCancelled()
will always return true if this method returned true.
cancel
in interface Future<T>
mayInterruptIfRunning
- true if the thread executing this
task should be interrupted; otherwise, in-progress tasks are allowed
to completepublic final boolean isCancelled()
isCancelled
in interface Future<T>
public final boolean isDone()
public final T get() throws InterruptedException, ExecutionException
Note: calling get
on the Event Dispatch Thread blocks
all events, including repaints, from being processed until this
SwingWorker
is complete.
When you want the SwingWorker
to block on the Event
Dispatch Thread we recommend that you use a modal dialog.
For example:
class SwingWorkerCompletionWaiter extends PropertyChangeListener { private JDialog dialog; public SwingWorkerCompletionWaiter(JDialog dialog) { this.dialog = dialog; } public void propertyChange(PropertyChangeEvent event) { if ("state".equals(event.getPropertyName()) && SwingWorker.StateValue.DONE == event.getNewValue()) { dialog.setVisible(false); dialog.dispose(); } } } JDialog dialog = new JDialog(owner, true); swingWorker.addPropertyChangeListener( new SwingWorkerCompletionWaiter(dialog)); swingWorker.execute(); //the dialog will be visible until the SwingWorker is done dialog.setVisible(true);
get
in interface Future<T>
InterruptedException
- if the current thread was interrupted
while waitingExecutionException
- if the computation threw an
exceptionpublic final T get(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException, ExecutionException, TimeoutException
Please refer to get()
for more details.
get
in interface Future<T>
timeout
- the maximum time to waitunit
- the time unit of the timeout argumentInterruptedException
- if the current thread was interrupted
while waitingExecutionException
- if the computation threw an
exceptionTimeoutException
- if the wait timed outpublic final void addPropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener listener)
PropertyChangeListener
to the listener list. The listener
is registered for all properties. The same listener object may be added
more than once, and will be called as many times as it is added. If
listener
is null
, no exception is thrown and no action is taken.
Note: This is merely a convenience wrapper. All work is delegated to
PropertyChangeSupport
from getPropertyChangeSupport()
.
listener
- the PropertyChangeListener
to be addedpublic final void removePropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener listener)
PropertyChangeListener
from the listener list. This
removes a PropertyChangeListener
that was registered for all
properties. If listener
was added more than once to the same
event source, it will be notified one less time after being removed. If
listener
is null
, or was never added, no exception is
thrown and no action is taken.
Note: This is merely a convenience wrapper. All work is delegated to
PropertyChangeSupport
from getPropertyChangeSupport()
.
listener
- the PropertyChangeListener
to be removedpublic final void firePropertyChange(String propertyName, Object oldValue, Object newValue)
old
and new
are equal and non-null.
This SwingWorker
will be the source for
any generated events.
When called off the Event Dispatch Thread
PropertyChangeListeners
are notified asynchronously on
the Event Dispatch Thread.
Note: This is merely a convenience wrapper. All work is delegated to
PropertyChangeSupport
from getPropertyChangeSupport()
.
propertyName
- the programmatic name of the property that was
changedoldValue
- the old value of the propertynewValue
- the new value of the propertypublic final PropertyChangeSupport getPropertyChangeSupport()
PropertyChangeSupport
for this SwingWorker
.
This method is used when flexible access to bound properties support is
needed.
This SwingWorker
will be the source for
any generated events.
Note: The returned PropertyChangeSupport
notifies any
PropertyChangeListener
s asynchronously on the Event Dispatch
Thread in the event that firePropertyChange
or
fireIndexedPropertyChange
are called off the Event Dispatch
Thread.
PropertyChangeSupport
for this SwingWorker
public final SwingWorker.StateValue getState()
SwingWorker
state bound property. Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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