1 |
771 |
jeremybenn |
/* java.beans.EventHandler
|
2 |
|
|
Copyright (C) 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
|
3 |
|
|
|
4 |
|
|
This file is part of GNU Classpath.
|
5 |
|
|
|
6 |
|
|
GNU Classpath is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
|
7 |
|
|
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
|
8 |
|
|
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
|
9 |
|
|
any later version.
|
10 |
|
|
|
11 |
|
|
GNU Classpath is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
|
12 |
|
|
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
|
13 |
|
|
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
|
14 |
|
|
General Public License for more details.
|
15 |
|
|
|
16 |
|
|
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
|
17 |
|
|
along with GNU Classpath; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
|
18 |
|
|
Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
|
19 |
|
|
02110-1301 USA.
|
20 |
|
|
|
21 |
|
|
Linking this library statically or dynamically with other modules is
|
22 |
|
|
making a combined work based on this library. Thus, the terms and
|
23 |
|
|
conditions of the GNU General Public License cover the whole
|
24 |
|
|
combination.
|
25 |
|
|
|
26 |
|
|
As a special exception, the copyright holders of this library give you
|
27 |
|
|
permission to link this library with independent modules to produce an
|
28 |
|
|
executable, regardless of the license terms of these independent
|
29 |
|
|
modules, and to copy and distribute the resulting executable under
|
30 |
|
|
terms of your choice, provided that you also meet, for each linked
|
31 |
|
|
independent module, the terms and conditions of the license of that
|
32 |
|
|
module. An independent module is a module which is not derived from
|
33 |
|
|
or based on this library. If you modify this library, you may extend
|
34 |
|
|
this exception to your version of the library, but you are not
|
35 |
|
|
obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do so, delete this
|
36 |
|
|
exception statement from your version. */
|
37 |
|
|
|
38 |
|
|
|
39 |
|
|
package java.beans;
|
40 |
|
|
|
41 |
|
|
import java.lang.reflect.InvocationHandler;
|
42 |
|
|
import java.lang.reflect.InvocationTargetException;
|
43 |
|
|
import java.lang.reflect.Method;
|
44 |
|
|
import java.lang.reflect.Proxy;
|
45 |
|
|
|
46 |
|
|
/**
|
47 |
|
|
* <p>EventHandler forms a bridge between dynamically created listeners and
|
48 |
|
|
* arbitrary properties and methods.</p>
|
49 |
|
|
*
|
50 |
|
|
* <p>You can use this class to easily create listener implementations for
|
51 |
|
|
* some basic interactions between an event source and its target. Using
|
52 |
|
|
* the three static methods named <code>create</code> you can create
|
53 |
|
|
* these listener implementations.</p>
|
54 |
|
|
*
|
55 |
|
|
* <p>See the documentation of each method for usage examples.</p>
|
56 |
|
|
*
|
57 |
|
|
* @author Jerry Quinn (jlquinn@optonline.net)
|
58 |
|
|
* @author Robert Schuster (thebohemian@gmx.net)
|
59 |
|
|
* @since 1.4
|
60 |
|
|
*/
|
61 |
|
|
public class EventHandler implements InvocationHandler
|
62 |
|
|
{
|
63 |
|
|
// The name of the method that will be implemented. If null, any method.
|
64 |
|
|
private String listenerMethod;
|
65 |
|
|
|
66 |
|
|
// The object to call action on.
|
67 |
|
|
private Object target;
|
68 |
|
|
|
69 |
|
|
// The name of the method or property setter in target.
|
70 |
|
|
private String action;
|
71 |
|
|
|
72 |
|
|
// The property to extract from an event passed to listenerMethod.
|
73 |
|
|
private String property;
|
74 |
|
|
|
75 |
|
|
// The target objects Class.
|
76 |
|
|
private Class targetClass;
|
77 |
|
|
|
78 |
|
|
// String class doesn't already have a capitalize routine.
|
79 |
|
|
private String capitalize(String s)
|
80 |
|
|
{
|
81 |
|
|
return s.substring(0, 1).toUpperCase() + s.substring(1);
|
82 |
|
|
}
|
83 |
|
|
|
84 |
|
|
/**
|
85 |
|
|
* Creates a new <code>EventHandler</code> instance.
|
86 |
|
|
*
|
87 |
|
|
* <p>Typical creation is done with the create method, not by knewing an
|
88 |
|
|
* EventHandler.</p>
|
89 |
|
|
*
|
90 |
|
|
* <p>This constructs an EventHandler that will connect the method
|
91 |
|
|
* listenerMethodName to target.action, extracting eventPropertyName from
|
92 |
|
|
* the first argument of listenerMethodName. and sending it to action.</p>
|
93 |
|
|
*
|
94 |
|
|
* <p>Throws a <code>NullPointerException</code> if the <code>target</code>
|
95 |
|
|
* argument is <code>null</code>.
|
96 |
|
|
*
|
97 |
|
|
* @param target Object that will perform the action.
|
98 |
|
|
* @param action A property or method of the target.
|
99 |
|
|
* @param eventPropertyName A readable property of the inbound event.
|
100 |
|
|
* @param listenerMethodName The listener method name triggering the action.
|
101 |
|
|
*/
|
102 |
|
|
public EventHandler(Object target, String action, String eventPropertyName,
|
103 |
|
|
String listenerMethodName)
|
104 |
|
|
{
|
105 |
|
|
this.target = target;
|
106 |
|
|
|
107 |
|
|
// Retrieving the class is done for two reasons:
|
108 |
|
|
// 1) The class object is needed very frequently in the invoke() method.
|
109 |
|
|
// 2) The constructor should throw a NullPointerException if target is null.
|
110 |
|
|
targetClass = target.getClass();
|
111 |
|
|
|
112 |
|
|
this.action = action; // Turn this into a method or do we wait till
|
113 |
|
|
// runtime
|
114 |
|
|
property = eventPropertyName;
|
115 |
|
|
listenerMethod = listenerMethodName;
|
116 |
|
|
}
|
117 |
|
|
|
118 |
|
|
/**
|
119 |
|
|
* Returns the event property name.
|
120 |
|
|
*/
|
121 |
|
|
public String getEventPropertyName()
|
122 |
|
|
{
|
123 |
|
|
return property;
|
124 |
|
|
}
|
125 |
|
|
|
126 |
|
|
/**
|
127 |
|
|
* Returns the listener's method name.
|
128 |
|
|
*/
|
129 |
|
|
public String getListenerMethodName()
|
130 |
|
|
{
|
131 |
|
|
return listenerMethod;
|
132 |
|
|
}
|
133 |
|
|
|
134 |
|
|
/**
|
135 |
|
|
* Returns the target object.
|
136 |
|
|
*/
|
137 |
|
|
public Object getTarget()
|
138 |
|
|
{
|
139 |
|
|
return target;
|
140 |
|
|
}
|
141 |
|
|
|
142 |
|
|
/**
|
143 |
|
|
* Returns the action method name.
|
144 |
|
|
*/
|
145 |
|
|
public String getAction()
|
146 |
|
|
{
|
147 |
|
|
return action;
|
148 |
|
|
}
|
149 |
|
|
|
150 |
|
|
// Fetch a qualified property like a.b.c from object o. The properties can
|
151 |
|
|
// be boolean isProp or object getProp properties.
|
152 |
|
|
//
|
153 |
|
|
// Returns a length 2 array with the first entry containing the value
|
154 |
|
|
// extracted from the property, and the second entry contains the class of
|
155 |
|
|
// the method return type.
|
156 |
|
|
//
|
157 |
|
|
// We play this game because if the method returns a native type, the return
|
158 |
|
|
// value will be a wrapper. If we then take the type of the wrapper and use
|
159 |
|
|
// it to locate the action method that takes the native type, it won't match.
|
160 |
|
|
private Object[] getProperty(Object o, String prop)
|
161 |
|
|
{
|
162 |
|
|
// Isolate the first property name from a.b.c.
|
163 |
|
|
int pos;
|
164 |
|
|
String rest = null;
|
165 |
|
|
if ((pos = prop.indexOf('.')) != -1)
|
166 |
|
|
{
|
167 |
|
|
rest = prop.substring(pos + 1);
|
168 |
|
|
prop = prop.substring(0, pos);
|
169 |
|
|
}
|
170 |
|
|
|
171 |
|
|
// Find a method named getProp. It could be isProp instead.
|
172 |
|
|
Method getter;
|
173 |
|
|
try
|
174 |
|
|
{
|
175 |
|
|
// Look for boolean property getter isProperty
|
176 |
|
|
getter = o.getClass().getMethod("is" + capitalize(prop));
|
177 |
|
|
}
|
178 |
|
|
catch (NoSuchMethodException nsme1)
|
179 |
|
|
{
|
180 |
|
|
try {
|
181 |
|
|
// Look for regular property getter getProperty
|
182 |
|
|
getter = o.getClass().getMethod("get" + capitalize(prop));
|
183 |
|
|
} catch(NoSuchMethodException nsme2) {
|
184 |
|
|
try {
|
185 |
|
|
// Finally look for a method of the name prop
|
186 |
|
|
getter = o.getClass().getMethod(prop);
|
187 |
|
|
} catch(NoSuchMethodException nsme3) {
|
188 |
|
|
// Ok, give up with an intelligent hint for the user.
|
189 |
|
|
throw new RuntimeException("Method not called: Could not find a property or method '" + prop
|
190 |
|
|
+ "' in " + o.getClass() + " while following the property argument '" + property + "'.");
|
191 |
|
|
}
|
192 |
|
|
}
|
193 |
|
|
}
|
194 |
|
|
try {
|
195 |
|
|
Object val = getter.invoke(o);
|
196 |
|
|
|
197 |
|
|
if (rest != null)
|
198 |
|
|
return getProperty(val, rest);
|
199 |
|
|
|
200 |
|
|
return new Object[] {val, getter.getReturnType()};
|
201 |
|
|
} catch(InvocationTargetException ite) {
|
202 |
|
|
throw new RuntimeException("Method not called: Property or method '" + prop + "' has thrown an exception.", ite);
|
203 |
|
|
} catch(IllegalAccessException iae) {
|
204 |
|
|
// This cannot happen because we looked up method with Class.getMethod()
|
205 |
|
|
// which returns public methods only.
|
206 |
|
|
throw (InternalError) new InternalError("Non-public method was invoked.").initCause(iae);
|
207 |
|
|
}
|
208 |
|
|
}
|
209 |
|
|
|
210 |
|
|
/**
|
211 |
|
|
* Invokes the <code>EventHandler</code>.
|
212 |
|
|
*
|
213 |
|
|
* <p>This method is normally called by the listener's proxy implementation.</p>
|
214 |
|
|
*
|
215 |
|
|
* @param proxy The listener interface that is implemented using
|
216 |
|
|
* the proxy mechanism.
|
217 |
|
|
* @param method The method that was called on the proxy instance.
|
218 |
|
|
* @param arguments The arguments which where given to the method.
|
219 |
|
|
* @throws Throwable <code>NoSuchMethodException</code> is thrown when the EventHandler's
|
220 |
|
|
* action method or property cannot be found.
|
221 |
|
|
*/
|
222 |
|
|
public Object invoke(Object proxy, Method method, Object[] arguments)
|
223 |
|
|
{
|
224 |
|
|
try {
|
225 |
|
|
// The method instance of the target object. We have to find out which
|
226 |
|
|
// one we have to invoke.
|
227 |
|
|
Method actionMethod = null;
|
228 |
|
|
|
229 |
|
|
// Listener methods that weren't specified are ignored. If listenerMethod
|
230 |
|
|
// is null, then all listener methods are processed.
|
231 |
|
|
if (listenerMethod != null && !method.getName().equals(listenerMethod))
|
232 |
|
|
return null;
|
233 |
|
|
|
234 |
|
|
// If a property is defined we definitely need a valid object at
|
235 |
|
|
// arguments[0] that can be used to retrieve a value to which the
|
236 |
|
|
// property of the target gets set.
|
237 |
|
|
if(property != null) {
|
238 |
|
|
// Extracts the argument. We will let it fail with a NullPointerException
|
239 |
|
|
// the caller used a listener method that has no arguments.
|
240 |
|
|
Object event = arguments[0];
|
241 |
|
|
|
242 |
|
|
// Obtains the property XXX propertyType keeps showing up null - why?
|
243 |
|
|
// because the object inside getProperty changes, but the ref variable
|
244 |
|
|
// can't change this way, dolt! need a better way to get both values out
|
245 |
|
|
// - need method and object to do the invoke and get return type
|
246 |
|
|
Object v[] = getProperty(event, property);
|
247 |
|
|
Object[] args = new Object[] { v[0] };
|
248 |
|
|
|
249 |
|
|
// Changes the class array that controls which method signature we are going
|
250 |
|
|
// to look up in the target object.
|
251 |
|
|
Class[] argTypes = new Class[] { initClass((Class) v[1]) };
|
252 |
|
|
|
253 |
|
|
// Tries to find a setter method to which we can apply the
|
254 |
|
|
while(argTypes[0] != null) {
|
255 |
|
|
try
|
256 |
|
|
{
|
257 |
|
|
// Look for a property setter for action.
|
258 |
|
|
actionMethod = targetClass.getMethod("set" + capitalize(action), argTypes);
|
259 |
|
|
|
260 |
|
|
return actionMethod.invoke(target, args);
|
261 |
|
|
}
|
262 |
|
|
catch (NoSuchMethodException e)
|
263 |
|
|
{
|
264 |
|
|
// If action as property didn't work, try as method later.
|
265 |
|
|
}
|
266 |
|
|
|
267 |
|
|
argTypes[0] = nextClass(argTypes[0]);
|
268 |
|
|
}
|
269 |
|
|
|
270 |
|
|
// We could not find a suitable setter method. Now we try again interpreting
|
271 |
|
|
// action as the method name itself.
|
272 |
|
|
// Since we probably have changed the block local argTypes array
|
273 |
|
|
// we need to rebuild it.
|
274 |
|
|
argTypes = new Class[] { initClass((Class) v[1]) };
|
275 |
|
|
|
276 |
|
|
// Tries to find a setter method to which we can apply the
|
277 |
|
|
while(argTypes[0] != null) {
|
278 |
|
|
try
|
279 |
|
|
{
|
280 |
|
|
actionMethod = targetClass.getMethod(action, argTypes);
|
281 |
|
|
|
282 |
|
|
return actionMethod.invoke(target, args);
|
283 |
|
|
}
|
284 |
|
|
catch (NoSuchMethodException e)
|
285 |
|
|
{
|
286 |
|
|
}
|
287 |
|
|
|
288 |
|
|
argTypes[0] = nextClass(argTypes[0]);
|
289 |
|
|
}
|
290 |
|
|
|
291 |
|
|
throw new RuntimeException("Method not called: Could not find a public method named '"
|
292 |
|
|
+ action + "' in target " + targetClass + " which takes a '"
|
293 |
|
|
+ v[1] + "' argument or a property of this type.");
|
294 |
|
|
}
|
295 |
|
|
|
296 |
|
|
// If property was null we will search for a no-argument method here.
|
297 |
|
|
// Note: The ordering of method lookups is important because we want to prefer no-argument
|
298 |
|
|
// calls like the JDK does. This means if we have actionMethod() and actionMethod(Event) we will
|
299 |
|
|
// call the first *EVEN* if we have a valid argument for the second method. This is behavior compliant
|
300 |
|
|
// to the JDK.
|
301 |
|
|
// If actionMethod() is not available but there is a actionMethod(Event) we take this. That makes us
|
302 |
|
|
// more specification compliant than the JDK itself because this one will fail in such a case.
|
303 |
|
|
try
|
304 |
|
|
{
|
305 |
|
|
actionMethod = targetClass.getMethod(action);
|
306 |
|
|
}
|
307 |
|
|
catch(NoSuchMethodException nsme)
|
308 |
|
|
{
|
309 |
|
|
// Note: If we want to be really strict the specification says that a no-argument method should
|
310 |
|
|
// accept an EventObject (or subclass I guess). However since the official implementation is broken
|
311 |
|
|
// anyways, it's more flexible without the EventObject restriction and we are compatible on everything
|
312 |
|
|
// else this can stay this way.
|
313 |
|
|
if(arguments != null && arguments.length >= 1/* && arguments[0] instanceof EventObject*/) {
|
314 |
|
|
Class[] targetArgTypes = new Class[] { initClass(arguments[0].getClass()) };
|
315 |
|
|
|
316 |
|
|
while(targetArgTypes[0] != null) {
|
317 |
|
|
try
|
318 |
|
|
{
|
319 |
|
|
// If no property exists we expect the first element of the arguments to be
|
320 |
|
|
// an EventObject which is then applied to the target method.
|
321 |
|
|
|
322 |
|
|
actionMethod = targetClass.getMethod(action, targetArgTypes);
|
323 |
|
|
|
324 |
|
|
return actionMethod.invoke(target, new Object[] { arguments[0] });
|
325 |
|
|
}
|
326 |
|
|
catch(NoSuchMethodException nsme2)
|
327 |
|
|
{
|
328 |
|
|
|
329 |
|
|
}
|
330 |
|
|
|
331 |
|
|
targetArgTypes[0] = nextClass(targetArgTypes[0]);
|
332 |
|
|
}
|
333 |
|
|
|
334 |
|
|
}
|
335 |
|
|
}
|
336 |
|
|
|
337 |
|
|
// If we do not have a Method instance at this point this means that all our tries
|
338 |
|
|
// failed. The JDK throws an ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException in this case.
|
339 |
|
|
if(actionMethod == null)
|
340 |
|
|
throw new ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException(0);
|
341 |
|
|
|
342 |
|
|
// Invoke target.action(property)
|
343 |
|
|
return actionMethod.invoke(target);
|
344 |
|
|
} catch(InvocationTargetException ite) {
|
345 |
|
|
throw new RuntimeException(ite.getCause());
|
346 |
|
|
} catch(IllegalAccessException iae) {
|
347 |
|
|
// Cannot happen because we always use getMethod() which returns public
|
348 |
|
|
// methods only. Otherwise there is something seriously broken in
|
349 |
|
|
// GNU Classpath.
|
350 |
|
|
throw (InternalError) new InternalError("Non-public method was invoked.").initCause(iae);
|
351 |
|
|
}
|
352 |
|
|
}
|
353 |
|
|
|
354 |
|
|
/**
|
355 |
|
|
* <p>Returns the primitive type for every wrapper class or the
|
356 |
|
|
* class itself if it is no wrapper class.</p>
|
357 |
|
|
*
|
358 |
|
|
* <p>This is needed because to be able to find both kinds of methods:
|
359 |
|
|
* One that takes a wrapper class as the first argument and one that
|
360 |
|
|
* accepts a primitive instead.</p>
|
361 |
|
|
*/
|
362 |
|
|
private Class initClass(Class klass) {
|
363 |
|
|
if(klass == Boolean.class) {
|
364 |
|
|
return Boolean.TYPE;
|
365 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Byte.class) {
|
366 |
|
|
return Byte.TYPE;
|
367 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Short.class) {
|
368 |
|
|
return Short.TYPE;
|
369 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Integer.class) {
|
370 |
|
|
return Integer.TYPE;
|
371 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Long.class) {
|
372 |
|
|
return Long.TYPE;
|
373 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Float.class) {
|
374 |
|
|
return Float.TYPE;
|
375 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Double.class) {
|
376 |
|
|
return Double.TYPE;
|
377 |
|
|
} else {
|
378 |
|
|
return klass;
|
379 |
|
|
}
|
380 |
|
|
}
|
381 |
|
|
|
382 |
|
|
/**
|
383 |
|
|
*
|
384 |
|
|
*
|
385 |
|
|
* @param klass
|
386 |
|
|
* @return
|
387 |
|
|
*/
|
388 |
|
|
private Class nextClass(Class klass) {
|
389 |
|
|
if(klass == Boolean.TYPE) {
|
390 |
|
|
return Boolean.class;
|
391 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Byte.TYPE) {
|
392 |
|
|
return Byte.class;
|
393 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Short.TYPE) {
|
394 |
|
|
return Short.class;
|
395 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Integer.TYPE) {
|
396 |
|
|
return Integer.class;
|
397 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Long.TYPE) {
|
398 |
|
|
return Long.class;
|
399 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Float.TYPE) {
|
400 |
|
|
return Float.class;
|
401 |
|
|
} else if(klass == Double.TYPE) {
|
402 |
|
|
return Double.class;
|
403 |
|
|
} else {
|
404 |
|
|
return klass.getSuperclass();
|
405 |
|
|
}
|
406 |
|
|
}
|
407 |
|
|
|
408 |
|
|
/**
|
409 |
|
|
* <p>Constructs an implementation of <code>listenerInterface</code>
|
410 |
|
|
* to dispatch events.</p>
|
411 |
|
|
*
|
412 |
|
|
* <p>You can use such an implementation to simply call a public
|
413 |
|
|
* no-argument method of an arbitrary target object or to forward
|
414 |
|
|
* the first argument of the listener method to the target method.</p>
|
415 |
|
|
*
|
416 |
|
|
* <p>Call this method like:</p>
|
417 |
|
|
* <code>
|
418 |
|
|
* button.addActionListener((ActionListener)
|
419 |
|
|
* EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, target, "dispose"));
|
420 |
|
|
* </code>
|
421 |
|
|
*
|
422 |
|
|
* <p>to achieve the following behavior:</p>
|
423 |
|
|
* <code>
|
424 |
|
|
* button.addActionListener(new ActionListener() {
|
425 |
|
|
* public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent ae) {
|
426 |
|
|
* target.dispose();
|
427 |
|
|
* }
|
428 |
|
|
* });
|
429 |
|
|
* </code>
|
430 |
|
|
*
|
431 |
|
|
* <p>That means if you need a listener implementation that simply calls a
|
432 |
|
|
* a no-argument method on a given instance for <strong>each</strong>
|
433 |
|
|
* method of the listener interface.</p>
|
434 |
|
|
*
|
435 |
|
|
* <p>Note: The <code>action</code> is interpreted as a method name. If your target object
|
436 |
|
|
* has no no-argument method of the given name the EventHandler tries to find
|
437 |
|
|
* a method with the same name but which can accept the first argument of the
|
438 |
|
|
* listener method. Usually this will be an event object but any other object
|
439 |
|
|
* will be forwarded, too. Keep in mind that using a property name instead of a
|
440 |
|
|
* real method here is wrong and will throw an <code>ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException</code>
|
441 |
|
|
* whenever one of the listener methods is called.<p/>
|
442 |
|
|
*
|
443 |
|
|
* <p>The <code>EventHandler</code> will automatically convert primitives
|
444 |
|
|
* to their wrapper class and vice versa. Furthermore it will call
|
445 |
|
|
* a target method if it accepts a superclass of the type of the
|
446 |
|
|
* first argument of the listener method.</p>
|
447 |
|
|
*
|
448 |
|
|
* <p>In case that the method of the target object throws an exception
|
449 |
|
|
* it will be wrapped in a <code>RuntimeException</code> and thrown out
|
450 |
|
|
* of the listener method.</p>
|
451 |
|
|
*
|
452 |
|
|
* <p>In case that the method of the target object cannot be found an
|
453 |
|
|
* <code>ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException</code> will be thrown when the
|
454 |
|
|
* listener method is invoked.</p>
|
455 |
|
|
*
|
456 |
|
|
* <p>A call to this method is equivalent to:
|
457 |
|
|
* <code>create(listenerInterface, target, action, null, null)</code></p>
|
458 |
|
|
*
|
459 |
|
|
* @param listenerInterface Listener interface to implement.
|
460 |
|
|
* @param target Object to invoke action on.
|
461 |
|
|
* @param action Target property or method to invoke.
|
462 |
|
|
* @return A constructed proxy object.
|
463 |
|
|
*/
|
464 |
|
|
public static <T> T create(Class<T> listenerInterface, Object target,
|
465 |
|
|
String action)
|
466 |
|
|
{
|
467 |
|
|
return create(listenerInterface, target, action, null, null);
|
468 |
|
|
}
|
469 |
|
|
|
470 |
|
|
/**
|
471 |
|
|
* <p>Constructs an implementation of <code>listenerInterface</code>
|
472 |
|
|
* to dispatch events.</p>
|
473 |
|
|
*
|
474 |
|
|
* <p>Use this method if you want to create an implementation that retrieves
|
475 |
|
|
* a property value from the <b>first</b> argument of the listener method
|
476 |
|
|
* and applies it to the target's property or method. This first argument
|
477 |
|
|
* of the listener is usually an event object but any other object is
|
478 |
|
|
* valid, too.</p>
|
479 |
|
|
*
|
480 |
|
|
* <p>You can set the value of <code>eventPropertyName</code> to "prop"
|
481 |
|
|
* to denote the retrieval of a property named "prop" from the event
|
482 |
|
|
* object. In case that no such property exists the <code>EventHandler</code>
|
483 |
|
|
* will try to find a method with that name.</p>
|
484 |
|
|
*
|
485 |
|
|
* <p>If you set <code>eventPropertyName</code> to a value like this "a.b.c"
|
486 |
|
|
* <code>EventHandler</code> will recursively evaluate the properties "a", "b"
|
487 |
|
|
* and "c". Again if no property can be found the <code>EventHandler</code>
|
488 |
|
|
* tries a method name instead. This allows mixing the names, too: "a.toString"
|
489 |
|
|
* will retrieve the property "a" from the event object and will then call
|
490 |
|
|
* the method "toString" on it.</p>
|
491 |
|
|
*
|
492 |
|
|
* <p>An exception thrown in any of these methods will provoke a
|
493 |
|
|
* <code>RuntimeException</code> to be thrown which contains an
|
494 |
|
|
* <code>InvocationTargetException</code> containing the triggering exception.</p>
|
495 |
|
|
*
|
496 |
|
|
* <p>If you set <code>eventPropertyName</code> to a non-null value the
|
497 |
|
|
* <code>action</code> parameter will be interpreted as a property name
|
498 |
|
|
* or a method name of the target object.</p>
|
499 |
|
|
*
|
500 |
|
|
* <p>Any object retrieved from the event object and applied to the
|
501 |
|
|
* target will converted from primitives to their wrapper class or
|
502 |
|
|
* vice versa or applied to a method that accepts a superclass
|
503 |
|
|
* of the object.</p>
|
504 |
|
|
*
|
505 |
|
|
* <p>Examples:</p>
|
506 |
|
|
* <p>The following code:</p><code>
|
507 |
|
|
* button.addActionListener(
|
508 |
|
|
* new ActionListener() {
|
509 |
|
|
* public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent ae) {
|
510 |
|
|
* Object o = ae.getSource().getClass().getName();
|
511 |
|
|
* textField.setText((String) o);
|
512 |
|
|
* }
|
513 |
|
|
* });
|
514 |
|
|
* </code>
|
515 |
|
|
*
|
516 |
|
|
* <p>Can be expressed using the <code>EventHandler</code> like this:</p>
|
517 |
|
|
* <p>
|
518 |
|
|
* <code>button.addActionListener((ActionListener)
|
519 |
|
|
* EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, textField, "text", "source.class.name");
|
520 |
|
|
* <code>
|
521 |
|
|
* </p>
|
522 |
|
|
*
|
523 |
|
|
* <p>As said above you can specify the target as a method, too:</p>
|
524 |
|
|
* <p>
|
525 |
|
|
* <code>button.addActionListener((ActionListener)
|
526 |
|
|
* EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, textField, "setText", "source.class.name");
|
527 |
|
|
* <code>
|
528 |
|
|
* </p>
|
529 |
|
|
*
|
530 |
|
|
* <p>Furthermore you can use method names in the property:</p>
|
531 |
|
|
* <p>
|
532 |
|
|
* <code>button.addActionListener((ActionListener)
|
533 |
|
|
* EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, textField, "setText", "getSource.getClass.getName");
|
534 |
|
|
* <code>
|
535 |
|
|
* </p>
|
536 |
|
|
*
|
537 |
|
|
* <p>Finally you can mix names:</p>
|
538 |
|
|
* <p>
|
539 |
|
|
* <code>button.addActionListener((ActionListener)
|
540 |
|
|
* EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, textField, "setText", "source.getClass.name");
|
541 |
|
|
* <code>
|
542 |
|
|
* </p>
|
543 |
|
|
*
|
544 |
|
|
* <p>A call to this method is equivalent to:
|
545 |
|
|
* <code>create(listenerInterface, target, action, null, null)</code>
|
546 |
|
|
* </p>
|
547 |
|
|
*
|
548 |
|
|
* @param listenerInterface Listener interface to implement.
|
549 |
|
|
* @param target Object to invoke action on.
|
550 |
|
|
* @param action Target property or method to invoke.
|
551 |
|
|
* @param eventPropertyName Name of property to extract from event.
|
552 |
|
|
* @return A constructed proxy object.
|
553 |
|
|
*/
|
554 |
|
|
public static <T> T create(Class<T> listenerInterface, Object target,
|
555 |
|
|
String action, String eventPropertyName)
|
556 |
|
|
{
|
557 |
|
|
return create(listenerInterface, target, action, eventPropertyName, null);
|
558 |
|
|
}
|
559 |
|
|
|
560 |
|
|
/**
|
561 |
|
|
* <p>Constructs an implementation of <code>listenerInterface</code>
|
562 |
|
|
* to dispatch events.</p>
|
563 |
|
|
*
|
564 |
|
|
* <p>Besides the functionality described for {@link create(Class, Object, String)}
|
565 |
|
|
* and {@link create(Class, Object, String, String)} this method allows you
|
566 |
|
|
* to filter the listener method that should have an effect. Look at these
|
567 |
|
|
* method's documentation for more information about the <code>EventHandler</code>'s
|
568 |
|
|
* usage.</p>
|
569 |
|
|
*
|
570 |
|
|
* <p>If you want to call <code>dispose</code> on a <code>JFrame</code> instance
|
571 |
|
|
* when the <code>WindowListener.windowClosing()</code> method was invoked use
|
572 |
|
|
* the following code:</p>
|
573 |
|
|
* <p>
|
574 |
|
|
* <code>
|
575 |
|
|
* EventHandler.create(WindowListener.class, jframeInstance, "dispose", null, "windowClosing");
|
576 |
|
|
* </code>
|
577 |
|
|
* </p>
|
578 |
|
|
*
|
579 |
|
|
* <p>A <code>NullPointerException</code> is thrown if the <code>listenerInterface</code>
|
580 |
|
|
* or <code>target</code> argument are <code>null</code>.
|
581 |
|
|
*
|
582 |
|
|
* @param listenerInterface Listener interface to implement.
|
583 |
|
|
* @param target Object to invoke action on.
|
584 |
|
|
* @param action Target method name to invoke.
|
585 |
|
|
* @param eventPropertyName Name of property to extract from event.
|
586 |
|
|
* @param listenerMethodName Listener method to implement.
|
587 |
|
|
* @return A constructed proxy object.
|
588 |
|
|
*/
|
589 |
|
|
public static <T> T create(Class<T> listenerInterface, Object target,
|
590 |
|
|
String action, String eventPropertyName,
|
591 |
|
|
String listenerMethodName)
|
592 |
|
|
{
|
593 |
|
|
// Create EventHandler instance
|
594 |
|
|
EventHandler eh = new EventHandler(target, action, eventPropertyName,
|
595 |
|
|
listenerMethodName);
|
596 |
|
|
|
597 |
|
|
// Create proxy object passing in the event handler
|
598 |
|
|
Object proxy = Proxy.newProxyInstance(listenerInterface.getClassLoader(),
|
599 |
|
|
new Class<?>[] {listenerInterface},
|
600 |
|
|
eh);
|
601 |
|
|
|
602 |
|
|
return (T) proxy;
|
603 |
|
|
}
|
604 |
|
|
}
|