@LeeJeong When you get onto the level where The Java API is not enough. Then bithacks and all the weird stuff no programmer uses ever will become a viable tool to you.
what do you think are other intuitive ways to make a JButton give two responses? Sample, i wanted my button to say yes when i click it, and say NO when i double click it. Now removing 2click in the equation.. is there any other way for it to react two ways
My first suggestion is to not make your own double click handling and use the click counter from the event instead. In case that does not for some reason work (need to differ from default time frames, or different threshold for location, etc), I'd store a time stamp (and location). Avoids the timer and threading stuff
@LeeJeong You have an UI issue... Basically, you should never have two conflicting actions at single and double clicks. That's because it is impossible to detect a single click without a delay, even theoretically, in that case.
@LeeJeong Consider what happens at single click: The system gets a click, event, but it can't act on it immediately, as it is not possible to know if another click is coming. So the only way to detect that reliably would be waiting for the second click, and only act after the delay is over
wikipedia: "Applications deployed in this manner lack some functionality of servlet-contained files, such as the ability to consume SOAP web services and Java RPC remote procedure calls."
I am trying to configure certain actions in response to number of mouse clicks. It seems to me that the single click and triple click get detected and applied. but the double click does not really work.
I tried to do something like:
if (doubleClick)
else if (tripleClick)
else if (singleClick).
...
Interfaces are just a set of methods that the implementor has to implement. Classes are stuff that's within the class itself, and is well-defined as its own class such that circular dependencies shouldn't be present.
Therefore, extending classes are inheriting from them, while declaring a class as an implementor of an interface doesn't inherit, and thus preserves composition over inheritence.
@Vogel612 You put it better then. This is an open discussion, you're welcome to participate!
oh you mean, when we say new Thread(implRunnableObject);, a reference variable from class Thread points to object of type class MyClass that implments Runnable
When you say new Thread();, you're constructing a new thread object. When you have MyThread extends Thread and you use new MyThread();, you're constructing a new mythread object which is also a thread, as it inherits from them.