Swing and AWT Mixing is bad, but still done, why?

2020-02-12 01:23发布

问题:

I have noticed that people recommend not intermixing Swing and AWT Components, however we see this alot:

import javax.swing.AbstractButton;
import javax.swing.JButton;
import javax.swing.JPanel;
import javax.swing.JFrame;
import javax.swing.ImageIcon;
 //AWT imports though only for listeners
import java.awt.event.ActionEvent;
import java.awt.event.ActionListener;
import java.awt.event.KeyEvent;

So why do many including Java (because I got that off their tutorial here) still use AWT imports, though I see its mainly for Listeners.

How do you add native Swing Listeners/Libraries for stuff like Key, Button, JComboBox presses/slections etc?

Or would I use firePropertyChangeListeners()? (though that relates to Java Beans)

It has been confusing me now for some time, most of my app have Swing and AWT which is said to be bad?

回答1:

Swing shares quite a few classes with AWT, and uses some of the same implementation - note that javax.swing.JComponent (the base Swing component class) actually inherits from java.awt.Component (the base AWT container class)

It's actually not that much of a problem to mix Swing and AWT if you are careful. The main pitfalls are:

  • You risk getting a very different look and feel if you mix AWT and Swing UI components
  • Swing components are "lightweight" (rendered by Java) while AWT components are "heavyweight" (implemented as components in the host platform) - this means you will have problems if you put AWT components inside Swing components (the other way round is fine)


回答2:

Swing is built on top of AWT, with a different philosophy for creating and drawing UI components. Mixing UI components from the two frameworks could lead to unexpected results and was/is thus discouraged (as kleopatra states, this has been fixed). However, Swing still uses the AWT event queue paradigm, including listeners - it does not replace them with listeners native to Swing because there's no reason to.

Using both Swing and AWT for your applications is common practice, what you were warned against is using both Swing and AWT UI components.



回答3:

Maybe someone will see this in the future and still find it useful. There's a list of AWT components and what their Swing replacements are.