My main class loads configuration from a file then shows a frame. I want to make a splash screen with a progress bar like Eclipse so that the progress will increase while the file is being loaded and the splash disappears after the file is loaded. Then my main frame gets loaded.
MainClass code:
public static void main(String[] args) {
ApplicationContext context = new ClassPathXmlApplicationContext(
"classpath:/META-INF/spring/applicationContext.xml");
// splash with progress load till this file is loaded
UserDao userDao = context.getBean(UserDao.class);
isRegistered = userDao.isRegistered();
System.out.println("registered: " + isRegistered);
if (isRegistered) {
// progress finish and hide splash
log.debug("user is registered"); // show frame1
} else {
// progress finish and hide splash
log.debug("user is not registered"); // show frame2
}
}
I don't have much experience with Swing, so please advise how to accomplish that.
UPDATE: i have found the following example, but it have little issue:
when the counter gets to the specified number it should stop at (300) it keeps counting for ever without stopping the timer and hiding the splash screen.
i want to bind the counter to the file loading, so while the file is loaded the progress gets loaded until the file gets loaded then the progress completes and the splash screen disappears.
@SuppressWarnings("serial") @Component public class SplashScreen extends JWindow { static boolean isRegistered; static Log log = LogFactory.getLog(SplashScreen.class); private static JProgressBar progressBar = new JProgressBar(); private static SplashScreen execute; private static int count; private static Timer timer1; public SplashScreen() { Container container = getContentPane(); container.setLayout(null); JPanel panel = new JPanel(); panel.setBorder(new javax.swing.border.EtchedBorder()); panel.setBackground(new Color(255, 255, 255)); panel.setBounds(10, 10, 348, 150); panel.setLayout(null); container.add(panel); JLabel label = new JLabel("Hello World!"); label.setFont(new Font("Verdana", Font.BOLD, 14)); label.setBounds(85, 25, 280, 30); panel.add(label); progressBar.setMaximum(50); progressBar.setBounds(55, 180, 250, 15); container.add(progressBar); loadProgressBar(); setSize(370, 215); setLocationRelativeTo(null); setVisible(true); } public void loadProgressBar() { ActionListener al = new ActionListener() { public void actionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) { count++; progressBar.setValue(count); if (count == 300) { timer1.stop(); execute.setVisible(false); return; } } }; timer1 = new Timer(50, al); timer1.start(); } public static void main(String[] args) { execute = new SplashScreen(); ApplicationContext context = new ClassPathXmlApplicationContext( "classpath:/META-INF/spring/applicationContext.xml"); UserDao userDao = context.getBean(UserDao.class); isRegistered = userDao.isRegistered(); if (isRegistered) { // show frame 1 } else { // show frame 2 } } }
Java has a built in
SplashScreen
class just for this purpose. There is a tutorial on how to use it here.The code below seems to work great (with the fatal flaw the counter may take longer then the file loading and vice versa):
You should take a look at
ProgressMonitor
andProgressMonitorInputStream
using aTask
you may then check when the file is completely read and end theSplashScreen
. see here for some great tutorial and explanation