Sometimes a task running within a program might take a while to complete. A user-friendly program provides some indication to the user that the task is occurring, how long the task might take, and how much work has already been done. One way of indicating work, and perhaps the amount of progress, is to use an animated image.Another way of indicating work is to set the wait cursor, using the
Cursor
class and theComponent
-definedsetCursor
method. For example, the following code makes the wait cursor be displayed when the cursor is overcontainer
(including any components it contains that have no cursor specified):To convey how complete a task is, you can use a progress bar like this one: -->container.setCursor(Cursor.getPredefinedCursor(Cursor.WAIT_CURSOR));Sometimes you can't immediately determine the length of a long-running task, or the task might stay stuck at the same state of completion for a long time. You can show work without measurable progress by putting the progress bar in indeterminate mode. A progress bar in indeterminate mode displays animation to indicate that work is occurring. As soon as the progress bar can display more meaningful information, you should switch it back into its default, determinate mode. In the Java look and feel, indeterminate progress bars look like this:
Swing provides three classes to help you use progress bars:
After you see a progress bar and a progress monitor in action, Deciding Whether to Use a Progress Bar or a Progress Monitor can help you figure out which is appropriate for your application.
JProgressBar
- A visible component to graphically display how much of a total task has completed. See Using Determinate Progress Bars for information and an example of using a typical progress bar. The section Using Indeterminate Mode tells you how to animate a progress bar to show activity before the task's scope is known.
ProgressMonitor
- Not a visible component. Instead, an instance of this class monitors the progress of a task and pops up a dialog if necessary. See How to Use Progress Monitors for details and an example of using a progress monitor.
ProgressMonitorInputStream
- An input stream with an attached progress monitor, which monitors reading from the stream. You use an instance of this stream like any of the other input streams described in Basic I/O. You can get the stream's progress monitor with a call to
getProgressMonitor
and configure it as described in How to Use Progress Monitors.
Here's a picture of a small demo application that uses a progress bar to measure the progress of a task that runs in its own thread:Below is the code from
Try this:
- Click the Launch button to run the ProgressBar Demo using Java™ Web Start (download JDK 6). Alternatively, to compile and run the example yourself, consult the example index.
ProgressBarDemo.java
that creates and sets up the progress bar:
The constructor that creates the progress bar sets the progress bar's minimum and maximum values. You can also set these values with//Where member variables are declared: JProgressBar progressBar; ... //Where the GUI is constructed: progressBar = new JProgressBar(0, task.getLengthOfTask()); progressBar.setValue(0); progressBar.setStringPainted(true);
setMinimum
and setMaximum
.
The minimum and maximum values used in this program are 0 and the
length of the task, which is typical of many programs and tasks.
However, a progress bar's minimum and maximum
values can be any value, even negative.
The code snippet also sets the progress bar's current value to 0.
The call to setStringPainted
causes the progress bar to display, within its bounds,
a textual indication of the percentage of the task that has completed.
By default, the progress bar displays the value
returned by its getPercentComplete
method
formatted as a percent, such as 33%.
Alternatively, you can replace the default with a different
string by calling setString
. For example,
if (/*...half way done...*/) progressBar.setString("Half way there!");
When the user clicks Start, an instance of the inner class
Task
is created and executed.
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent evt) { startButton.setEnabled(false); setCursor(Cursor.getPredefinedCursor(Cursor.WAIT_CURSOR)); done = false; task = new Task(); task.addPropertyChangeListener(this); task.execute(); }
Task
is a
subclass of
javax.swing.SwingWorker
. The Task
instance does three important things for
ProgressBarDemo
:
doInBackground
in a
separate thread. This is where the long-running task is actually
executed. Using a background thread instead of the
event-dispatching thread prevents the user interface from freezing
while the task is running.
done
method in the event-dispatching thread.
progress
, that is updated to indicate the progress of
the task. The propertyChange
method is invoked each
time progress
changes.
SwingWorker
.
The background task in ProgressBarDemo
simulates a real
task by reporting random amounts of progress at random intervals. The
propertyChange
method responds to changes in the the
task's progress
property by updating the progress bar:
public void propertyChange(PropertyChangeEvent evt) { if (!done) { int progress = task.getProgress(); progressBar.setValue(progress); taskOutput.append(String.format( "Completed %d%% of task.\n", progress)); }
When the background task is complete, the task's done
method resets the progress bar:
Note that thepublic void done() { //Tell progress listener to stop updating progress bar. done = true; Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().beep(); startButton.setEnabled(true); setCursor(null); //turn off the wait cursor progressBar.setValue(progressBar.getMinimum()); taskOutput.append("Done!\n"); }
done
method sets the done
field to true
, preventing propertyChange
from making further updates to the progress bar. This is necessary
because the final updates to the progress
property may
occcur after done
is invoked.
InProgressBarDemo2
indeterminate mode is set until actual progress begins:public void propertyChange(PropertyChangeEvent evt) { if (!done) { int progress = task.getProgress(); if (progress == 0) { progressBar.setIndeterminate(true); taskOutput.append("No progress yet\n"); } else { progressBar.setIndeterminate(false); progressBar.setString(null); progressBar.setValue(progress); taskOutput.append(String.format( "Completed %d%% of task.\n", progress)); } } }The other changes in the code are related to string display. A progress bar that displays a string is likely to be taller than one that doesn't, and, as the demo designers, we've arbitarily decided that this progress bar should display a string only when it's in the default, determinate mode. However, we want to avoid the layout ugliness that might result if the progress bar changed height when it changed modes. Thus, the code leaves in the call to
setStringPainted(true)
but adds a call tosetString("")
so that no text will be displayed. Later, when the progress bar switches from indeterminate to determinate mode, invokingsetString(null)
makes the progress bar display its default string.One change we did not make was removing the call to
progressBar.setValue
from theprogress
event handler. The call doesn't do any harm because an indeterminate progress bar doesn't use its value property, except perhaps to display it in the status string. In fact, keeping the progress bar's data as up-to-date as possible is a good practice, since some look and feels might not support indeterminate mode.
Try this:
- Click the Launch button to run the ProgressBar2 Demo using Java™ Web Start (download JDK 6). Alternatively, to compile and run the example yourself, consult the example index.
- Push the Start button. Note that the progress bar starts animating as soon as the button is pressed, and then switches back into determinate mode (like ProgressBarDemo).
Now let's rewrite ProgressBarDemo to use a progress monitor instead of a progress bar. Here's a picture of the new demo program, ProgressMonitorDemo:A progress monitor cannot be used again, so a new one must be created each time a new task is started. This program creates a progress monitor each time the user starts a new task with the Start button.
Try this:
- Click the Launch button to run the ProgressMonitor Demo using Java™ Web Start (download JDK 6). Alternatively, to compile and run the example yourself, consult the example index.
- Push the Start button. After a certain amount of time, the program displays a progress dialog.
- Click the OK button. Note that the task continues even though the dialog is gone.
- Start another task. After the dialog pops up, click the Cancel button. The dialog goes away and the task stops.
Here's the statement that creates the progress monitor:
This code usesprogressMonitor = new ProgressMonitor(ProgressMonitorDemo.this, "Running a Long Task", "", 0, task.getLengthOfTask());
ProgressMonitor
's only constructor
to create the monitor and
initialize several arguments:
null
for this argument,
the note is omitted from the dialog.
The example updates the note
each time the progress
property changes.
It updates the monitor's current value at the same time:
int progress = task.getProgress(); String message = String.format("Completed %d%%.\n", progress); progressMonitor.setNote(message); progressMonitor.setProgress(progress); taskOutput.append(message);
setMillisToDecidedToPopup
. To adjust the minimum progress
time required for a dialog to appear, invoke
setMillisToPopup
.
By the simple fact that this example uses a progress monitor, it adds a feature that wasn't present in the version of the program that uses a progress bar: The user can cancel the task by clicking the Cancel button on the dialog. Here's the code in the example that checks to see if the user canceled the task or if the task exited normally:
Note that the progress monitor doesn't itself cancel the task. It provides the GUI and API to allow the program to do so easily.if (progressMonitor.isCanceled() || task.isDone()) { progressMonitor.close(); Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().beep(); if (progressMonitor.isCanceled()) { task.cancel(true); taskOutput.append("Task canceled.\n"); } else { taskOutput.append("Task completed.\n"); } startButton.setEnabled(true); }
Use a progress bar if:
- You want more control over the configuration of the progress bar. If you are working directly with a progress bar, you can set it to be indeterminate, make it display vertically, provide a string for it to display, register change listeners on it, and provide it with a bounded range model to control the progress bar's minimum, maximum, and current values.
- The program needs to display other components along with the progress bar.
- You need more than one progress bar. With some tasks, you need to monitor more than one parameter. For example, an installation program might monitor disk space usage in addition to how many files have been successfully installed.
- You need to reuse the progress bar. A progress bar can be reused; a progress monitor cannot. Once the progress monitor has decided to display a dialog (or not), the progress monitor cannot do it again.
Use a progress monitor if:
If you decide to use a progress monitor and the task you are monitoring is reading from an input stream, use the
- You want an easy way to display progress in a dialog.
- The running task is secondary and the user might not be interested in the progress of the task. Progress monitor provides a way for the user to dismiss the dialog while the task is still running.
- You want an easy way for the task to be cancelled. Progress monitor provides a GUI for the user to cancel the task. All you have to do is call progress monitor's
isCanceled
method to find out if the user pressed the Cancel button.- Your task displays a short message periodically while running. The progress monitor dialog provides the
setNote
method so that the task can provide further information about what it's doing. For example, an installation task might report the name of each file as it's installed.- The task might not take a long time to complete. You decide at what point a running task is taking long enough to warrant letting the user know about it. Progress monitor won't pop up a dialog if the task completes within the timeframe you set.
ProgressMonitorInputStream
class.
The following tables list the commonly used API for using progress bars and progress monitors. BecauseJProgressBar
is a subclass ofJComponent
, other methods you are likely to call on aJProgressBar
are listed in The JComponent Class. Note thatProgressMonitor
is a subclass ofObject
and is not a visual component.The API for monitoring progress falls into these categories:
- Creating the Progress Bar
- Setting or Getting the Progress Bar's Constraints/Values
- Controlling the Progress Bar's Appearance
- Creating the Progress Monitor
- Configuring the Progress Monitor
- Terminating the Progress Monitor
Creating the Progress Bar Constructor Purpose JProgressBar()
JProgressBar(int, int)Create a horizontal progress bar. The no-argument constructor initializes the progress bar with a minimum and initial value of 0 and a maximum of 100. The constructor with two integer arguments specifies the minimum and maximum values. JProgressBar(int)
JProgressBar(int, int, int)Create a progress bar with the specified orientation, which can be either JProgressBar.HORIZONTAL
orJProgressBar.VERTICAL
. The optional second and third arguments specify minimum and maximum values.JProgressBar(BoundedRangeModel) Create a horizontal progress bar with the specified range model.
Setting or Getting the Progress Bar's Constraints/Values Method Purpose void setValue(int)
int getValue()Set or get the current value of the progress bar. The value is constrained by the minimum and maximum values. double getPercentComplete() Get the percent complete for the progress bar. void setMinimum(int)
int getMinimum()Set or get the minimum value of the progress bar. void setMaximum(int)
int getMaximum()Set or get the maximum value of the progress bar. void setModel(BoundedRangeModel)
BoundedRangeModel getModel()Set or get the model used by the progress bar. The model establishes the progress bar's constraints and values, so you can use it directly as an alternative to using the individual set/get methods listed above.
Controlling the Progress Bar's Appearance Method Purpose void setIndeterminate(boolean) By specifying true
, put the progress bar into indeterminate mode. Specifyingfalse
puts the progress bar back into its default, determinate mode.void setOrientation(int)
int getOrientation()Set or get whether the progress bar is vertical or horizontal. Acceptable values are JProgressBar.VERTICAL
orJProgressBar.HORIZONTAL
.void setBorderPainted(boolean)
boolean isBorderPainted()Set or get whether the progress bar has a border. void setStringPainted(boolean)
boolean isStringPainted()Set or get whether the progress bar displays a percent string. By default, the value of the percent string is the value returned by getPercentComplete
formatted as a percent. You can set the string to be displayed withsetString
.void setString(String)
String getString()Set or get the percent string.
Creating the Progress Monitor Method or Constructor Purpose ProgressMonitor(Component, Object, String, int, int) Create a progress monitor. The Component
argument is the parent for the monitor's dialog. TheObject
argument is a message to put on the option pane within the dialog. The value of this object is typically aString
. TheString
argument is a changeable status note. The final twoint
arguments set the minimum and maximum values, respectively, for the progress bar used in the dialog.ProgressMonitor getProgressMonitor()
(inProgressMonitorInputStream
)Gets a progress monitor that monitors reading from an input stream.
Configuring the Progress Monitor Method Purpose void setMinimum(int)
int getMinimum()Set or get the minimum value of the progress monitor. This value is used by the monitor to set up the progress bar in the dialog. void setMaximum(int)
int getMaximum()Set or get the maximum value of the progress monitor. This value is used by the monitor to set up the progress bar in the dialog. void setProgress(int) Update the monitor's progress. void setNote(String)
String getNote()Set or get the status note. This note is displayed on the dialog. To omit the status note from the dialog, provide null
as the third argument to the monitor's constructor.void setMillisToDecideToPopup(int)
int getMillisToDecideToPopup()Set or get the time after which the monitor should decide whether to popup a dialog.
Terminating the Progress Monitor Method Purpose void close() Close the progress monitor. This disposes of the dialog. boolean isCanceled() Determine whether the user pressed the Cancel button.
This following examples useJProgressBar
orProgressMonitor
.
Example Where Described Notes ProgressBarDemo
This section Uses a basic progress bar to show progress on a task running in a separate thread. ProgressBarDemo2
This section Uses a basic progress bar to show progress on a task running in a separate thread. ProgressMonitorDemo
This section Modification of the previous example that uses a progress monitor instead of a progress bar.