Problem: I don't know where to put my painting code.Problem: The stuff I paint doesn't show up.
- Painting code belongs in the
paintComponentmethod of any component descended fromJComponent.Problem: My component's foreground shows up, but its background is invisible. The result is that one or more components directly behind my component are unexpectedly visible.
- Check whether your component is showing up at all. Solving Common Component Problems should help you with this.
- Check whether
repaintis invoked on your component whenever its appearance needs to be updated.
- Make sure your component is opaque.
JPanels, for example, are opaque by default in many but not all look and feels. To make components such asJLabels and GTK+JPanels opaque, you must invokesetOpaque(true)on them.
- If your custom component extends
JPanelor a more specializedJComponentdescendant, then you can paint the background by invokingsuper.paintComponentbefore painting the contents of your component.
- You can paint the background yourself using this code at the top of a custom component's
paintComponentmethod:g.setColor(getBackground()); g.fillRect(0, 0, getWidth(), getHeight()); g.setColor(getForeground());Problem: I used
setBackgroundto set my component's background color, but it seemed to have no effect.
- Most likely, your component isn't painting its background, either because it's not opaque or your custom painting code doesn't paint the background. If you set the background color for a
JLabel, for example, you must also invokesetOpaque(true)on the label to make the label's background be painted.Problem: I'm using the exact same code as a tutorial example, but it doesn't work. Why?
Problem: How do I paint thick lines? patterns?
- Is the code executed in the exact same method as the tutorial example? For example, if the tutorial example has the code in the example's
paintComponentmethod, then this method might be the only place where the code is guaranteed to work.Problem: The edges of a particular component look odd.
- The JavaTM 2D API provides extensive support for implementing line widths and styles, as well as patterns for use in filling and stroking shapes. See the 2D Graphics trail for more information on using the Java 2D API.
Problem: Visual artifacts appear in my GUI.
- Because components often update their borders to reflect component state, you generally should avoid invoking
setBorderexcept onJPanels and custom subclasses ofJComponent.
- Is the component painted by a look and feel such as GTK+ or Windows XP that uses UI-painted borders instead of
Borderobjects? If so, don't invokesetBorderon the component.
- Does the component have custom painting code? If so, does the painting code take the component's insets into account?
Problem: The performance of my custom painting code is poor.
- If you set the background color of a component, be sure the color has no transparency if the component is supposed to be opaque.
- Use the
setOpaquemethod to set component opacity if necessary. For example, the content pane must be opaque, but components with transparent backgrounds must not be opaque.
- Make sure your custom component fills its painting area completely if it's opaque.
Problem: The same transforms applied to seemingly identical
- If you can paint part of your component, use the
getCliporgetClipBoundsmethod ofGraphicsto determine which area you need to paint. The less you paint, the faster it will be.
- If only part of your component needs to be updated, make paint requests using a version of
repaintthat specifies the painting region.
- For help on choosing efficient painting techniques, look for the string "performance" in the Java 2D API home page.
Graphicsobjects sometimes have slightly different effects.
- Because the Swing painting code sets the transform (using the
Graphicsmethodtranslate) before invokingpaintComponent, any transforms that you apply have a cumulative effect. This doesn't matter when doing a simple translation, but a more complexAffineTransform, for example, might have unexpected results.If you don't see your problem in this list, see Solving Common Component Problems and Solving Common Layout Problems.