Also known as The Swing Tutorial
This trail tells you how to create graphical user interfaces (GUIs) for applications and applets, using the Swing components.
Getting Started with Swing
is a quick start lesson.
First it gives you a bit of background about the JFC
and Swing.
Then it tells you how to compile
and run programs
that use Swing components.
Learning Swing with the NetBeans IDE
is the fastest and easiest way to begin working with Swing.
This lesson explores the NetBeans IDE's GUI builder,
a powerful feature that lets you visually
construct your Graphical User Interfaces.
Using Swing Components
tells you how to use each of the Swing components —
buttons, tables, text components, and all the rest.
It also tells you how to use borders and icons.
Concurrency in Swing
discusses concurrency as it applies to Swing programming.
Information on the event dispatch thread and the SwingWorker class are
included.
Using Other Swing Features
tells you how to use actions, timers, and the system tray; how to integrate
with the desktop class, how to support assistive technologies,
how to print tables and text, how to create a splash screen,
and how to use modality in dialogs.
Laying Out Components Within a Container
tells you how to choose a layout manager,
how to use each of the layout manager classes the
Java platform provides,
how to use absolute positioning instead of a layout manager,
and how to create your own layout manager.
Modifying the Look and Feel
tells you how to specify the look and feel of Swing components.
Drag and Drop and Data Transfer
tells you what you need to know to implement data transfer
in your application.
Writing Event Listeners
tells you how to handle events in your programs.
Performing Custom Painting
gives you information on painting your own Swing components.
It discusses painting issues
specific to Swing components,
provides an overview of painting concepts,
and has examples of custom components
that paint themselves.