When I set setAccelerator开发者_运维技巧() to Control + A or Control + P and I run the program it doesn't detect the keystroke.
Here's the code:
menuItem = new JMenuItem("About");
menuItem.setActionCommand("About");
menuItem.setAccelerator(KeyStroke.getKeyStroke(KeyEvent.VK_A, Event.CTRL_MASK));
menuItem.setMnemonic(KeyEvent.VK_A);
menuItem.addActionListener(this);
menu.add(menuItem);
Then when it's pressed it should invoke the Action Listener:
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
if(e.getActionCommand().equals("About")) {
System.out.println("About");
}
}
I'm running it in Eclipse on a Mac if that matters.
Control-A and Control-P are both keystrokes that may already be intercepted, depending on your platform and depending on what has keyboard focus. Control-A may already be intercepted and interpreted as "select all", and Control-P may already be intercepted and interpreted as "paste".
What if you select a less commonly-used keystroke instead of "Control-A", such as "Control-Shift-A" or "Control-B"? Here's a modified version of your code that uses Control-Shift-A instead of Control-A:
menuItem = new JMenuItem("About");
menuItem.setActionCommand("About");
menuItem.setAccelerator(KeyStroke.getKeyStroke(KeyEvent.VK_A, Event.CTRL_MASK | Event.SHIFT_MASK));
menuItem.setMnemonic(KeyEvent.VK_A);
menuItem.addActionListener(this);
menu.add(menuItem);
I tested this change on my own system using the JMenu demo from the Swing tutorial, and I found (exactly as you did) that registering Control-A as the accelerator had no effect. However, registering Control-Shift-A as the accelerator worked perfectly.
not sure if it will help, but you're using Event.CTRL_MASK
instead of KeyEvent.CTRL_MASK
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