I want to use JCheckBoxMenuItem
s in a JPopupMenu
. It works, but the problem is that the popup menu disappears when a checkb开发者_StackOverflowox item has been checked or unchecked. So if one wants to check/uncheck several items, the popup needs to be launched repeatedly, which is irritating.
Curiously, if I use just plain JCheckBox
items in the menu (instead of JCheckBoxMenuItem
s), the behavior is just as it should be: the popup stays there and the checkboxes can be checked/unchecked. Once done, the popup can be closed just by clicking outside it.
How do I make the popup to behave like that when the items there are JCheckBoxMenuItem
s? I would prefer using JCheckBoxMenuItem
s because of their looks.
Well, found working answer from http://forums.sun.com/thread.jspa?threadID=5432911. Basically, create a custom UI:
public class StayOpenCheckBoxMenuItemUI extends BasicCheckBoxMenuItemUI {
@Override
protected void doClick(MenuSelectionManager msm) {
menuItem.doClick(0);
}
public static ComponentUI createUI(JComponent c) {
return new StayOpenCheckBoxMenuItemUI();
}
}
And set it in the JCheckBoxMenuItem
:
myJCheckBoxMenuItem.setUI(new StayOpenCheckBoxMenuItemUI());
Don't know if this is the most elegant possible solution, but works perfectly.
I ran into an issue with the nice Joonas Pulakka's answer because the "UIManager lookandFeel" was ignored.
I found the nice trick below on http://tips4java.wordpress.com/2010/09/12/keeping-menus-open/
The point is to reopen immediatly the menu after it has been closed, it's invisible and keep the application look and feel and behavior.
public class StayOpenCBItem extends JCheckBoxMenuItem {
private static MenuElement[] path;
{
getModel().addChangeListener(new ChangeListener() {
@Override
public void stateChanged(ChangeEvent e) {
if (getModel().isArmed() && isShowing()) {
path = MenuSelectionManager.defaultManager().getSelectedPath();
}
}
});
}
public StayOpenCBItem(String text) {
super(text);
}
@Override
public void doClick(int pressTime) {
super.doClick(pressTime);
MenuSelectionManager.defaultManager().setSelectedPath(path);
}
}
I found a much easier solution for this problem
JCheckBoxMenuItem menuItem = new JCheckBoxMenuItem("sample");
menuItem.putClientProperty("CheckBoxMenuItem.doNotCloseOnMouseClick", Boolean.TRUE);
I found this solution while reading the code from
BasicMenuItemUI.doNotCloseOnMouseClick()
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