I am really confused with the Java swing timer. Does it need an action listener? Could someone please give me an example? Thanks!
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closed as not a real question by Andrew Thompson, pst, Robin, user714965, Kumar Bibek Nov 22 '12 at 12:45
It's difficult to tell what is being asked here. This question is ambiguous, vague, incomplete, overly broad, or rhetorical and cannot be reasonably answered in its current form. For help clarifying this question so that it can be reopened, see the FAQ.
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Here is an example of using
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Setting up a timer involves creating a Timer object, registering one or more action listeners on it, and starting the timer using the start method. For example, the following code creates and starts a timer that fires an action event once per second (as specified by the first argument to the Timer constructor). The second argument to the Timer constructor specifies a listener to receive the timer's action events. Timers are constructed by specifying both a delay parameter and an ActionListener. (source) Futhermore, the timer's timing is done in thread distinct from the event dispatch thread (or EDT) which is the thread that runs the code in the ActionListener. So even if the actionPerformed code is slow, the timer will keep on firing regardless and will queue its actionPerformed code on the event queue which will likely get backed up and the event thread will get clogged and the application will be unresponsive or poorly responsive, unsell you set coalesce to Here is a good tuturial How to Use Swing Timers |
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