1

I try to play a beep, I use Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().beep() and it works with Java 7.

import java.awt.Toolkit;

public class testbeep {

    public static void main(String[] args) {

        Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().beep();
      }

}

Howevere, I need to use JavaFX, and JavaFX works on Java 8. Can some one help me to configure my project ? I work on eclipse, when I use Java 8 the beep works but not JavaFX, and when I use Java 7 the beep doesn't work and JavaFX not. I remark that icetea-sound.jar exist on Java 7 and doesn't existe on Java 8, can I find it somewhere ?

2 Answers 2

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Mixing AWT and JavaFX can be a little tricky; however this seems to work fine for me (Java 1.8.0_20; Mac OS X 10.9.5):

import java.awt.Toolkit;

import javafx.application.Application;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.control.Button;
import javafx.scene.layout.StackPane;
import javafx.stage.Stage;


public class TestBeep extends Application {

    @Override
    public void start(Stage primaryStage) {
        Toolkit awtToolkit = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit();
        Button button = new Button("Beep");
        button.setOnAction(e -> awtToolkit.beep());
        StackPane root = new StackPane(button);
        primaryStage.setScene(new Scene(root, 250, 75));
        primaryStage.show();
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        launch(args);
    }

}

I have no idea if it's OK to call toolkit.beep() from a thread other than the AWT event handling thread (here, I do that).

1
  • I am on Ubuntu 14.04.1 LTS
    – Midora
    Nov 10, 2014 at 19:50
0

As you are writing a JavaFX application, you should probably use the built-in JavaFX AudioClip API rather than AWT based API.

AudioClip plonkSound = new AudioClip("http://somehost/path/plonk.mp3");
plonkSound.play();

See the JavaFX media Javadoc for a description of supported audio formats.

Ensure that your system meets the minimum requirements for JavaFX media playback.

For ubuntu, to use JavaFX, you either need to use the Oracle JDK or the Debian OpenJFX package as posted by Emmanuel in JavaFX and OpenJDK. The Debian OpenJFX package, is quite new, so at this stage, I'd recommend sticking with the Oracle Java runtime if you can.


Regarding your comment about icedtea-sound being present in Java 7 but not Java 8, perhaps that is because your Java 7 in openjdk and your Java 8 is Oracle jdk and perhaps Oracle jdk does not ship with icedtea-sound (I haven't checked and don't really know). You could try openjdk 8 + the debian openjfx package if you wish, perhaps that would include the icedtea-sound library. icedtea-sound is definitely not required for pure JavaFX media playback, but might be required to use the awt beep command. Regardless, I'd probably still recommend a JavaFX only solution using the JavaFX media libraries rather than mixing in AWT libraries.

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