16

I have a Java project with a toolbar, and the toolbar has icons on it. These icons are stored in a folder called resources/, so for example the path might be "resources/icon1.png". This folder is located in my src directory, so when it is compiled the folder is copied into bin/

I'm using the following code to access the resources.

    protected AbstractButton makeToolbarButton(String imageName, String actionCommand, String toolTipText,
        String altText, boolean toggleButton) {

    String imgLocation = imageName;
    InputStream imageStream = getClass().getResourceAsStream(imgLocation);

    AbstractButton button;
    if (toggleButton)
        button = new JToggleButton();
    else
        button = new JButton();

    button.setActionCommand(actionCommand);
    button.setToolTipText(toolTipText);
    button.addActionListener(listenerClass);

    if (imageStream != null) { // image found
        try {
            byte abyte0[] = new byte[imageStream.available()];
            imageStream.read(abyte0);

            (button).setIcon(new ImageIcon(Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().createImage(abyte0)));

        } catch (IOException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        } finally {
            try {
                imageStream.close();
            } catch (IOException e) {
                e.printStackTrace();
            }
        }
    } else { // no image found
        (button).setText(altText);
        System.err.println("Resource not found: " + imgLocation);
    }

    return button;
}

(imageName will be "resources/icon1.png" etc). This works fine when run in Eclipse. However, when I export a runnable JAR from Eclipse, the icons are not found.

I opened the JAR file and the resources folder is there. I've tried everything, moving the folder, altering the JAR file etc, but I cannot get the icons to show up.

Does anyone know what I'm doing wrong?

(As a side question, is there any file monitor that can work with JAR files? When path problems arise I usually just open FileMon to see what's going on, but it just shows up as accessing the JAR file in this case)

Thank you.

0

4 Answers 4

11

I see two problems with your code:

getClass().getResourceAsStream(imgLocation);

This assumes that the image file is in the same folder as the .class file of the class this code is from, not in a separate resources folder. Try this instead:

getClass().getClassLoader().getResourceAsStream("resources/"+imgLocation);

Another problem:

byte abyte0[] = new byte[imageStream.available()];

The method InputStream.available() does not return the total number of bytes in the stream! It returns the number of bytes available without blocking, which is often much less.

You have to write a loop to copy the bytes to a temporary ByteArrayOutputStream until the end of the stream is reached. Alternatively, use getResource() and the createImage() method that takes an URL parameter.

5

To load an image from a JAR resource use the following code:

Toolkit tk = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit();
URL url = getClass().getResource("path/to/img.png");
Image img = tk.createImage(url);
tk.prepareImage(img, -1, -1, null);
1
  • 1
    What package is that Toolkit within?
    – tomasb
    Aug 7, 2012 at 10:02
4

The section from the Swing tutorial on How to Use Icons shows you how to create a URL and read the Icon in two statements.

0

For example in a NetBeans project, create a resources folder in the src folder. Put your images (jpg, ...) in there.

Whether you use ImageIO or Toolkit (including getResource), you must include a leading / in your path to the image file:

Image image = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getImage(getClass().getResource("/resources/agfa_icon.jpg"));
setIconImage(image);

If this code is inside your JFrame class, the image is added to the frame as an icon in your title bar.

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