vote up 2 vote down star

In the past, when one made a JPopupMenu visible it's first item would get selected by default: http://weblogs.java.net/blog/alexfromsun/archive/2008/02/jtrayicon_updat.html

Nowadays the default behavior is to pop up the menu without any item selected. I would like create a JPopupMenu with a single item that will pop up selected and centered under the mouse pointer. I have managed to get the item to pop up centered under the mouse but I the JMenuItem refuses to render as if it is selected. If I move the mouse out of the item and back in it selects properly.

Any ideas?

Here is my testcase:

import java.awt.Component;
import java.awt.Point;
import java.awt.event.ActionEvent;
import java.awt.event.ActionListener;
import java.awt.event.MouseAdapter;
import java.awt.event.MouseEvent;
import javax.swing.JFrame;
import javax.swing.JMenuItem;
import javax.swing.JPopupMenu;

public class Test extends JFrame
{
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {
    	JFrame frame = new JFrame();
    	frame.setSize(800, 600);
    	frame.getContentPane().addMouseListener(new MouseAdapter()
    	{
    		@Override
    		public void mousePressed(MouseEvent e)
    		{
    			if (e.isPopupTrigger())
    				popupTriggered(e);
    		}

    		@Override
    		public void mouseReleased(MouseEvent e)
    		{
    			if (e.isPopupTrigger())
    				popupTriggered(e);
    		}

    		private void popupTriggered(MouseEvent e)
    		{
    			JPopupMenu menu = new JPopupMenu();
    			final JMenuItem item = new JMenuItem("This is a JMenuItem");
    			menu.add(item);
    			Point point = e.getPoint();
    			int x = point.x - (item.getPreferredSize().width / 2);
    			int y = point.y - (item.getPreferredSize().height / 2);
    			menu.show((Component) e.getSource(), x, y);
    		}
    	});
    	frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.DISPOSE_ON_CLOSE);
    	frame.setVisible(true);
    }
}
flag

78% accept rate
I found some inconsistent behavior too (see my updated answer). Can you confirm this? – Zach Scrivena Jan 30 at 3:20
I reported this as a bug to Sun. I'll let you know what they write back. – Gili Jan 30 at 19:48
Here is the associated bug report: bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/… – Gili Feb 28 at 17:37

4 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

Nowadays the default behavior is to pop up the menu without any item selected.

Actually, I would argue that this is the correct behavior, at least in Windows. Other non-Java applications do this too. I don't think it's worth breaking this convention even if there is only one item in the menu. If you feel otherwise, you can set the selection index as in sean.bright's answer.


So, I finally got the chance to try it out on Java 1.6.0_11, and found some inconsistent behavior: If the popup menu juts out of the parent frame, the item is automatically selected; if the popup menu appears entirely within the parent frame, nothing is selected. Sounds like a Swing bug, which at least warrants an RFE for consistent behavior.

link|flag
+1: The right behavior is whatever the particular platform does for other (non-Java) programs. – Software Monkey Jan 27 at 2:34
Zach, I agree with your general assessment but unfortunately this doesn't answer my question. I want to break away from the conventional behavior but I'm finding it impossible to do so. I'm trying to find out if this is a Swing bug or user error. – Gili Jan 27 at 4:20
I filed a bug report with Sun: bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/… – Gili Feb 28 at 17:39
vote up 0 vote down
menu.getSelectionModel().setSelectedIndex(0);
link|flag
This doesn't work. Try it for yourself. Under Java6 update 11 if you pop up the JMenuItem such that it is centered under the mouse and then you invoke setSelectedIndex() then the JMenuItem won't show up as selected. – Gili Jan 27 at 3:54
vote up 0 vote down

This is weird.

I tried it with Windows, and with Java 1.5.0_08 and even 1.6.0_07 the first Element is selected automatically, as you expected it to be.

So I tried it with 1.6.0_11, and it does not work any more, the first element is not selected initially. Selecting the element in the selectionModel does not seem to help.

One workaround (that I'm not at all proud of) is to move the mouse automatically after displaying the popup menu, using the coordinates of the MouseEvent. Maybe someone's got a better idea?

import java.awt.AWTException;
import java.awt.Robot;
import java.awt.event.MouseAdapter;
import java.awt.event.MouseEvent;

import javax.swing.JFrame;
import javax.swing.JMenuItem;
import javax.swing.JPopupMenu;

public class SelectedPopupMenu extends JFrame {

    public SelectedPopupMenu() {
    	addMouseListener(new MouseAdapter() {
    	    public void mouseClicked(final MouseEvent e) {
    	    	JPopupMenu popupMenu = new JPopupMenu();
    	    	popupMenu.add(new JMenuItem("Test-Item"));
    	    	popupMenu.add(new JMenuItem("Test-Item-2"));
    	    	// do not care to really hit the center of the popup
    	    	popupMenu.show(SelectedPopupMenu.this, e.getX() - 30, e.getY() - 10);
    	    	try {
                    // shake mouse, so that first element is selected even in Java 1.6.0_11
                    Robot robot = new Robot();
                    robot.mouseMove(e.getX() + 1, e.getY());
                    robot.mouseMove(e.getX(), e.getY());
    	        } catch (AWTException ex) {
    		        ex.printStackTrace();
    		    }
    	    }
    	});
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) {
    	JFrame frame = new SelectedPopupMenu();
    	frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
    	frame.setSize(800, 600);
    	frame.setVisible(true);
    }
}
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Secret turns out to be MenuSelectionManager.defaultManager().setSelectedPath(new MenuElement[]{menu, ...});

import java.awt.event.MouseAdapter;
import java.awt.event.MouseEvent;
import javax.swing.JFrame;
import javax.swing.JMenuItem;
import javax.swing.JPopupMenu;
import javax.swing.MenuElement;
import javax.swing.MenuSelectionManager;
import javax.swing.SwingUtilities;

/**
 * Demonstrates programmatic {@link JMenuItem} selection;
 * specifically how to make the first item selected by default
 */
public class TestPopup extends JFrame {
  public static void main(String[] args) {
    final JFrame frame = new JFrame("TestPopup");
    frame.setSize(640, 480);
    frame.getContentPane().addMouseListener(new MouseAdapter() {
      @Override
      public void mousePressed(MouseEvent e) {
        if (e.isPopupTrigger()) {
          popupTriggered(e);
        }
      }
      private void popupTriggered(MouseEvent e) {
        final JPopupMenu menu = new JPopupMenu();
        final JMenuItem item0 = new JMenuItem("JMenuItem 0");
        final JMenuItem item1 = new JMenuItem("JMenuItem 1");
        menu.add(item0);
        menu.add(item1);
        menu.pack();
        // use invokeLater or just do this after the menu has been shown
        SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
          public void run() {
            MenuSelectionManager.defaultManager().setSelectedPath(new MenuElement[]{menu, item0});
          }
        });
        int x = (int) ((int) (frame.getSize().width - (menu.getPreferredSize().width / 2.)) / 2.);
        int y = (int) ((int) (frame.getSize().height - (menu.getPreferredSize().height / 2.)) / 2.);
        menu.show(frame, x, y);
        // doesn't work:
        //item0.setSelected(true);
        // doesn't work:
        //menu.getSelectionModel().setSelectedIndex(0);
        // bingo; see also MenuKeyListener / MenuKeyEvent
//        MenuSelectionManager.defaultManager().setSelectedPath(new MenuElement[]{menu, item0});
      }
    });
    frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.DISPOSE_ON_CLOSE);
    frame.setLocationRelativeTo(null);
    frame.setVisible(true);
  }
}
link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.