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I have encountered a very strange behavior of Java Graphics2D draw String.

If I set a font name, such as

Font f = new Font("Helvetica", Font.PLAIN, 10);

Then on the screen device the first call to g2D.drawString can take as much as 600ms. This creates a screen jam, it's not significant but quite annoying.

Switching the font name to defaults such as "Monospaced" will solve the problem.

Anyone has encountered similar issues?

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    Why not load the required Font instances at start-up? Apr 28, 2012 at 2:53
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    Or request the font family, Font.SANS_SERIF?
    – trashgod
    Apr 28, 2012 at 3:24

1 Answer 1

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That happens because you are loading the Font inside the paint method (when you paint the string first time), which is a bad thing to do. You should either set component's font if it is the only font you are using or atleast load it before painting the component.

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  • Hi @mgarin no I made sure that the Font was not loaded within the paint method. I loaded the font in the constructor, and it took ridiculously long time for the first draw. Another weird thing is if I create a buffered image, the bufferedImage.createGraphics() can take 500 - 600ms to finish too. I don't know whether it's because of the iMac I am using - I am running Windows 7 on a iMac 27. Thank you for your answer!
    – Gang Su
    May 2, 2012 at 15:02
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    How exactly do you load Font before the paint method call? Simply adding a line like "Font font = new Font(...);" will not initialize that Font - it will just create a Font object to manipulate actual font that will be loaded on first real paint call. I guess bufferedImage.createGraphics() can take a while if you are creating some large image (for e.g. 5000x5000) but i am not sure - better provide some code with that problem in a separate question... May 2, 2012 at 15:27
  • @MikleGarin Did you figure out how to load the font? I can't seem to figure it out. Mar 2, 2019 at 5:10
  • @Kerndog73 not really, but it (probably) shouldn't be too hard to figure out - just need to debug the Font class and see what exactly gets initialized upon actual Font usage and then look for options Font class provides to initialize that and forcefully do that when you need to. Mar 2, 2019 at 10:01

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