70

I need to close the current fxml window by code in the controller

I know stage.close() or stage.hide() do this in fx

how to implement this in fxml? I tried

private void on_btnClose_clicked(ActionEvent actionEvent) {
        Parent root = FXMLLoader.load(getClass().getResource("currentWindow.fxml"));    
        Scene scene = new Scene(root);

        Stage stage = new Stage();            
        stage.setScene(scene);
        stage.show();
}

but it doesn't work!

All help will be greatly appreciated. Thanks!

9 Answers 9

187
  1. give your close button an fx:id, if you haven't yet: <Button fx:id="closeButton" onAction="#closeButtonAction">
  2. In your controller class:

    @FXML private javafx.scene.control.Button closeButton;
    
    @FXML
    private void closeButtonAction(){
        // get a handle to the stage
        Stage stage = (Stage) closeButton.getScene().getWindow();
        // do what you have to do
        stage.close();
    }
    
7
  • 4
    This approach did not work for me. I receive a NullPointerException
    – Austin
    Commented Feb 11, 2016 at 5:13
  • 1
    amazing Works ! , just in case, people remember check the name of your Button (this case closeButton)and the name of your onClick (this case closeButtonAction) Commented May 4, 2016 at 15:10
  • 1
    I get this error when I use this code. Exception in thread "JavaFX Application Thread" java.lang.ClassCastException: com.sun.javafx.stage.EmbeddedWindow cannot be cast to javafx.stage.Stage
    – ryan.s
    Commented Sep 12, 2017 at 15:32
  • 3
    @ZinMinn if you want to close the app, just call Platform.exit(). Closing a stage is different than closing the app (you can have multiple stages). Commented Dec 20, 2017 at 19:53
  • This solution is perfect to close a secondary window. closeButton must be a button in the window to close and the method closeButtonAction() must be in the same class also.
    – Orici
    Commented Apr 29, 2018 at 16:59
25

If you have a window which extends javafx.application.Application; you can use the following method. (This will close the whole application, not just the window. I misinterpreted the OP, thanks to the commenters for pointing it out).

Platform.exit();

Example:

public class MainGUI extends Application {
.........

Button exitButton = new Button("Exit");
exitButton.setOnAction(new ExitButtonListener());
.........

public class ExitButtonListener implements EventHandler<ActionEvent> {

  @Override
  public void handle(ActionEvent arg0) {
    Platform.exit();
  }
}

Edit for the beauty of Java 8:

 public class MainGUI extends Application {
    .........

    Button exitButton = new Button("Exit");
    exitButton.setOnAction(actionEvent -> Platform.exit());
 }
2
  • 11
    Platform.exit() will close all stages and shot down the entire application. This might not be desired. Commented Apr 13, 2017 at 18:14
  • 4
    The original poster was asking how to close a window (stage), not the application. Commented Jun 17, 2017 at 3:00
12

I implemented this in the following way after receiving a NullPointerException from the accepted answer.

In my FXML:

<Button onMouseClicked="#onMouseClickedCancelBtn" text="Cancel">

In my Controller class:

@FXML public void onMouseClickedCancelBtn(InputEvent e) {
    final Node source = (Node) e.getSource();
    final Stage stage = (Stage) source.getScene().getWindow();
    stage.close();
}
4

If you don't want to overspread your controller with fxml linked methods you can do something like this:

You have to give it a "fx:id", like "closeButton" for example. Should look like this in your FXML file:

<Button fx:id="closeButton" layoutX="876.0" layoutY="74.0" mnemonicParsing="false" textAlignment="CENTER">

Then you can just code the button in your initialize method or wherever you want:

@FXML
Button closeButton

public initialize(){
    closeButton.setOnAction(new EventHandler<ActionEvent>(){
        @Override
        public void handle(ActionEvent e){
            ((Stage) closeButton.getScene().getWindow()).close();
        }
    });
}
0
2

Hide doesn't close the window, just put in visible mode. The best solution was:

@FXML
private void exitButtonOnAction(ActionEvent event){
        ((Stage)(((Button)event.getSource()).getScene().getWindow())).close();      
}
1

I'm not sure if this is the best way (or if it works), but you could try:

private void on_btnClose_clicked(ActionEvent actionEvent) {

        Window window = getScene().getWindow();   

        if (window instanceof Stage){
            ((Stage) window).close();
        }
}

(Assuming your controller is a Node. Otherwise you have to get the node first (getScene() is a method of Node)

0
1

I found a nice solution which does not need an event to be triggered:

@FXML
private Button cancelButton;

close(new Event(cancelButton, stage, null));

@FXML
private void close(Event event) {
    ((Node)(event.getSource())).getScene().getWindow().hide();                      
}
1
stage.setOnCloseRequest(new EventHandler<WindowEvent>() {
    public void handle(WindowEvent we) {                        
        Platform.setImplicitExit(false);
        stage.close();
    }
});

It is equivalent to hide. So when you are going to open it next time, you just check if the stage object is exited or not. If it is exited, you just show() i.e. (stage.show()) call. Otherwise, you have to start the stage.

1

finally, I found a solution

 Window window =   ((Node)(event.getSource())).getScene().getWindow(); 
            if (window instanceof Stage){
                ((Stage) window).close();
            }

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