Yes, it's possible. You need to use the enterNestedEventLoop and exitNestedEventLoop methods (they are inside the com.sun.javafx.tk.Toolkit class). See this usage example:
// Make sure to import the FX Toolkit first
import com.sun.javafx.tk.Toolkit;
// This object will be used as a unique identifier to the nested loop (to
// block the execution of the thread until exitNestedEventLoop is called)
final Object loopLock = new Object();
// Simulate a long process thread (DB call, download, etc)
Thread longProcess = new Thread(new Runnable()
{
@Override
public void run()
{
// Sleep for 12 seconds to simulate a long process
try
{
Thread.sleep(12000);
} catch (InterruptedException e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
// Setup a result to pass back to the enterNestedLoop() caller
String result = "Result of this long process";
// We are now done. Call exitNestedEventLoop() to unblock
// the enterNestedLoop() caller. This needs to run from
// the FX Thread so use Platform.runLater()
Runnable fxRunner = new Runnable()
{
public void run()
{
try
{
Toolkit.getToolkit().exitNestedEventLoop(loopLock,
result);
} catch (Throwable t)
{
t.printStackTrace();
}
}
};
Platform.runLater(fxRunner);
}
});
// Start that long process from the FX Thread
longProcess.start();
// The next call will block until exitNestedEventLoop is called, however
// the FX Thread will continue processing UI requests
Object result = Toolkit.getToolkit().enterNestedEventLoop(loopLock);
// Next statement will print: "Result of this long process"
System.out.println("Result is: " + result);
Now, before you use this be warned of two important things:
The com.sun.javafx.tk.Toolkit class is not part of the public API, so Oracle reserves the right of removing it without notice. I've been using it just fine from Java 7 to 8u51 so they could stay there forever, change package/names or disappear completely (unlikely).
Nested loops (and Swing's secondary loops) are great for flexibility and small applications but overusing them often comes with a price. Nesting to many loops (huge stack trace) will often cause "strange" behaviour in your applications since initial parts of your code might end up waiting four or five things ahead completely unrelated to them. I've seen FX nested loops causing "empty" exceptions in FX WebEngine executeScript() calls and duplicating keyboard preprocessing (when pairing FX+Swing) among other problems.
That said I would recommend using the javafx.concurrent.Task instead (if it makes sense). Using the Task class will require a bit more effort but I think it's the correct way of doing things and will probably save you lots of maintenance time.
For extra reference about the FX Task class see this great article: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/javafx/interoperability-tutorial/concurrency.htm
UPDATE: enterNestedEventLoop and exitNestedEventLoop will be part of the Java 9 public API (Platform class), more info in JDK-8090865
Hope this helps!