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I need a JavaFX program to set text to a random color and opacity I'm not sure on how to do it.

Here is a sample of my code:

Text text1 = new Text();
text1.setText("Java");
text1.setFont(Font.font("Times New Roman", FontWeight.BOLD, FontPosture.ITALIC, 22));
text1.setRotate(90);
gridpane.add(text1, 3, 1);

2 Answers 2

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You can use Math.random() to generate a Double in the range [0,1), so you need to do:

text.setOpacity(Math.random());

Color took a little more digging through the docs, but can be accomplished with:

text.setFill(Color.color(Math.random(), Math.random(), Math.random());

setFill comes from Shape, which Text inherits from. setFill takes a Paint, which Color is the simplest implementation of. Color.color(double, double, double) takes the rgb value with doubles in the range [0,1].

Learn how to navigate through the docs and you'll be able to find these sorts of things on your own quickly in the future!

Note: opacity/rgb color all take doubles of the range [0,1] where Math.random() produces in the range [0,1). If you're unfamiliar with this notation, this means Math.random() will NEVER produce 1, only a number smaller than 1 by possible accuracy. This means that you will never have a 100% fully opaque/r/g/b with this method but in reality you probably can't tell the difference, so it's better to use the less complicated method.

Note 2: javafx.scene.paint.Color#color actually provides a four-argument constructor that includes opacity, but I would recommend setting the opacity of the Text node itself as above rather than the opacity of the Paint.

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  • Since I usually use Label and not Text, here's a link discussing when to use one or the other: stackoverflow.com/questions/24374867/…
    – CAD97
    Mar 1, 2016 at 6:11
  • thanks for the tip opacity worked but color is still giving me a not suitable consturctor error. i had tried math.random before but didnt know you needed it 3 times Mar 1, 2016 at 14:44
  • That was my mistake in reading the docs. The constructor takes (double r, double g, double b, double alpha). I've changed the answer to use Color.color now, which has an option for rgb. You need the three randoms because the method takes three values.
    – CAD97
    Mar 1, 2016 at 14:56
  • Awesome thanks I'll try it out once im home should work now Mar 1, 2016 at 19:13
  • still wont run with text.setFill(Color.color(Math.random(), Math.random(), Math.random()); Mar 2, 2016 at 4:13
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Like this:

Text randomColorText(String txt) {
    Text t = new Text(txt);
    Random rng = new Random();
    int c = rng.nextInt();
    int r = c & 255;
    int g = (c >>> 8) & 255;
    int b = (c >>> 16) & 255;
    double op = (c >>> 24) / 255.0;
    t.setFill(Color.rgb(r, g, b, op));
    // or use only r,g,b above and set opacity of the Text shape: t.setOpacity(op);
    return t;
}

Note that the other answer that mentions how Random will never return a double == 1.0, says you won't get the full range of colours is wrong. Color RGB values do not have the same range as double - typically they end up as 8-bit values in the range 0-255 at some point, on some high end applications you might use 16-bits per channel. You will get the full range of colours using the doubles from Random.

You will note that I avoided calling into the random number generator multiple times for what is usually represented by a 32-bit value. (Micro-optimization: Calling nextInt does half the work of nextDouble, and we only need to call it once. I would typically save the instance of Random as a static variable rather than create one every time that method is called. java.util.Random is threeadsafe.)

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