Yes, callSeriallyAndWait
is the equivalent of SwingUtilities.invokeAndWait
. There's no logical difference.
This can work but there's a couple of concerns here... First:
What if two threads show a dialog like that at once. The first will dispose to show the second dialog which might dispose to show the first dialog in an infinite loop... This can happen even if your physically on the EDT because the code isn't a part of the normal application flow.
Unlike Swing we have only one Form
at a time so a dialog "goes back" and that can get tricky.
So first of all your GUI code needs to check that you're not currently asking for a pin and the best way to do that is to have one class responsible for getting the pin from the user if necessary and it should have a static state. If should also check that there's no other dialog showing at this time and if so it might want to avoid showing e.g.:
if(getCurrentForm() instanceof Dialog) {
// ... don't show yet
}
If I understand your problem correctly you have background threads that might need a pin. In that case more than one thread might be caught without a pin and would need it from the GUI. So both threads need to be suspended but only one of them should invoke callSeriallyAndWait
... This means the current approach is sub par anyway.
Normally we avoid callSeriallyAndWait
as it's much slower (on Swing too). I would also use an InteractionDialog
or similar which is less intrusive than a regular dialog. However, it isn't modal. But in this case it shouldn't matter.
You need to develop your own thread blocking code for the background threads and it can react to a standard callback to release all the waiting background threads. You can then just use any code you want to create the GUI and use any listener then update shared state in the class with the new pin and invoke notifyAll()
to wake up threads waiting for the pin. E.g.
synchronized(LOCK) {
if(pin == null && !dialogIsShowing) {
dialogIsShowing = true;
callSerially(() -> promptForPin());
}
while(pin == null) {
LOCK.wait();
}
}
Then the UI logic:
private void onUserSubmittedPin(String pin) {
synchronized(LOCK) {
this.pin = pin;
dialogIsShowing = false;
LOCK.notifyAll();
}
}
Dialog
, then thatDialog
should be called inside acallSeriallyAndWait
. ModalDialog
s (the default) block the current EDT thread until theDialog
is dismissed, usinginvokeAndBlock
under the hood. For an explanation, see: codenameone.com/manual/edt.html#invoke-And-Block-sectioncallSeriallyAndWait
, aren't I? I may be doing it wrong - that's why I'm asking, but the call is there.