How do I create and show common dialogs (Error, Warning, Confirmation) in JavaFX 2.0? I can't find any "standard" classes like Dialog
, DialogBox
, Message
or something.
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Perhaps you like to have a look on project for private use: github.com/4ntoine/JavaFxDialog/wiki– BudMintonSep 5, 2012 at 13:55
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Backport of JavaFX 8 dialogs to JDK7: github.com/BertelSpA/openjfx-dialogs-jdk7– Paolo FulgoniJun 16, 2015 at 9:00
10 Answers
Recently released JDK 1.8.0_40 added support for JavaFX dialogs, alerts, etc. For example, to show a confirmation dialog, one would use the Alert class:
Alert alert = new Alert(AlertType.CONFIRMATION, "Delete " + selection + " ?", ButtonType.YES, ButtonType.NO, ButtonType.CANCEL);
alert.showAndWait();
if (alert.getResult() == ButtonType.YES) {
//do stuff
}
Here's a list of added classes in this release:
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Found this to be a good solution, I didn't find a way to title the top of the dialogue but not a big deal. But then again, would you need too...? Cheers Mar 21, 2016 at 19:21
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@GideonSassoon The alert object can be modified after creation. A call to alert.setTitle() before showAndWait() should do nicely. Mar 21, 2016 at 20:25
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@GideonSassoon You can set the header text with
alert.setHeaderText("header text");
if that is what you need Apr 13, 2017 at 14:38 -
EDIT: dialog support was added to JavaFX, see https://stackoverflow.com/a/28887273/1054140
There were no common dialog support in a year 2011.
You had to write it yourself by creating new Stage()
:
Stage dialogStage = new Stage();
dialogStage.initModality(Modality.WINDOW_MODAL);
VBox vbox = new VBox(new Text("Hi"), new Button("Ok."));
vbox.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER);
vbox.setPadding(new Insets(15));
dialogStage.setScene(new Scene(vbox));
dialogStage.show();
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11Hmm, may be, they will appear later like FileChooser? Or they wish every developer to reinvent the wheel?)– AntonDec 1, 2011 at 9:49
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9
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2Official platform support for Alert dialog can be tracked via javafx-jira.kenai.com/browse/RT-12643– jewelseaAug 25, 2012 at 8:40
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1
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3VBoxBuilder is deprecated now. This is still a useful answer though it could do with a small update. Sep 9, 2014 at 8:44
Update
Official standard dialogs are coming to JavaFX in release 8u40, as part of the implemenation of RT-12643. These should be available in final release form around March of 2015 and in source code form in the JavaFX development repository now.
In the meantime, you can use the ControlsFX solution below...
ControlsFX is the defacto standard 3rd party library for common dialog support in JavaFX (error, warning, confirmation, etc).
There are numerous other 3rd party libraries available which provide common dialog support as pointed out in some other answers and you can create your own dialogs easily enough using the sample code in Sergey's answer.
However, I believe that ControlsFX easily provide the best quality standard JavaFX dialogs available at the moment. Here are some samples from the ControlsFX documentation.
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1Voted up, but documentation links aren't apparent on the site linked. Also site says maven 8.0.2 is up, but for me only works with maven 8.0.1.. and I get an "Unsupported major.minor version 52.0" when calling Dialogs.create().message("great").showConfirm(); Aug 27, 2013 at 9:50
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2Documentation links work fine for me. The documentation currently states "Important note: ControlsFX will only work on JavaFX 8.0 b102 or later." Likely you are trying to run ControlsFX against an incompatible Java version. If you have further issues you should log them against the ControlsFX issue tracker.– jewelseaAug 27, 2013 at 15:29
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Sergey is correct, but if you need to get a response from your home-spun dialog(s) for evaluation in the same block of code that invoked it, you should use .showAndWait(), not .show(). Here's my rendition of a couple of the dialog types that are provided in Swing's OptionPane:
public class FXOptionPane {
public enum Response { NO, YES, CANCEL };
private static Response buttonSelected = Response.CANCEL;
private static ImageView icon = new ImageView();
static class Dialog extends Stage {
public Dialog( String title, Stage owner, Scene scene, String iconFile ) {
setTitle( title );
initStyle( StageStyle.UTILITY );
initModality( Modality.APPLICATION_MODAL );
initOwner( owner );
setResizable( false );
setScene( scene );
icon.setImage( new Image( getClass().getResourceAsStream( iconFile ) ) );
}
public void showDialog() {
sizeToScene();
centerOnScreen();
showAndWait();
}
}
static class Message extends Text {
public Message( String msg ) {
super( msg );
setWrappingWidth( 250 );
}
}
public static Response showConfirmDialog( Stage owner, String message, String title ) {
VBox vb = new VBox();
Scene scene = new Scene( vb );
final Dialog dial = new Dialog( title, owner, scene, "res/Confirm.png" );
vb.setPadding( new Inset(10,10,10,10) );
vb.setSpacing( 10 );
Button yesButton = new Button( "Yes" );
yesButton.setOnAction( new EventHandler<ActionEvent>() {
@Override public void handle( ActionEvent e ) {
dial.close();
buttonSelected = Response.YES;
}
} );
Button noButton = new Button( "No" );
noButton.setOnAction( new EventHandler<ActionEvent>() {
@Override public void handle( ActionEvent e ) {
dial.close();
buttonSelected = Response.NO;
}
} );
BorderPane bp = new BorderPane();
HBox buttons = new HBox();
buttons.setAlignment( Pos.CENTER );
buttons.setSpacing( 10 );
buttons.getChildren().addAll( yesButton, noButton );
bp.setCenter( buttons );
HBox msg = new HBox();
msg.setSpacing( 5 );
msg.getChildren().addAll( icon, new Message( message ) );
vb.getChildren().addAll( msg, bp );
dial.showDialog();
return buttonSelected;
}
public static void showMessageDialog( Stage owner, String message, String title ) {
showMessageDialog( owner, new Message( message ), title );
}
public static void showMessageDialog( Stage owner, Node message, String title ) {
VBox vb = new VBox();
Scene scene = new Scene( vb );
final Dialog dial = new Dialog( title, owner, scene, "res/Info.png" );
vb.setPadding( new Inset(10,10,10,10) );
vb.setSpacing( 10 );
Button okButton = new Button( "OK" );
okButton.setAlignment( Pos.CENTER );
okButton.setOnAction( new EventHandler<ActionEvent>() {
@Override public void handle( ActionEvent e ) {
dial.close();
}
} );
BorderPane bp = new BorderPane();
bp.setCenter( okButton );
HBox msg = new HBox();
msg.setSpacing( 5 );
msg.getChildren().addAll( icon, message );
vb.getChildren().addAll( msg, bp );
dial.showDialog();
}
}
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1Was trying to run your class but the compiler chokes on Layout - apparently the constants used. Which import did you use?– likejudoJan 15, 2013 at 4:40
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How does one get the response i.e. which button was selected? the member variable buttonSelected is private.– likejudoJan 15, 2013 at 5:16
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got it to compile and made buttonSelected public but calling it like this does not display anything. ` Stage stage = new Stage(StageStyle.TRANSPARENT); FXOptionPane.showConfirmDialog(stage, "Do you wish to disconnect?", "my title"); `– likejudoJan 15, 2013 at 5:28
Adapted from answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/7505528/921224
javafx.scene.control.Alert
For a an in depth description of how to use JavaFX dialogs see: JavaFX Dialogs (official) by code.makery. They are much more powerful and flexible than Swing dialogs and capable of far more than just popping up messages.
import javafx.scene.control.Alert
import javafx.scene.control.Alert.AlertType;
import javafx.application.Platform;
public class ClassNameHere
{
public static void infoBox(String infoMessage, String titleBar)
{
/* By specifying a null headerMessage String, we cause the dialog to
not have a header */
infoBox(infoMessage, titleBar, null);
}
public static void infoBox(String infoMessage, String titleBar, String headerMessage)
{
Alert alert = new Alert(AlertType.INFORMATION);
alert.setTitle(titleBar);
alert.setHeaderText(headerMessage);
alert.setContentText(infoMessage);
alert.showAndWait();
}
}
One thing to keep in mind is that JavaFX is a single threaded GUI toolkit, which means this method should be called directly from the JavaFX application thread. If you have another thread doing work, which needs a dialog then see these SO Q&As: JavaFX2: Can I pause a background Task / Service? and Platform.Runlater and Task Javafx.
To use this method call:
ClassNameHere.infoBox("YOUR INFORMATION HERE", "TITLE BAR MESSAGE");
or
ClassNameHere.infoBox("YOUR INFORMATION HERE", "TITLE BAR MESSAGE", "HEADER MESSAGE");
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1Please don't post identical answers to multiple questions. Post one good answer, then vote/flag to close the other questions as duplicates. If the question is not a duplicate, tailor your answers to the question.– Martijn Pieters ♦Jun 10, 2015 at 14:54
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1@MartijnPieters The original question specifies Swing as a tag but is open to general Java dialogs (it was asked before JavaFX was really a thing), if anything the JavaFX content I posted there is slightly off topic, yet useful to newbies who find that Q&A while looking for Java Dialogs and don't realise that Swing is going out of date.– TroysephJun 10, 2015 at 15:26
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All the more reason then to tailor your answer to the context then!– Martijn Pieters ♦Jun 10, 2015 at 15:51
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I found this topic on google, so it's better to have information right here than to enter question topic to see the answer i need. This answer deserves more votes. Sep 16, 2015 at 13:32
This works since java 8u40:
Alert alert = new Alert(AlertType.INFORMATION, "Content here", ButtonType.OK);
alert.getDialogPane().setMinHeight(Region.USE_PREF_SIZE);
alert.show();
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1Keep in mind that this has to be run in the FXApplicationThread. (Eg. with
Platform.runLater()
or similar)– LerkMay 21, 2019 at 14:16
Update: JavaFX 8u40 includes simple Dialogs and Alerts!, check out this blog post which explains how to use the official JavaFX Dialogs!
- You can have a look to the great tool JavaFX Dialogs are simple dialogs in the style of JOptionPane from Swing
You can give dialog box which given by the JavaFX UI Controls Project. I think it will help you
Dialogs.showErrorDialog(Stage object, errorMessage, "Main line", "Name of Dialog box");
Dialogs.showWarningDialog(Stage object, errorMessage, "Main line", "Name of Dialog box");
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1
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javafx-dialogs-0.0.3.jar You can download this jar and then you can work with the same dialog box. Jul 24, 2013 at 7:10
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I edited your post to link to the 3rd party JavaFX dialogs project Rajeev referenced. I think it is an older version of the dialogs from ControlsFX.– jewelseaJul 24, 2013 at 7:44
public myClass{
private Stage dialogStage;
public void msgBox(String title){
dialogStage = new Stage();
GridPane grd_pan = new GridPane();
grd_pan.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER);
grd_pan.setHgap(10);
grd_pan.setVgap(10);//pading
Scene scene =new Scene(grd_pan,300,150);
dialogStage.setScene(scene);
dialogStage.setTitle("alert");
dialogStage.initModality(Modality.WINDOW_MODAL);
Label lab_alert= new Label(title);
grd_pan.add(lab_alert, 0, 1);
Button btn_ok = new Button("fermer");
btn_ok.setOnAction(new EventHandler<ActionEvent>() {
@Override
public void handle(ActionEvent arg0) {
// TODO Auto-generated method stub
dialogStage.hide();
}
});
grd_pan.add(btn_ok, 0, 2);
dialogStage.show();
}
}
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3It's probably a good idea to at least explain what your code is doing; there's fairly strong opinions on whether or not code-only answers are okay. May 30, 2014 at 22:13
To make an example of Clairton Luz work, you need to run in the FXApplicationThread
and insert into Platform.runLater
method your code snippet:
Platform.runLater(() -> {
Alert alert = new Alert(Alert.AlertType.ERROR);
alert.setTitle("Error Dialog");
alert.setHeaderText("No information.");
alert.showAndWait();
}
);
Otherwise, you'll get: java.lang.IllegalStateException: Not on FX application thread