153

Coming from .NET i am so used calling Alert() in desktop apps. However in this java desktop app, I just want to alert a message saying "thank you for using java" I have to go through this much suffering:

(using a JOptionPane)

Is there an easier way?

1
  • 10
    What exactly do you expect from "easier"? If it's the verbosity, why not just wrap it in some static utility method and hide it away, for example? By the way, the official tutorial is here.
    – BalusC
    Feb 2, 2012 at 20:28

6 Answers 6

275

I'll be the first to admit Java can be very verbose, but I don't think this is unreasonable:

JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null, "My Goodness, this is so concise");

If you statically import javax.swing.JOptionPane.showMessageDialog using:

import static javax.swing.JOptionPane.showMessageDialog;

This further reduces to

showMessageDialog(null, "This is even shorter");
7
  • 40
    Nothing wrong with verbosity. In fact, I consider that one of its strengths.
    – mre
    Feb 2, 2012 at 20:32
  • 16
    @mre I guess this is either a joke or you're misunderstanding "verbosity"?
    – Dónal
    Feb 2, 2012 at 20:34
  • 38
    @mre unless you need the typing practice to transition to a secretarial job, I don't see how verbosity is desirable.
    – Dónal
    Feb 3, 2012 at 10:52
  • 7
    @Dónal When some simple thing takes a whole page of code to get working, that really creates a whole lot of extra jobs for people! :) Mar 4, 2015 at 7:38
  • 11
    Well, one argument for verbosity could be gained from a counterexample - I've spent quite a few minutes trying to disentangle the meaning of a single compact line, before. Being brief sometimes comes at the cost of readability. Granted, verbosity doesn't automatically grant readability.
    – Erhannis
    Jul 7, 2018 at 23:41
42

Assuming you already have a JFrame to call this from:

JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(frame, "thank you for using java");

See The Java Tutorials: How to Make Dialogs
See the JavaDoc

2
  • 5
    The first argument can be null if you don't have a JFrame available. Aug 28, 2014 at 21:19
  • 8
    Note (to whom it may concern): JOptionPane is in javax.swing Mar 4, 2015 at 7:47
37

If you don't like "verbosity" you can always wrap your code in a short method:

private void msgbox(String s){
   JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null, s);
}

and the usage:

msgbox("don't touch that!");
28

Even without importing swing, you can get the call in one, all be it long, string. Otherwise just use the swing import and simple call:

JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null, "Thank you for using Java", "Yay, java", JOptionPane.PLAIN_MESSAGE);

Easy enough.

11

Call "setWarningMsg()" Method and pass the text that you want to show.

exm:- setWarningMsg("thank you for using java");


public static void setWarningMsg(String text){
    Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().beep();
    JOptionPane optionPane = new JOptionPane(text,JOptionPane.WARNING_MESSAGE);
    JDialog dialog = optionPane.createDialog("Warning!");
    dialog.setAlwaysOnTop(true);
    dialog.setVisible(true);
}

Or Just use

JOptionPane optionPane = new JOptionPane("thank you for using java",JOptionPane.WARNING_MESSAGE);
JDialog dialog = optionPane.createDialog("Warning!");
dialog.setAlwaysOnTop(true); // to show top of all other application
dialog.setVisible(true); // to visible the dialog

You can use JOptionPane. (WARNING_MESSAGE or INFORMATION_MESSAGE or ERROR_MESSAGE)

0
2

Can use this code simply like javascript:

void alert(String str){
        JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null, str);
    }

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