Misplaced Pages

JFace

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
JFace
The Eclipse IDE, a JFace-based application
Developer(s)Eclipse Foundation
Stable release3.9.1 / July 25, 2013 (2013-07-25)
Repository
Operating systemCross-platform
Available inMultilingual
Typewidget toolkit for the Java platform
LicenseEclipse Public License
Websitewiki.eclipse.org/JFace
This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources.
Find sources: "JFace" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

JFace is defined by the Eclipse project as "a UI toolkit that provides helper classes for developing UI features that can be tedious to implement." The Standard Widget Toolkit (SWT) is an open source widget toolkit for Java designed to provide efficient, portable access to the user-interface facilities of the operating systems on which it is implemented.

Structure

It is a layer that sits on top of the raw widget system, and provides classes for handling common UI programming tasks. It brings model view controller programming to the Standard Widget Toolkit.

  1. Provides Viewer classes that handle the tedious tasks of populating, sorting, filtering, and updating widgets
  2. Provides Actions to allow users to define their own behavior and to assign that behavior to specific components, e.g. menu items, tool items, push buttons, etc.
  3. Provides registries that hold Images and Fonts
  4. Defines standard dialogs and wizards, and defines a framework for building complex interactions with the user
  5. Its primary goal is to free the developer up, letting the developer focus on the implementation of his or her specific application without having to be concerned with the underlying widget system or solving problems that are common in almost all UI applications.
  6. A primary concern of the Eclipse group when developing JFace was that under no circumstances did they want to hide the SWT component implementation from the programmer. JFace is completely dependent on SWT, but SWT is not dependent on JFace. Furthermore, the Eclipse Workbench is built on both JFace and SWT; in some instances, it bypasses JFace and accesses SWT directly.

Example

The following is a basic Hello World program using JFace.

import org.eclipse.jface.window.ApplicationWindow;
import org.eclipse.swt.SWT;
import org.eclipse.swt.widgets.*;
public class HelloWorld extends ApplicationWindow {
    public static void main(String args) {
        new HelloWorld().run();
    }
    public HelloWorld() {
        super(null);
    }
    public void run() {
        setBlockOnOpen(true);
        open();
        Display.getCurrent().dispose();
    }
    protected Control createContents(Composite parent) {
        Label label = new Label(parent, SWT.CENTER);
        label.setText("Hello, World");
        return label;
    }
}

See also

References

  1. Eclipse programmer's guide entry on JFace

Bibliography

External links

Eclipse Foundation
Eclipse Public License
Categories: