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* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
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* under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as
* published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this
* particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided
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*
* This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
* accompanied this code).
*
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*
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package java.beans;
import java.lang.reflect.InvocationHandler;
import java.lang.reflect.InvocationTargetException;
import java.lang.reflect.Proxy;
import java.lang.reflect.Method;
import java.security.AccessControlContext;
import java.security.AccessController;
import java.security.PrivilegedAction;
import sun.reflect.misc.MethodUtil;
/**
* The EventHandler
class provides
* support for dynamically generating event listeners whose methods
* execute a simple statement involving an incoming event object
* and a target object.
*
* The EventHandler
class is intended to be used by interactive tools, such as
* application builders, that allow developers to make connections between
* beans. Typically connections are made from a user interface bean
* (the event source)
* to an application logic bean (the target). The most effective
* connections of this kind isolate the application logic from the user
* interface. For example, the EventHandler
for a
* connection from a JCheckBox
to a method
* that accepts a boolean value can deal with extracting the state
* of the check box and passing it directly to the method so that
* the method is isolated from the user interface layer.
*
* Inner classes are another, more general way to handle events from
* user interfaces. The EventHandler
class
* handles only a subset of what is possible using inner
* classes. However, EventHandler
works better
* with the long-term persistence scheme than inner classes.
* Also, using EventHandler
in large applications in
* which the same interface is implemented many times can
* reduce the disk and memory footprint of the application.
*
* The reason that listeners created with EventHandler
* have such a small
* footprint is that the Proxy
class, on which
* the EventHandler
relies, shares implementations
* of identical
* interfaces. For example, if you use
* the EventHandler
create
methods to make
* all the ActionListener
s in an application,
* all the action listeners will be instances of a single class
* (one created by the Proxy
class).
* In general, listeners based on
* the Proxy
class require one listener class
* to be created per listener type (interface),
* whereas the inner class
* approach requires one class to be created per listener
* (object that implements the interface).
*
*
* You don't generally deal directly with EventHandler
* instances.
* Instead, you use one of the EventHandler
* create
methods to create
* an object that implements a given listener interface.
* This listener object uses an EventHandler
object
* behind the scenes to encapsulate information about the
* event, the object to be sent a message when the event occurs,
* the message (method) to be sent, and any argument
* to the method.
* The following section gives examples of how to create listener
* objects using the create
methods.
*
*
EventHandler
is to install
* a listener that calls a method on the target object with no arguments.
* In the following example we create an ActionListener
* that invokes the toFront
method on an instance
* of javax.swing.JFrame
.
*
* ** * When*myButton.addActionListener( * (ActionListener)EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, frame, "toFront")); **
myButton
is pressed, the statement
* frame.toFront()
will be executed. One could get
* the same effect, with some additional compile-time type safety,
* by defining a new implementation of the ActionListener
* interface and adding an instance of it to the button:
*
* ** * The next simplest use of//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler. *myButton.addActionListener(new ActionListener() { * public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { * frame.toFront(); * } *}); **
EventHandler
is
* to extract a property value from the first argument
* of the method in the listener interface (typically an event object)
* and use it to set the value of a property in the target object.
* In the following example we create an ActionListener
that
* sets the nextFocusableComponent
property of the target
* (myButton) object to the value of the "source" property of the event.
*
* ** * This would correspond to the following inner class implementation: * **EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, myButton, "nextFocusableComponent", "source") **
** * It's also possible to create an//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler. *new ActionListener() { * public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { * myButton.setNextFocusableComponent((Component)e.getSource()); * } *} **
EventHandler
that
* just passes the incoming event object to the target's action.
* If the fourth EventHandler.create
argument is
* an empty string, then the event is just passed along:
*
* ** * This would correspond to the following inner class implementation: * **EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, target, "doActionEvent", "") **
** * Probably the most common use of//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler. *new ActionListener() { * public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { * target.doActionEvent(e); * } *} **
EventHandler
* is to extract a property value from the
* source of the event object and set this value as
* the value of a property of the target object.
* In the following example we create an ActionListener
that
* sets the "label" property of the target
* object to the value of the "text" property of the
* source (the value of the "source" property) of the event.
*
* ** * This would correspond to the following inner class implementation: * **EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, myButton, "label", "source.text") **
** * The event property may be "qualified" with an arbitrary number * of property prefixes delimited with the "." character. The "qualifying" * names that appear before the "." characters are taken as the names of * properties that should be applied, left-most first, to * the event object. *//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler. *new ActionListener { * public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { * myButton.setLabel(((JTextField)e.getSource()).getText()); * } *} **
* For example, the following action listener * *
** * might be written as the following inner class * (assuming all the properties had canonical getter methods and * returned the appropriate types): * **EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, target, "a", "b.c.d") **
** The target property may also be "qualified" with an arbitrary number * of property prefixs delimited with the "." character. For example, the * following action listener: *//Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler. *new ActionListener { * public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { * target.setA(e.getB().getC().isD()); * } *} **
* EventHandler.create(ActionListener.class, target, "a.b", "c.d") ** might be written as the following inner class * (assuming all the properties had canonical getter methods and * returned the appropriate types): *
* //Equivalent code using an inner class instead of EventHandler. * new ActionListener { * public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { * target.getA().setB(e.getC().isD()); * } *} **
* As EventHandler
ultimately relies on reflection to invoke
* a method we recommend against targeting an overloaded method. For example,
* if the target is an instance of the class MyTarget
which is
* defined as:
*
* public class MyTarget { * public void doIt(String); * public void doIt(Object); * } ** Then the method
doIt
is overloaded. EventHandler will invoke
* the method that is appropriate based on the source. If the source is
* null, then either method is appropriate and the one that is invoked is
* undefined. For that reason we recommend against targeting overloaded
* methods.
*
* @see java.lang.reflect.Proxy
* @see java.util.EventObject
*
* @since 1.4
*
* @author Mark Davidson
* @author Philip Milne
* @author Hans Muller
*
*/
public class EventHandler implements InvocationHandler {
private Object target;
private String action;
private final String eventPropertyName;
private final String listenerMethodName;
private final AccessControlContext acc = AccessController.getContext();
/**
* Creates a new EventHandler
object;
* you generally use one of the create
methods
* instead of invoking this constructor directly. Refer to
* {@link java.beans.EventHandler#create(Class, Object, String, String)
* the general version of create} for a complete description of
* the eventPropertyName
and listenerMethodName
* parameter.
*
* @param target the object that will perform the action
* @param action the name of a (possibly qualified) property or method on
* the target
* @param eventPropertyName the (possibly qualified) name of a readable property of the incoming event
* @param listenerMethodName the name of the method in the listener interface that should trigger the action
*
* @throws NullPointerException if target
is null
* @throws NullPointerException if action
is null
*
* @see EventHandler
* @see #create(Class, Object, String, String, String)
* @see #getTarget
* @see #getAction
* @see #getEventPropertyName
* @see #getListenerMethodName
*/
@ConstructorProperties({"target", "action", "eventPropertyName", "listenerMethodName"})
public EventHandler(Object target, String action, String eventPropertyName, String listenerMethodName) {
this.target = target;
this.action = action;
if (target == null) {
throw new NullPointerException("target must be non-null");
}
if (action == null) {
throw new NullPointerException("action must be non-null");
}
this.eventPropertyName = eventPropertyName;
this.listenerMethodName = listenerMethodName;
}
/**
* Returns the object to which this event handler will send a message.
*
* @return the target of this event handler
* @see #EventHandler(Object, String, String, String)
*/
public Object getTarget() {
return target;
}
/**
* Returns the name of the target's writable property
* that this event handler will set,
* or the name of the method that this event handler
* will invoke on the target.
*
* @return the action of this event handler
* @see #EventHandler(Object, String, String, String)
*/
public String getAction() {
return action;
}
/**
* Returns the property of the event that should be
* used in the action applied to the target.
*
* @return the property of the event
*
* @see #EventHandler(Object, String, String, String)
*/
public String getEventPropertyName() {
return eventPropertyName;
}
/**
* Returns the name of the method that will trigger the action.
* A return value of null
signifies that all methods in the
* listener interface trigger the action.
*
* @return the name of the method that will trigger the action
*
* @see #EventHandler(Object, String, String, String)
*/
public String getListenerMethodName() {
return listenerMethodName;
}
private Object applyGetters(Object target, String getters) {
if (getters == null || getters.equals("")) {
return target;
}
int firstDot = getters.indexOf('.');
if (firstDot == -1) {
firstDot = getters.length();
}
String first = getters.substring(0, firstDot);
String rest = getters.substring(Math.min(firstDot + 1, getters.length()));
try {
Method getter = null;
if (target != null) {
getter = Statement.getMethod(target.getClass(),
"get" + NameGenerator.capitalize(first),
new Class[]{});
if (getter == null) {
getter = Statement.getMethod(target.getClass(),
"is" + NameGenerator.capitalize(first),
new Class[]{});
}
if (getter == null) {
getter = Statement.getMethod(target.getClass(), first, new Class[]{});
}
}
if (getter == null) {
throw new RuntimeException("No method called: " + first +
" defined on " + target);
}
Object newTarget = MethodUtil.invoke(getter, target, new Object[]{});
return applyGetters(newTarget, rest);
}
catch (Exception e) {
throw new RuntimeException("Failed to call method: " + first +
" on " + target, e);
}
}
/**
* Extract the appropriate property value from the event and
* pass it to the action associated with
* this EventHandler
.
*
* @param proxy the proxy object
* @param method the method in the listener interface
* @return the result of applying the action to the target
*
* @see EventHandler
*/
public Object invoke(final Object proxy, final Method method, final Object[] arguments) {
AccessControlContext acc = this.acc;
if ((acc == null) && (System.getSecurityManager() != null)) {
throw new SecurityException("AccessControlContext is not set");
}
return AccessController.doPrivileged(new PrivilegedAction