I think it would be great to have in the public API. It looks like it would allow you to spread large UI updates out over several pulses in a well-defined way.
See also this post from a month or so ago: > Hi, > I want to do some performance tuning of a JavaFX application of mine but > before > I can start with that I have to learn a little bit about the scene graph > redraw handling. > Maybe there is someone on this list who can help me there. > > What I want to achieve is a super smooth animation (movement) of my scene > graph. > Let's assume the scene graph itself can be redrawn fast enough in less than > 1/60s. > In addition let's assume the scene graph contains a canvas which only has to > be updated from > time to time but an update of the canvas takes substantially longer. > Let's say it takes 1s. > > When an update of the canvas is in progress will this delay the next pulse > until all internal > drawing within the canvas is finished? From my observations I think so. > > If I submit my drawing calls to the canvas in smaller chunks via > Platform.runLater calls will > these also delay the next pulse or will the execution of these calls be > delayed in favor of the > scene graph update? > > I hope my goal has become clear. I would like to be able to spread the update > of the canvas over > several scene graph redraw cycles so that an animation of the canvas stays > smooth although the > content builds up more slowly. > > Michael -----Original Message----- From: openjfx-dev [mailto:openjfx-dev-boun...@openjdk.java.net] On Behalf Of Jonathan Giles Sent: Donnerstag, 24. September 2015 01:49 To: openjfx-dev@openjdk.java.net Subject: Usage of Toolkit firePulse Hi all, Today I am keen to get your help on understanding use of the Toolkit.getToolkit().firePulse() private API. If you could spare a few minutes to grep your source directory for any usage of 'firePulse', and email me your findings, that would be really interesting. As a gentle motivational tool I'll conclude by saying that, surprisingly, this private API is barely used inside the openjfx production code. If you look at the openjfx unit tests, it is used massively. The question is - how much is this being used by other community members. If the answer is 'not much' or less, then this private API may not be made public in JDK 9. Your feedback therefore is critical! Thanks, -- Jonathan