Ticket created: ID 9064689 Dirk
> On 23 Apr 2020, at 13:40, Dirk Lemmermann <dlemmerm...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I think this is a bug … I will create a ticket for it. When this behaviour > was fixed for Swing in Java 6 it made a huge difference in the perception of > the quality and performance of Java applications. Could do the same for > JavaFX. > > Dirk > > >> On 22 Apr 2020, at 20:17, Tom Schindl <tom.schi...@bestsolution.at> wrote: >> >> yes I do but I think this is by nature: >> >> a) you use CSS so only after the first CSS-Pass the color could be set >> appropriately, this CSS pass could happen after the Native-Window is >> shown >> => you can mitigate that a bit using >> root.setBackground(new Background(new BackgroundFill(Color.ORANGE, >> CornerRadii.EMPTY, Insets.EMPTY))); >> >> b) if the above gives you short flash (IMHO shorter than with CSS) and >> you can see that by setting eg RED or GREEN as the Scene-Fill so then >> it gets more prominent >> >> So the flash is gone if you put the same color to Scene.setFill() as your >> root-Pane but now something slightly unexpected happens. The trim is colored >> slighly in your scene-color ;-) >> >> Tom >> >> Am 22.04.20 um 19:46 schrieb Dirk Lemmermann: >>> import javafx.application.Application; >>> import javafx.scene.Scene; >>> import javafx.scene.layout.VBox; >>> import javafx.stage.Stage; >>> public class BugDemo extends Application { >>> public void start(Stage stage) { >>> VBox root = new VBox(); >>> root.setStyle("-fx-background-color: orange;"); >>> Scene scene = new Scene(root, 1000, 800); >>> stage.setScene(scene); >>> stage.show(); >>> } >>> public static void main(String[] args) { >>> launch(args); >>> } >>> } >