Hi Sean,

I think the attached sample was removed because I didn't get any attachments...

Regards, Pavel
Hi Pavel,

I found C# Form application treats Mnemonics in menu in this way. I attached the sample
application. Press alt+i will iterate over three menu.

2011/9/13 Pavel Porvatov <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>

    Hi Sean,
    Hi,

       Thanks.

       So is there any one can give me a suggestion about what shall I
    do if we want these feature ?  Thanks again.
    First of all you should file a bug (RFE actually). BTW: before
    reviewing the fix I'd like to ask about OS behavior when there are
    several components with the same mnemonic. How Windows XP/Vista/7
    and Linux (Gnome/KDE) manage the described situation?

    Regards, Pavel



    2011/7/6 Jean-Remi Desjardins <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>>

        I think that sounds like a great idea!

        Regards,
        Jean-Rémi Desjardins

        Sent from my iPhone (so don't expect me to be too verbose)

        On 2011-07-06, at 5:42 AM, Sean Chou
        <[email protected]
        <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

        Hi,

           Is there anybody interested in this feature? Or any other
        comments?

        2011/4/21 Sean Chou <[email protected]
        <mailto:[email protected]>>

            Hi,

               I have a simple patch to demo the new behavior. With
            the patch, the focus will go through the radiobuttons
            with mnemonic key Y when alt+y is pressed instead of
            select the last.


            The patch is as follows:

            diff -r 554adcfb615e 
src/share/classes/javax/swing/KeyboardManager.java
            --- a/src/share/classes/javax/swing/KeyboardManager.java    Wed Mar 
16 15:01:07 2011 -0700
            +++ b/src/share/classes/javax/swing/KeyboardManager.java    Thu Mar 
17 14:57:14 2011 +0800
            @@ -251,6 +251,93 @@
                               }
                           } else if ( tmp instanceof Vector) { //more than one 
comp registered for this
                               Vector v = (Vector)tmp;
            +
            +                 /* The below code is added to make sure the focus 
is not always
            +                    transferred to the last component in the 
vector when
            +                    more than one component have the same mnemonic
            +                 */
            +                 if ((e.getModifiers()&  Event.ALT_MASK) == 
Event.ALT_MASK) {
            +                      /* Mnemonic key should transfer the focus 
only, do not select.
            +                       * The following code works in this way:
            +                       * 1. If only one component in the vector is 
visible, fireBinding on it.
            +                       * 2. If multi-components in the vector are 
visible, move the focus to next component.
            +                       *    2.1 If the next component is not a 
JAbstractButton, fireBinding on it.
            +                       *    2.2 If the next component is a JMenu, 
which is a JAbstractButton, fireBinding
            +                       *        on it to open the menu.
            +                       *    2.3 If the next component is another 
JAbstractButton like JRadioButton. Request
            +                       *        focus on it instead of fireBinding. To 
AVOID SELECTION&  CLICK of the button.
            +                       * 3. If the code is triggered by release 
event, fireBinding on current focus component
            +                       *    instead of move focus.
            +                       * 4. Further consideration: there may be 
more swing control like JMenu, or customized
            +                       *    controls, which may break this 
behavior.
            +                       */
            +                      // This has alt as it's modifier so this 
could be a mnemonic
            +                      Component focusOwner = 
KeyboardFocusManager.getCurrentKeyboardFocusManager().getFocusOwner();
            +                      {
            +                      // If only one visible component, invoke it.
            +                      int visibleComponentCounter = 0;
            +                      int nextFocus = 0;
            +                      for (int i =  0; i<  v.size(); i++){
            +                          JComponent c = (JComponent) 
v.elementAt(i);
            +                          if (c.isShowing()&&  c.isEnabled()){
            +                                    visibleComponentCounter++ ;
            +                                         nextFocus = i;
            +                                }
            +                      }
            +                      if (visibleComponentCounter == 1){
            +                                JComponent tmpc = (JComponent) 
v.elementAt(nextFocus);
            +                                fireBinding(tmpc, ks, e, pressed);
            +                          if (e.isConsumed())
            +                             return true;
            +                      }
            +                      // If multi-components are visible, do not 
select the button, just move the focus.
            +                      for (int counter = v.size() - 1; counter>= 
0; counter--) {
            +                          JComponent c = (JComponent) 
v.elementAt(counter);
            +                          if (c.isShowing()&&  c.isEnabled()) {
            +                              if ((c == focusOwner)
            +                                       || (c instanceof JLabel&&  
((JLabel) c).getLabelFor() == focusOwner)) {
            +                                  if (e.getID() == 
KeyEvent.KEY_RELEASED){
            +                                        nextFocus = counter;
            +                                        break;
            +                                  }
            +                                       nextFocus = (counter - 1 + 
v.size()) % v.size();
            +                                  break;
            +                              }
            +                          }
            +                      }
            +                      for (; nextFocus>= 0; nextFocus--) {
            +                          JComponent c = (JComponent) 
v.elementAt(nextFocus);
            +                          if (c.isShowing()&&  c.isEnabled()) {
            +                              break;
            +                          }
            +                      }
            +                      if (nextFocus>= 0) {
            +                          JComponent tmpc = (JComponent) 
v.elementAt(nextFocus);
            +                          // Next is the hack for this 
accessibility:
            +                          // For general Buttons, do not press 
them, but request focus only.
            +                          // For special buttons like JMenu, needs 
press.
            +                          // If it is not a button, let the 
component handles by itself.
            +                          if (!(tmpc instanceof 
javax.swing.AbstractButton)){
            +                              fireBinding(tmpc, ks, e, pressed);
            +                              if (e.isConsumed())
            +                                       return true;
            +                          }
            +                          if (tmpc instanceof JMenu ) {
            +                              fireBinding(tmpc, ks, e, pressed);
            +                              tmpc.requestFocusInWindow();
            +                              if (e.isConsumed())
            +                                  return true;
            +                          } else {
            +                              boolean result = 
tmpc.requestFocusInWindow();
            +                              e.consume();
            +                              return result;
            +                          }
            +                      }
            +                      // If it is not handled here, default 
behavior is selecting the last.
            +                      }
            +                 }
            +
            +
                               // There is no well defined order for 
WHEN_IN_FOCUSED_WINDOW
                               // bindings, but we give precedence to those 
bindings just
                               // added. This is done so that JMenus 
WHEN_IN_FOCUSED_WINDOW




            2011/4/1 Sean Chou <[email protected]
            <mailto:[email protected]>>

                Hi all,

                   In daily use, we may encounter a problem of
                mnemonic key: there may be several
                controls want the same key to be set as mnemonic
                key. It is not common but it does exist.

                   Current openjdk implementation allows users to
                set a same mnemonic key for
                different controls; but during the execution, when
                the mnemonic key is pressed,
                the last control always gets the action. Users are
                not able to touch other controls with
                that mnemonic key. This may confuse them.

                   If all the controls with the same mnemonic key
                can be accessed through, for
                example, when the mnemonic key is pressed, the focus
                is moved to the last control,
                and when the mnemonic key is pressed again, the
                focus is moved to the second control
                with that mnemonic, it will give user the choice to
                select other controls.

                   Here is an example for the case:

                package test;

                import java.awt.BorderLayout;
                import java.awt.Container;
                import javax.swing.ButtonGroup;
                import javax.swing.JFrame;
                import javax.swing.JRadioButton;

                public class TestFocus extends JFrame {
                public TestFocus() {
                Container pane = getContentPane();
                pane.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
                JRadioButton btn1,btn2,btn3;
                btn1 = new JRadioButton("Yes");
                btn1.setMnemonic('Y');
                btn2 = new JRadioButton("Yup");
                btn2.setMnemonic('Y');
                btn3 = new JRadioButton("No");
                btn3.setMnemonic('N');
                btn3.setSelected(true);
                ButtonGroup group = new ButtonGroup();
                group.add(btn1);
                group.add(btn2);
                group.add(btn3);
                pane.add(btn1,BorderLayout.NORTH);
                pane.add(btn2,BorderLayout.CENTER);
                pane.add(btn3,BorderLayout.SOUTH);
                setSize(200,200);
                setVisible(true);
                setDefaultCloseOperation(EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
                }
                public static void main(String[] args) {
                new TestFocus();
                }
                }




-- Best Regards,
                Sean Chou




-- Best Regards,
            Sean Chou




-- Best Regards,
        Sean Chou




-- Best Regards,
    Sean Chou





--
Best Regards,
Sean Chou


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