public abstract class LookAndFeel extends Object
LookAndFeel, as the name implies, encapsulates a look and
 feel. Beyond installing a look and feel most developers never need to
 interact directly with LookAndFeel. In general only developers
 creating a custom look and feel need to concern themselves with this class.
 
 Swing is built upon the foundation that each JComponent
 subclass has an implementation of a specific ComponentUI
 subclass. The ComponentUI is often referred to as "the ui",
 "component ui", or "look and feel delegate". The ComponentUI
 subclass is responsible for providing the look and feel specific
 functionality of the component. For example, JTree requires
 an implementation of the ComponentUI subclass TreeUI. The implementation of the specific ComponentUI subclass is provided by the LookAndFeel. Each
 JComponent subclass identifies the ComponentUI
 subclass it requires by way of the JComponent method getUIClassID.
 
 Each LookAndFeel implementation must provide
 an implementation of the appropriate ComponentUI subclass by
 specifying a value for each of Swing's ui class ids in the UIDefaults object returned from getDefaults. For example,
 BasicLookAndFeel uses BasicTreeUI as the concrete
 implementation for TreeUI. This is accomplished by BasicLookAndFeel providing the key-value pair "TreeUI"-"javax.swing.plaf.basic.BasicTreeUI", in the
 UIDefaults returned from getDefaults. Refer to
 UIDefaults.getUI(JComponent) for defails on how the implementation
 of the ComponentUI subclass is obtained.
 
 When a LookAndFeel is installed the UIManager does
 not check that an entry exists for all ui class ids. As such,
 random exceptions will occur if the current look and feel has not
 provided a value for a particular ui class id and an instance of
 the JComponent subclass is created.
 
UIManager each LookAndFeel has the opportunity
 to provide a set of defaults that are layered in with developer and
 system defaults. Some of Swing's components require the look and feel
 to provide a specific set of defaults. These are documented in the
 classes that require the specific default.
 ComponentUIs typically need to set various properties
 on the JComponent the ComponentUI is providing the
 look and feel for. This is typically done when the ComponentUI is installed on the JComponent. Setting a
 property should only be done if the developer has not set the
 property. For non-primitive values it is recommended that the
 ComponentUI only change the property on the JComponent if the current value is null or implements
 UIResource. If the current value is null or
 implements UIResource it indicates the property has not
 been set by the developer, and the ui is free to change it.  For
 example, BasicButtonUI.installDefaults only changes the
 font on the JButton if the return value from button.getFont() is null or implements UIResource. On the other hand if button.getFont() returned
 a non-null value that did not implement UIResource
 then BasicButtonUI.installDefaults would not change the
 JButton's font.
 
 For primitive values, such as opaque, the method installProperty should be invoked.  installProperty only changes
 the correspoding property if the value has not been changed by the
 developer.
 
 ComponentUI implementations should use the various install methods
 provided by this class as they handle the necessary checking and install
 the property using the recommended guidelines.
 
LookAndFeel need to
 access the defaults if the value of the property being changed is
 null or a UIResource. For example, installing the
 font does the following:
 
   JComponent c;
   Font font = c.getFont();
   if (font == null || (font instanceof UIResource)) {
       c.setFont(UIManager.getFont("fontKey"));
   }
 
 If the font is null or a UIResource, the
 defaults table is queried with the key fontKey. All of
 UIDefault's get methods throw a NullPointerException if passed in null. As such, unless
 otherwise noted each of the various install methods of LookAndFeel throw a NullPointerException if the current
 value is null or a UIResource and the supplied
 defaults key is null. In addition, unless otherwise specified
 all of the install methods throw a NullPointerException if
 a null component is passed in.| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
| LookAndFeel() | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| UIDefaults | getDefaults()Returns the look and feel defaults. | 
| abstract String | getDescription()Return a one line description of this look and feel implementation,
 e.g. | 
| static Object | getDesktopPropertyValue(String systemPropertyName,
                       Object fallbackValue)Returns the value of the specified system desktop property by
 invoking  Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getDesktopProperty(). | 
| Icon | getDisabledIcon(JComponent component,
               Icon icon)Returns an  Iconwith a disabled appearance. | 
| Icon | getDisabledSelectedIcon(JComponent component,
                       Icon icon)Returns an  Iconfor use by disabled
 components that are also selected. | 
| abstract String | getID()Return a string that identifies this look and feel. | 
| LayoutStyle | getLayoutStyle()Returns the  LayoutStylefor this look
 and feel. | 
| abstract String | getName()Return a short string that identifies this look and feel, e.g. | 
| boolean | getSupportsWindowDecorations()Returns  trueif theLookAndFeelreturnedRootPaneUIinstances support providingWindowdecorations in aJRootPane. | 
| void | initialize()Initializes the look and feel. | 
| static void | installBorder(JComponent c,
             String defaultBorderName)Convenience method for setting a component's border property with
 a value from the defaults. | 
| static void | installColors(JComponent c,
             String defaultBgName,
             String defaultFgName)Convenience method for setting a component's foreground
 and background color properties with values from the
 defaults. | 
| static void | installColorsAndFont(JComponent c,
                    String defaultBgName,
                    String defaultFgName,
                    String defaultFontName)Convenience method for setting a component's foreground,
 background and font properties with values from the
 defaults. | 
| static void | installProperty(JComponent c,
               String propertyName,
               Object propertyValue)Convenience method for installing a property with the specified name
 and value on a component if that property has not already been set
 by the developer. | 
| abstract boolean | isNativeLookAndFeel()If the underlying platform has a "native" look and feel, and
 this is an implementation of it, return  true. | 
| abstract boolean | isSupportedLookAndFeel()Return  trueif the underlying platform supports and or permits
 this look and feel. | 
| static void | loadKeyBindings(InputMap retMap,
               Object[] keys)Populates an  InputMapwith the specified bindings. | 
| static ComponentInputMap | makeComponentInputMap(JComponent c,
                     Object[] keys)Creates a  ComponentInputMapUIResourcefromkeys. | 
| static Object | makeIcon(Class<?> baseClass,
        String gifFile)Creates and returns a  UIDefault.LazyValuethat loads an
 image. | 
| static InputMap | makeInputMap(Object[] keys)Creates a  InputMapUIResourcefromkeys. | 
| static JTextComponent.KeyBinding[] | makeKeyBindings(Object[] keyBindingList)Convenience method for building an array of  KeyBindings. | 
| void | provideErrorFeedback(Component component)Invoked when the user attempts an invalid operation,
 such as pasting into an uneditable  JTextFieldthat has focus. | 
| String | toString()Returns a string that displays and identifies this
 object's properties. | 
| void | uninitialize()Uninitializes the look and feel. | 
| static void | uninstallBorder(JComponent c)Convenience method for uninstalling a border. | 
public static void installColors(JComponent c, String defaultBgName, String defaultFgName)
null or a UIResource.c - component to set the colors ondefaultBgName - key for the backgrounddefaultFgName - key for the foregroundNullPointerException - as described in
         exceptionsinstallColorsAndFont(javax.swing.JComponent, java.lang.String, java.lang.String, java.lang.String), 
UIManager.getColor(java.lang.Object)public static void installColorsAndFont(JComponent c, String defaultBgName, String defaultFgName, String defaultFontName)
null or a UIResource.c - component set to the colors and font ondefaultBgName - key for the backgrounddefaultFgName - key for the foregrounddefaultFontName - key for the fontNullPointerException - as described in
         exceptionsinstallColors(javax.swing.JComponent, java.lang.String, java.lang.String), 
UIManager.getColor(java.lang.Object), 
UIManager.getFont(java.lang.Object)public static void installBorder(JComponent c, String defaultBorderName)
null or an instance of UIResource.c - component to set the border ondefaultBorderName - key specifying the borderNullPointerException - as described in
         exceptionspublic static void uninstallBorder(JComponent c)
UIResource, it is set to null.c - component to uninstall the border onNullPointerException - if c is nullpublic static void installProperty(JComponent c, String propertyName, Object propertyValue)
UIResource marker, this method
 uses private state to determine whether the property has been set
 by the client.c - target component to set the property onpropertyName - name of the property to setpropertyValue - value of the propertyIllegalArgumentException - if the specified property is not
         one which can be set using this methodClassCastException - if the property value has not been set
         by the developer and the type does not match the property's typeNullPointerException - if c is null, or the
         named property has not been set by the developer and
         propertyValue is nullpublic static JTextComponent.KeyBinding[] makeKeyBindings(Object[] keyBindingList)
KeyBindings. While this method is not deprecated, developers
 should instead use ActionMap and InputMap for
 supplying key bindings.
 
 This method returns an array of KeyBindings, one for each
 alternating key-action pair in keyBindingList.
 A key can either be a String in the format
 specified by the KeyStroke.getKeyStroke method, or
 a KeyStroke. The action part of the pair is a
 String that corresponds to the name of the Action.
 
 The following example illustrates creating a KeyBinding array
 from six alternating key-action pairs:
 
  JTextComponent.KeyBinding[] multilineBindings = makeKeyBindings( new Object[] {
          "UP", DefaultEditorKit.upAction,
        "DOWN", DefaultEditorKit.downAction,
     "PAGE_UP", DefaultEditorKit.pageUpAction,
   "PAGE_DOWN", DefaultEditorKit.pageDownAction,
       "ENTER", DefaultEditorKit.insertBreakAction,
         "TAB", DefaultEditorKit.insertTabAction
  });
 
 If keyBindingList's length is odd, the last element is
 ignored.
 
 Supplying a null value for either the key or
 action part of the key-action pair results in
 creating a KeyBinding with the corresponding value
 null. As other parts of Swing's expect non-null values
 in a KeyBinding, you should avoid supplying null as
 either the key or action part of the key-action
 pair.
keyBindingList - an array of key-action pairsKeyBindingsNullPointerException - if keyBindingList is nullClassCastException - if the key part of the pair is
         not a KeyStroke or String, or the
         action part of the pair is not a StringActionMap, 
InputMap, 
KeyStroke.getKeyStroke(char)public static InputMap makeInputMap(Object[] keys)
InputMapUIResource from keys. This is
 a convenience method for creating a new InputMapUIResource,
 invoking loadKeyBindings(map, keys), and returning the
 InputMapUIResource.keys - alternating pairs of keystroke-action key
        pairs as described in loadKeyBindings(javax.swing.InputMap, java.lang.Object[])InputMapUIResourceloadKeyBindings(javax.swing.InputMap, java.lang.Object[])public static ComponentInputMap makeComponentInputMap(JComponent c, Object[] keys)
ComponentInputMapUIResource from
 keys. This is a convenience method for creating a
 new ComponentInputMapUIResource, invoking loadKeyBindings(map, keys), and returning the ComponentInputMapUIResource.c - component to create the ComponentInputMapUIResource
          withkeys - alternating pairs of keystroke-action key
        pairs as described in loadKeyBindings(javax.swing.InputMap, java.lang.Object[])InputMapUIResourceIllegalArgumentException - if c is nullloadKeyBindings(javax.swing.InputMap, java.lang.Object[]), 
ComponentInputMapUIResourcepublic static void loadKeyBindings(InputMap retMap, Object[] keys)
InputMap with the specified bindings.
 The bindings are supplied as a list of alternating
 keystroke-action key pairs. The keystroke is either
 an instance of KeyStroke, or a String
 that identifies the KeyStroke for the binding. Refer
 to KeyStroke.getKeyStroke(String) for the specific
 format. The action key part of the pair is the key
 registered in the InputMap for the KeyStroke.
 
 The following illustrates loading an InputMap with two
 key-action pairs:
 
   LookAndFeel.loadKeyBindings(inputMap, new Object[] {
     "control X", "cut",
     "control V", "paste"
   });
 
 
 Supplying a null list of bindings (keys) does not
 change retMap in any way.
 
 Specifying a null action key results in
 removing the keystroke's entry from the InputMap.
 A null keystroke is ignored.
retMap - InputMap to add the key-action
               pairs tokeys - bindings to add to retMapNullPointerException - if keys is
         non-null, not empty, and retMap is
         nullKeyStroke.getKeyStroke(String), 
InputMappublic static Object makeIcon(Class<?> baseClass, String gifFile)
UIDefault.LazyValue that loads an
 image. The returned value is an implementation of UIDefaults.LazyValue. When createValue is invoked on
 the returned object, the image is loaded. If the image is non-null, it is then wrapped in an Icon that implements UIResource. The image is loaded using Class.getResourceAsStream(gifFile).
 
 This method does not check the arguments in any way. It is
 strongly recommended that non-null values are supplied else
 exceptions may occur when createValue is invoked on the
 returned object.
baseClass - Class used to load the resourcegifFile - path to the image to loadUIDefaults.LazyValue; when resolved the
         LazyValue loads the specified imageUIDefaults.LazyValue, 
Icon, 
Class.getResourceAsStream(String)public LayoutStyle getLayoutStyle()
LayoutStyle for this look
 and feel.  This never returns null.
 
 You generally don't use the LayoutStyle from
 the look and feel, instead use the LayoutStyle
 method getInstance.
LayoutStyle for this look and feelLayoutStyle.getInstance()public void provideErrorFeedback(Component component)
JTextField
 that has focus. The default implementation beeps. Subclasses
 that wish different behavior should override this and provide
 the additional feedback.component - the Component the error occurred in,
                  may be null
                  indicating the error condition is not directly
                  associated with a Componentpublic static Object getDesktopPropertyValue(String systemPropertyName, Object fallbackValue)
Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getDesktopProperty().
 If the value of the specified property is null,
 fallbackValue is returned.systemPropertyName - the name of the system desktop property being queriedfallbackValue - the object to be returned as the value if the system value is nullToolkit.getDesktopProperty(java.lang.String)public Icon getDisabledIcon(JComponent component, Icon icon)
Icon with a disabled appearance.
 This method is used to generate a disabled Icon when
 one has not been specified.  For example, if you create a
 JButton and only specify an Icon via
 setIcon this method will be called to generate the
 disabled Icon. If null is passed as
 icon this method returns null.
 
 Some look and feels might not render the disabled Icon, in which
 case they will ignore this.
component - JComponent that will display the Icon,
         may be nullicon - Icon to generate the disabled icon fromIcon, or null if a suitable
         Icon can not be generatedpublic Icon getDisabledSelectedIcon(JComponent component, Icon icon)
Icon for use by disabled
 components that are also selected. This method is used to generate an
 Icon for components that are in both the disabled and
 selected states but do not have a specific Icon for this
 state.  For example, if you create a JButton and only
 specify an Icon via setIcon this method
 will be called to generate the disabled and selected
 Icon. If null is passed as icon this
 methods returns null.
 
 Some look and feels might not render the disabled and selected
 Icon, in which case they will ignore this.
component - JComponent that will display the Icon,
        may be nullicon - Icon to generate disabled and selected icon fromnull if a suitable
         Icon can not be generated.public abstract String getName()
public abstract String getID()
public abstract String getDescription()
public boolean getSupportsWindowDecorations()
true if the LookAndFeel returned
 RootPaneUI instances support providing Window
 decorations in a JRootPane.
 
 The default implementation returns false, subclasses that
 support Window decorations should override this and return
 true.
true if the RootPaneUI instances created by
         this look and feel support client side decorationsJDialog.setDefaultLookAndFeelDecorated(boolean), 
JFrame.setDefaultLookAndFeelDecorated(boolean), 
JRootPane.setWindowDecorationStyle(int)public abstract boolean isNativeLookAndFeel()
true.  For
 example, when the underlying platform is Solaris running CDE
 a CDE/Motif look and feel implementation would return true.true if this look and feel represents the underlying
         platform look and feelpublic abstract boolean isSupportedLookAndFeel()
true if the underlying platform supports and or permits
 this look and feel.  This method returns false if the look
 and feel depends on special resources or legal agreements that
 aren't defined for the current platform.true if this is a supported look and feelUIManager.setLookAndFeel(javax.swing.LookAndFeel)public void initialize()
UIManager when a
 look and feel is installed as the current look and feel. This
 method is invoked before the UIManager invokes
 getDefaults. This method is intended to perform any
 initialization for the look and feel. Subclasses
 should do any one-time setup they need here, rather than
 in a static initializer, because look and feel class objects
 may be loaded just to discover that isSupportedLookAndFeel()
 returns false.public void uninitialize()
UIManager when
 the look and feel is uninstalled. For example,
 UIManager.setLookAndFeel invokes this when the look and
 feel is changed.
 Subclasses may choose to free up some resources here.
public UIDefaults getDefaults()
UIManager when the
 look and feel is set as the current look and feel and after
 initialize has been invoked.initialize(), 
uninitialize(), 
UIManager.setLookAndFeel(javax.swing.LookAndFeel) Submit a bug or feature 
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