Computer Science 252
Problem Solving with Java
Spring 2014, The College of Saint Rose
FallingBallComboReact Demo
A working demo of FallingBallComboReact will appear below. Click inside the applet to interact with it.
FallingBallComboReact BlueJ Project
Click here to download a BlueJ project for FallingBallComboReact.
FallingBallComboReact Source Code
The Java source code for FallingBallComboReact is below. Click on a file name to download it.
import objectdraw.*; import java.awt.*; import java.awt.event.ActionEvent; import java.awt.event.ActionListener; import javax.swing.JButton; import javax.swing.JComboBox; import javax.swing.JPanel; /* * Example FallingBallComboReact: create a falling ball whose speed * depends on the value of a JComboBox, but also have the most recently * created ball change its speed when the menu selection changes. * * Jim Teresco, The College of Saint Rose, CSC 252, Fall 2013 * * $Id: FallingBallComboReact.java 2227 2013-10-24 03:37:54Z terescoj $ */ public class FallingBallComboReact extends WindowController implements ActionListener { private static final int SLOW_SPEED = 2; private static final int MEDIUM_SPEED = 5; private static final int FAST_SPEED = 10; // we'll be using a JComboBox in begin and in // actionPerformed, so we need to remember it. private JComboBox speedMenu; // the ball, so we can tell it to change speeds private Ball lastLaunch; public void begin() { setSize(500, 500); // We still need our content pane Container contentPane = getContentPane(); // A JPanel, in which we will group together our JButton // and JComboBox JPanel southPanel = new JPanel(); // Next, we'll create just one button and add it to our // JPanel. JButton createBallButton = new JButton("Drop Ball"); southPanel.add(createBallButton); // construct a JComboBox speedMenu = new JComboBox(); // and some menu entries therein speedMenu.addItem("Slow"); speedMenu.addItem("Medium"); speedMenu.addItem("Fast"); // which one is selected when we start? speedMenu.setSelectedItem("Medium"); // and put our JComboBox into our JPanel southPanel.add(speedMenu); // now, we add the JPanel (which contains our JButton // and JComboBox) to the content pane, in the south contentPane.add(southPanel, BorderLayout.SOUTH); // add our action listener createBallButton.addActionListener(this); speedMenu.addActionListener(this); // put at end of all methods that change the layout contentPane.validate(); } // actionPerformed this time needs to differentiate between // an event triggered by a button press vs. one triggered by // the combo box selection changing public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { // first, we do some things that have to happen // regardless of why we were called double speed; // this will return the selected item from the JComboBox Object selectedSpeed = speedMenu.getSelectedItem(); // now we see which one it is by comparing to the Strings // we used when we added the menu items above. if (selectedSpeed.equals("Slow")) { speed = SLOW_SPEED; } else if (selectedSpeed.equals("Medium")) { speed = MEDIUM_SPEED; } else { // "Fast" is the only other possibility speed = FAST_SPEED; } // now why are we here? if (e.getSource() == speedMenu) { // menu item changed - change the speed of the last ball // if we have one if (lastLaunch != null) { lastLaunch.setSpeed(speed); } } else { // we must have pressed the button for a new ball, so // let's create one. lastLaunch = new Ball(new Location(200, 0), speed, canvas); } } }