I'm currently developing a program in Java where a certain event must be triggered only when the user clicks with both the left and the right click on a button.
Since it is a little unconventional, I decided to first test this. Here it is:
import javax.swing.JFrame;
import javax.swing.JButton;
import javax.swing.JLabel;
import java.awt.event.MouseListener;
import java.awt.event.MouseEvent;
public class GUI
{
private JFrame mainframe;
private JButton thebutton;
private boolean left_is_pressed;
private boolean right_is_pressed;
private JLabel notifier;
public GUI ()
{
thebutton = new JButton ("Double Press Me");
addListen ();
thebutton.setBounds (20, 20, 150, 40);
notifier = new JLabel (" ");
notifier.setBounds (20, 100, 170, 20);
mainframe = new JFrame ("Double Mouse Tester");
mainframe.setDefaultCloseOperation (JFrame.DISPOSE_ON_CLOSE);
mainframe.setResizable (false);
mainframe.setSize (400, 250);
mainframe.setLayout (null);
mainframe.add (thebutton);
mainframe.add (notifier);
mainframe.setVisible (true);
left_is_pressed = right_is_pressed = false;
}
private void addListen ()
{
thebutton.addMouseListener (new MouseListener ()
{
@Override public void mouseClicked (MouseEvent e) { }
@Override public void mouseEntered (MouseEvent e) { }
@Override public void mouseExited (MouseEvent e) { }
@Override public void mousePressed (MouseEvent e)
{
//If left button pressed
if (e.getButton () == MouseEvent.BUTTON1)
{
//Set that it is pressed
left_is_pressed = true;
if (right_is_pressed)
{
//Write that both are pressed
notifier.setText ("Both pressed");
}
}
//If right button pressed
else if (e.getButton () == MouseEvent.BUTTON3)
{
//Set that it is pressed
right_is_pressed = true;
if (left_is_pressed)
{
//Write that both are pressed
notifier.setText ("Both pressed");
}
}
}
@Override public void mouseReleased (MouseEvent e)
{
//If left button is released
if (e.getButton () == MouseEvent.BUTTON1)
{
//Set that it is not pressed
left_is_pressed = false;
//Remove notification
notifier.setText (" ");
}
//If right button is released
else if (e.getButton () == MouseEvent.BUTTON3)
{
//Set that it is not pressed
right_is_pressed = false;
//Remove notification
notifier.setText (" ");
}
}
});
}
}
I tested it and it works, but there is a problem.
As you can see, the left mouse button is represented by MouseEvent.BUTTON1 and the right mouse button by MouseEvent.BUTTON3.
If the user has a mouse which doesn't have a scroll wheel (apparently such mice still exist), then only two buttons are set in MouseEvent. Does that mean that the right button will be represented by MouseEvent.BUTTON2 instead of MouseEvent.BUTTON3? If yes, how can I change my code to accomodate this? Is there any way I can detect something like this?
I read anything I could find on the MouseListener interface and on MouseEvent, but I couldn't find something about this.
To determine which of the Mouse buttons is pressed, these three methods from SwingUtilities could help you:
You can use the utilities methods from SwingUtilties:
SwingUtilities.isLeftMouseButton(MouseEvent anEvent)
SwingUtilities.isRightMouseButton(MouseEvent anEvent)
SwingUtilities.isMiddleMouseButton(MouseEvent anEvent)
There is also MouseEvent.isPopupTrigger(). This method should return true, if the right mouse button is pressed.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8972267/which-mouse-button-is-the-middle-one