The Alert class subclasses the Dialog
class, and provides support for a number
of pre-built dialog types that can be easily shown to users to prompt for a
response. Therefore, for many users, the Alert class is the most suited class
for their needs (as opposed to using Dialog
directly). Alternatively,
users who want to prompt a user for text input or to make a choice from a list
of options would be better served by using TextInputDialog
and
ChoiceDialog
, respectively.
When creating an Alert instance, users must pass in an AlertType
enumeration value. It is by passing in this value that the Alert instance will
configure itself appropriately (by setting default values for many of the
Dialog
properties, including title
,
header
, and graphic
,
as well as the default buttons
that are expected in
a dialog of the given type.
To instantiate (but not yet show) an Alert, simply use code such as the following:
Alert alert = new Alert(AlertType.CONFIRMATION, "Are you sure you want to format your system?");
Once an Alert is instantiated, we must show it. More often than not, alerts (and dialogs in general) are shown in a modal and blocking fashion. 'Modal' means that the dialog prevents user interaction with the owning application whilst it is showing, and 'blocking' means that code execution stops at the point in which the dialog is shown. This means that you can show a dialog, await the user response, and then continue running the code that directly follows the show call, giving developers the ability to immediately deal with the user input from the dialog (if relevant).
JavaFX dialogs are modal by default (you can change this via the
initModality(javafx.stage.Modality)
API). To specify whether you want
blocking or non-blocking dialogs, developers simply choose to call
showAndWait()
or show()
(respectively). By default most
developers should choose to use showAndWait()
, given the ease of
coding in these situations. Shown below is three code snippets, showing three
equally valid ways of showing the Alert dialog that was specified above:
Option 1: The 'traditional' approach
Optional<ButtonType> result = alert.showAndWait();
if (result.isPresent() && result.get() == ButtonType.OK) {
formatSystem();
}
Option 2: The traditional + Optional approach
alert.showAndWait().ifPresent(response -> {
if (response == ButtonType.OK) {
formatSystem();
});}
Option 3: The fully lambda approach
alert.showAndWait()
.filter(response -> response == ButtonType.OK)
.ifPresent(response -> formatSystem());
There is no better or worse option of the three listed above, so developers
are encouraged to work to their own style preferences. The purpose of showing
the above is to help introduce developers to the Optional
API, which
is new in Java 8 and may be foreign to many developers.
extends
Dialog, AlertType, TextInputDialog, ChoiceDialog