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java.lang.Objectjavax.microedition.lcdui.Item
public abstract class Item
A superclass for components that can be added to a Form. All
Item objects have a label field, which is a string that is
attached to the item. The label is typically displayed near the component
when it is displayed within a screen. The label should be positioned on the
same horizontal row as the item or directly above the item. The
implementation should attempt to distinguish label strings from other textual
content, possibly by displaying the label in a different font, aligning it to
a different margin, or appending a colon to it if it is placed on the same
line as other string content. If the screen is scrolling, the implementation
should try to keep the label visible at the same time as the
Item.
In some cases, when the user attempts to interact with an Item,
the system will switch to a system-generated screen where the actual
interaction takes place. If this occurs, the label will generally be carried
along and displayed within this new screen in order to provide the user with
some context for the operation. For this reason it is recommended that
applications supply a label to all interactive Item objects. However, this is
not required, and a null value for a label is legal and
specifies the absence of a label.
An Item's layout within its container depends on the Forms
layout policy.
Each subclass of FormLayoutPolicy defines which layout directives and
ItemLayoutHints influence its layout.
The default flow layout policy uses the predefined layout directives:
LAYOUT_DEFAULT LAYOUT_LEFT LAYOUT_RIGHT LAYOUT_CENTER LAYOUT_TOP LAYOUT_BOTTOM LAYOUT_VCENTER LAYOUT_NEWLINE_BEFORE LAYOUT_NEWLINE_AFTER LAYOUT_SHRINK LAYOUT_VSHRINK LAYOUT_EXPAND LAYOUT_VEXPAND LAYOUT_2
The LAYOUT_DEFAULT directive indicates that the container's
default layout policy is to be used for this item.
LAYOUT_DEFAULT has the value zero and has no effect when
combined with other layout directives. It is useful within programs in order
to document the programmer's intent.
The LAYOUT_LEFT, LAYOUT_RIGHT, and
LAYOUT_CENTER directives indicate horizontal alignment and are
mutually exclusive. Similarly, the LAYOUT_TOP,
LAYOUT_BOTTOM, and LAYOUT_VCENTER directives
indicate vertical alignment and are mutually exclusive.
A horizontal alignment directive, a vertical alignment directive, and any
combination of other layout directives may be combined using the bit-wise
OR operator (|) to compose a layout directive
value. Such a value is used as the parameter to the setLayout(int) method
and is the return value from the getLayout() method.
Some directives have no defined behavior in some contexts. A layout directive
is ignored if its behavior is not defined for the particular context within
which the Item resides.
Some layout policy subclasses use additional layout hints that are set on
Items using the setLayoutHint method. The current
layout hint is available from the getLayoutHint
method. Refer to the specific layout subclass for the types and values of
hints.
Applications may select a layout policy and may create new subclasses of
FormLayoutPolicy. A complete specification of the
default flow layout of Items within a Form is
given in Form.
Items have two explicit size concepts: the minimum
size and the preferred size. Both the minimum and the preferred
sizes refer to the total area of the Item, which includes
space for the Item's contents, the Item's
label, as well as other space that is significant to the layout policy. These
sizes do not include space that is not significant for layout purposes. For
example, if the addition of a label to an Item would cause
other Items to move in order to make room, then the space
occupied by this label is significant to layout and is counted as part of the
Item's minimum and preferred sizes. However, if an
implementation were to place the label in a margin area reserved exclusively
for labels, this would not affect the layout of neighboring
Items. In this case, the space occupied by the label would
not be considered part of the minimum and preferred sizes.
The minimum size is the smallest size at which the Item can
function and display its contents, though perhaps not optimally. The minimum
size may be recomputed whenever the Item's contents changes.
The preferred size is generally a size based on the Item's
contents and is the smallest size at which no information is clipped and text
wrapping (if any) is kept to a tolerable minimum. The preferred size may be
recomputed whenever the Item's contents changes. The
application can lock the preferred width or preferred height (or
both) by supplying specific values for parameters to the
setPreferredSize method. The manner in which an
Item fits its contents within an application-specified
preferred size is implementation-specific. However, it is recommended that
textual content be word-wrapped to fit the preferred size set by the
application. The application can unlock either or both dimensions
by supplying the value -1 for parameters to the
setPreferredSize method.
When an Item is created, both the preferred width and height
are unlocked. In this state, the implementation computes the preferred width
and height based on the Item's contents, possibly including
other relevant factors such as the Item's graphic design and
the screen dimensions. After having locked either the preferred width or
height, the application can restore the initial, unlocked state by calling
setPreferredSize(-1, -1).
The application can lock one dimension of the preferred size and leave the
other unlocked. This causes the system to compute an appropriate value for
the unlocked dimension based on arranging the contents to fit the locked
dimension. If the contents changes, the size on the unlocked dimension is
recomputed to reflect the new contents, but the size on the locked dimension
remains unchanged. For example, if the application called
setPreferredSize(50, -1), the preferred width would be
locked at 50 pixels and the preferred height would be computed
based on the Item's contents. Similarly, if the application
called setPreferredSize(-1, 60), the preferred height
would be locked at 60 pixels and the preferred width would be
computed based on the Item's contents. This feature is
particularly useful for Items with textual content that can be
line wrapped.
The application can also lock both the preferred width and height to specific
values. The Item's contents are truncated or padded as
necessary to honor this request. For Items containing text,
the text should be wrapped to the specified width, and any truncation should
occur at the end of the text.
Items also have an implicit maximum size provided by the
implementation. The maximum width is typically based on the width of the
screen space available to a Form. Since Forms
can scroll vertically, the maximum height should typically not be based on
the height of the available screen space.
If the application attempts to lock a preferred size dimension to a value
smaller than the minimum or larger than the maximum, the implementation may
disregard the requested value and instead use either the minimum or maximum
as appropriate. If this occurs, the actual values used must be visible to the
application via the values returned from the
getPreferredWidth and
getPreferredHeight methods.
A Command is said to be present on an Item if
the Command has been added to this Item with a
prior call to addCommand(javax.microedition.lcdui.Command) or setDefaultCommand(javax.microedition.lcdui.Command) and if the
Command has not been removed with a subsequent call to
removeCommand(javax.microedition.lcdui.Command). Commands present on an item should
have a command type of ITEM. However, it is not an error for
a command whose type is other than ITEM to be added to an
item. For purposes of presentation and placement within its user interface,
the implementation is allowed to treat item's commands as if they were of
type ITEM.
Items may have a default Command.
This state is controlled by the setDefaultCommand(javax.microedition.lcdui.Command) method. The
default Command is eligible to be bound to a special
platform-dependent user gesture. The implementation chooses which gesture is
the most appropriate to initiate the default command on that particular
Item. For example, on a device that has a dedicated selection
key, pressing this key might invoke the item's default command. Or, on a
stylus-based device, tapping on the Item might invoke its
default command. Even if it can be invoked through a special gesture, the
default command should also be invokable in the same fashion as other item
commands.
It is possible that on some devices there is no special gesture suitable for invoking the default command on an item. In this case the default command must be accessible to the user in the same fashion as other item commands. The implementation may use the state of a command being the default in deciding where to place the command in its user interface.
It is possible for an Item not to have a default command. In
this case, the implementation may bind its special user gesture (if any) for
another purpose, such as for displaying a menu of commands. The default state
of an Item is not to have a default command. An
Item may be set to have no default Command by
removing it from the Item or by passing null to
the setDefaultCommand() method.
The same command may occur on more than one Item and also on
more than one Displayable. If this situation occurs, the user
must be provided with distinct gestures to invoke that command on each
Item or Displayable on which it occurs, while
those Items or Displayables are visible on the
display. When the user invokes the command, the listener (CommandListener
or ItemCommandListener as appropriate) of just the object on
which the command was invoked will be called.
Adding commands to an Item may affect its appearance, the way
it is laid out, and the traversal behavior. For example, the presence of
commands on an Item may cause row breaks to occur, or it may
cause additional graphical elements (such as a menu icon) to appear. In
particular, if a StringItem whose appearance mode is
PLAIN (see below) is given one or more Commands,
the implementation is allowed to treat it as if it had a different appearance
mode.
The StringItem and ImageItem classes have an
appearance mode attribute that can be set in their constructors.
This attribute can have one of the values PLAIN,
HYPERLINK, or BUTTON. An appearance mode
of PLAIN is typically used for non-interactive display of
textual or graphical material. The appearance mode values do not have any
side effects on the interactivity of the item. In order to be interactive,
the item must have one or more Commands (preferably with a
default command assigned), and it must have a CommandListener
that receives notification of Command invocations. The
appearance mode values also do not have any effect on the semantics of
Command invocation on the item. For example, setting the
appearance mode of a StringItem to be HYPERLINK
requests that the implementation display the string contents as if they were
a hyperlink in a browser. It is the application's responsibility to attach a
Command and a listener to the StringItem that
provide behaviors that the user would expect from invoking an operation on a
hyperlink, such as loading the referent of the link or adding the link to the
user's set of bookmarks. A StringItem that has item commands and the
appearance mode PLAIN MUST always be presented as a StringItem with
added command(s) and appearance mode HYPERLINK.
Setting the appearance mode of an Item to be other than
PLAIN may affect its minimum, preferred, and maximum sizes, as
well as the way it is laid out. For example, a StringItem with
an appearance mode of BUTTON should not be wrapped across
rows. (However, a StringItem with an appearance mode of
HYPERLINK should be wrapped the same way as if its appearance
mode is PLAIN.)
A StringItem or ImageItem in
BUTTON mode can be used to create a button-based user
interface. This can easily lead to applications that are inconvenient to use.
For example, in a traversal-based system, users must navigate to a button
before they can invoke any commands on it. If buttons are spread across a
long Form, users may be required to perform a considerable
amount of navigation in order to discover all the available commands.
Furthermore, invoking a command from a button at the other end of the
Form can be quite cumbersome. Traversal-based systems often
provide a means of invoking commands from anywhere (such as from a menu),
without the need to traverse to a particular item. Instead of adding a
command to a button and placing that button into a Form, it
would often be more appropriate and convenient for users if that command were
added directly to the Form. Buttons should be used only in
cases where direct user interaction with the item's string or image contents
is essential to the user's understanding of the commands that can be invoked
from that item.
Unless otherwise specified by a subclass, the default state of newly created
Items is as follows:
Item is not contained within ("owned by")
any container;Commands present;Command is null;ItemCommandListener is null;LAYOUT_DEFAULT; and
| Field Summary | |
|---|---|
static int |
BUTTON
An appearance mode value indicating that the Item MUST
appear as a button. |
static int |
HYPERLINK
An appearance mode value indicating that the Item MUST
appear as a hyperlink. |
static int |
LAYOUT_2
A layout directive indicating that new MIDP 2.0 layout rules are in effect for this Item. |
static int |
LAYOUT_BOTTOM
A layout directive indicating that this Item MUST have a
bottom-aligned layout. |
static int |
LAYOUT_CENTER
A layout directive indicating that this Item MUST have a
horizontally centered layout. |
static int |
LAYOUT_DEFAULT
A layout directive indicating that this Item MUST follow
the default layout policy of its container. |
static int |
LAYOUT_EXPAND
A layout directive indicating that this Item's width may
be increased to fill available space. |
static int |
LAYOUT_LEFT
A layout directive indicating that this Item MUST have a
left-aligned layout. |
static int |
LAYOUT_NEWLINE_AFTER
A layout directive indicating that this Item MUST be the
last on its line or row, and that the next Item (if any)
in the container should be placed on a new line or row. |
static int |
LAYOUT_NEWLINE_BEFORE
A layout directive indicating that this Item MUST be
placed at the beginning of a new line or row. |
static int |
LAYOUT_RIGHT
A layout directive indicating that this Item MUST have a
right-aligned layout. |
static int |
LAYOUT_SHRINK
A layout directive indicating that this Item's width may
be reduced to its minimum width. |
static int |
LAYOUT_TOP
A layout directive indicating that this Item MUST have a
top-aligned layout. |
static int |
LAYOUT_VCENTER
A layout directive indicating that this Item MUST have a
vertically centered layout. |
static int |
LAYOUT_VEXPAND
A layout directive indicating that this Item's height MUST
be increased to fill available space. |
static int |
LAYOUT_VSHRINK
A layout directive indicating that this Item's height may
be reduced to its minimum height. |
static int |
PLAIN
An appearance mode value indicating that the Item MUST
have a normal appearance. |
| Method Summary | |
|---|---|
void |
addCommand(Command cmd)
Adds a context sensitive Command to the item. |
Command[] |
getCommands()
Gets the set of commands that has been added to the Item. |
java.lang.String |
getLabel()
Gets the label of this Item object. |
int |
getLayout()
Gets the layout directives used for placing the item. |
ItemLayoutHint |
getLayoutHint()
Gets the layout hint used by the layout policy for this item. |
int |
getMinimumHeight()
Gets the minimum height for this Item. |
int |
getMinimumWidth()
Gets the minimum width for this Item. |
int |
getPreferredHeight()
Gets the preferred height of this Item. |
int |
getPreferredWidth()
Gets the preferred width of this Item. |
void |
notifyStateChanged()
Causes this Item's containing Form to
notify the Item's
ItemStateListener. |
void |
removeCommand(Command cmd)
Removes the context sensitive command from item. |
void |
setCommand(Command cmd,
int placement)
Adds or sets a Command to the Item at
the given placement. |
void |
setDefaultCommand(Command cmd)
Sets default Command for this Item. |
void |
setItemCommandListener(ItemCommandListener l)
Sets a listener for Commands to this Item,
replacing any previous ItemCommandListener. |
void |
setLabel(java.lang.String label)
Sets the label of the Item. |
void |
setLayout(int layout)
Sets the layout directives for this item. |
void |
setLayoutHint(ItemLayoutHint hint)
Sets the layout hint used for this item by the layout policy. |
void |
setPreferredSize(int width,
int height)
Sets the preferred width and height for this Item. |
| Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object |
|---|
equals, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait |
| Field Detail |
|---|
public static final int LAYOUT_DEFAULT
Item MUST follow
the default layout policy of its container.
Value 0 is assigned to LAYOUT_DEFAULT.
public static final int LAYOUT_LEFT
Item MUST have a
left-aligned layout.
Value 1 is assigned to LAYOUT_LEFT.
public static final int LAYOUT_RIGHT
Item MUST have a
right-aligned layout.
Value 2 is assigned to LAYOUT_RIGHT.
public static final int LAYOUT_CENTER
Item MUST have a
horizontally centered layout.
Value 3 is assigned to LAYOUT_CENTER.
public static final int LAYOUT_TOP
Item MUST have a
top-aligned layout.
Value 0x10 is assigned to LAYOUT_TOP.
public static final int LAYOUT_BOTTOM
Item MUST have a
bottom-aligned layout.
Value 0x20 is assigned to LAYOUT_BOTTOM.
public static final int LAYOUT_VCENTER
Item MUST have a
vertically centered layout.
Value 0x30 is assigned to LAYOUT_VCENTER.
public static final int LAYOUT_NEWLINE_BEFORE
Item MUST be
placed at the beginning of a new line or row.
Value 0x100 is assigned to
LAYOUT_NEWLINE_BEFORE.
public static final int LAYOUT_NEWLINE_AFTER
Item MUST be the
last on its line or row, and that the next Item (if any)
in the container should be placed on a new line or row.
Value 0x200 is assigned to
LAYOUT_NEWLINE_AFTER.
public static final int LAYOUT_SHRINK
Item's width may
be reduced to its minimum width.
Value 0x400 is assigned to LAYOUT_SHRINK
public static final int LAYOUT_EXPAND
Item's width may
be increased to fill available space.
Value 0x800 is assigned to LAYOUT_EXPAND.
public static final int LAYOUT_VSHRINK
Item's height may
be reduced to its minimum height.
Value 0x1000 is assigned to LAYOUT_VSHRINK.
public static final int LAYOUT_VEXPAND
Item's height MUST
be increased to fill available space.
Value 0x2000 is assigned to LAYOUT_VEXPAND.
public static final int LAYOUT_2
Item. If this bit is clear, indicates
that MIDP 1.0 layout behavior applies to this Item.
Value 0x4000 is assigned to LAYOUT_2.
public static final int PLAIN
Item MUST
have a normal appearance.
Value 0 is assigned to PLAIN.
public static final int HYPERLINK
Item MUST
appear as a hyperlink.
Value 1 is assigned to HYPERLINK.
public static final int BUTTON
Item MUST
appear as a button.
Value 2 is assigned to BUTTON.
| Method Detail |
|---|
public void setLabel(java.lang.String label)
Item. If label is
null, specifies that this item has no label.
It is illegal to call this method if this Item is
contained within an Alert.
label - the label string
java.lang.IllegalStateException - if this Item is contained within an
AlertgetLabel()public java.lang.String getLabel()
Item object.
setLabel(java.lang.String)public int getLayout()
setLayout(int)public void setLayout(int layout)
It is illegal to call this method if this Item is
contained within an Alert.
layout - a combination of layout directive values for this item
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException - if the value of layout is not a bit-wise OR combination of
layout directives
java.lang.IllegalStateException - if this Item is contained within an
AlertgetLayout()public ItemLayoutHint getLayoutHint()
ItemLayoutHint instance or null.setLayout(int),
setLayoutHint(javax.microedition.lcdui.ItemLayoutHint)public void setLayoutHint(ItemLayoutHint hint)
If the Item is contained within an Alert
then the layout hint is ignored.
hint - an instance of ItemLayoutHint appropriate for the current
Layout policy; may be null.getLayout(),
getLayoutHint()public void addCommand(Command cmd)
Command to the item. The semantic
type of Command should be ITEM. The
implementation will present the command only when the item is active, for
example, highlighted.
If the added command is already in the item (tested by comparing the object references), the method has no effect. If the item is actually visible on the display, and this call affects the set of visible commands, the implementation should update the display as soon as it is feasible to do so.
It is illegal to call this method if this Item is
contained within an Alert.
cmd - the command to be added
java.lang.IllegalStateException - if this Item is contained within an
Alert
java.lang.NullPointerException - if cmd is null
DisplayCapabilityException - if the Item has Commands and this Form is currently
being displayed on a Display that
does not support Commandspublic Command[] getCommands()
addCommand()public void removeCommand(Command cmd)
Item (tested by comparing the object references), the
method has no effect. If the Item is actually visible on
the display, and this call affects the set of visible commands, the
implementation should update the display as soon as it is feasible to do
so. If the command to be removed happens to be the default command, the
command is removed and the default command on this Item is set to
null. The following code:
// Command c is the default command on Item item item.removeCommand(c);is equivalent to the following code:
// Command c is the default command on Item item item.setDefaultCommand(null); item.removeCommand(c);
cmd - the command to be removedpublic void setItemCommandListener(ItemCommandListener l)
Commands to this Item,
replacing any previous ItemCommandListener. A
null reference is allowed and has the effect of removing
any existing listener.
It is illegal to call this method if this Item is
contained within an Alert.
l - the new listener, or null.
java.lang.IllegalStateException - if this Item is contained within an
Alertpublic int getPreferredWidth()
Item. If the application
has locked the width to a specific value, this method returns that value.
Otherwise, the return value is computed based on the Item's
contents, possibly with respect to the Item's preferred
height if it is locked. See Item Sizes for a
complete discussion.
getPreferredHeight(),
setPreferredSize(int, int)public int getPreferredHeight()
Item. If the
application has locked the height to a specific value, this method
returns that value. Otherwise, the return value is computed based on the
Item's contents, possibly with respect to the
Item's preferred width if it is locked. See Item Sizes for a complete discussion.
ItemgetPreferredWidth(),
setPreferredSize(int, int)
public void setPreferredSize(int width,
int height)
Item. Values
for width and height less than -1 are illegal. If the
width is between zero and the minimum width, inclusive, the minimum width
is used instead. If the height is between zero and the minimum height,
inclusive, the minimum height is used instead.
Supplying a width or height value greater than the minimum width or
height locks that dimension to the supplied value. The
implementation may silently enforce a maximum dimension for an
Item based on factors such as the screen size. Supplying a
value of -1 for the width or height unlocks that
dimension. See Item Sizes for a complete
discussion.
It is illegal to call this method if this Item is
contained within an Alert.
width - the value to which the width should be locked, or
-1 to unlockheight - the value to which the height should be locked, or
-1 to unlock
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException - if width or height is less than -1
java.lang.IllegalStateException - if this Item is contained within an
AlertgetPreferredHeight(),
getPreferredWidth()public int getMinimumWidth()
Item. This is a width at
which the item can function and display its contents, though perhaps not
optimally. See Item Sizes for a complete
discussion.
public int getMinimumHeight()
Item. This is a height
at which the item can function and display its contents, though perhaps
not optimally. See Item Sizes for a complete
discussion.
public void setDefaultCommand(Command cmd)
Command for this Item. If the
Item previously had a default Command,
that Command is no longer the default, but it remains
present on the Item.
If not null, the Command object passed
becomes the default Command for this Item.
If the Command object passed is not currently present on
this Item, it is added as if addCommand(javax.microedition.lcdui.Command) had been
called before it is made the default Command.
If null is passed, the Item is set to have
no default Command. The previous default
Command, if any, remains present on the Item.
It is illegal to call this method if this Item is
contained within an Alert.
cmd - the command to be used as this Item's default
Command, or null if there is to
be no default command
java.lang.IllegalStateException - if this Item is contained within an
Alert
DisplayCapabilityException - if the Item has Commands and this Form is currently
being displayed on a Display that
does not support Commandspublic void notifyStateChanged()
Item's containing Form to
notify the Item's
ItemStateListener. The application
calls this method to inform the listener on the Item that
the Item's state has been changed in response to an
action. Even though this method simply causes a call to another part of
the application, this mechanism is useful for decoupling the
implementation of an Item (in particular, the
implementation of a CustomItem, though this also applies
to subclasses of other items) from the consumer of the item.
If an edit was performed by invoking a separate screen, and the editor
now wishes to "return" to the form which contained the selected
Item, the preferred method is
Display.setCurrent(Item) instead of
Display.setCurrent(Displayable), because it allows the
Form to restore focus to the Item that
initially invoked the editor.
In order to make sure that the documented behavior of
ItemStateListener is maintained, it is up to the caller
(application) to guarantee that this function is not called unless:
Item's value has actually been changed, andItem's APIs
The call to ItemStateListener.itemStateChanged may be
delayed in order to be serialized with the event stream. The
notifyStateChanged method does not block awaiting the
completion of the itemStateChanged method.
java.lang.IllegalStateException - if the Item is not owned by a
Form
public void setCommand(Command cmd,
int placement)
Command to the Item at
the given placement. If the Command already
exists on another placement of this Item, it will
be moved to the new placement. Just before the Command is
added, any Menu or Command already occupying
the given placement will be removed from the associated
Item or Displayable.
This method should only be called from inside an implementation of the
CommandLayoutPolicy interface.
If the Item is actually visible on the display, and
this call affects the set of visible commands, the implementation should
update the display as soon as it is feasible to do so.
cmd - the Command to be addedplacement - the placement of the Command to be added
java.lang.NullPointerException - if cmd is null
DisplayCapabilityException - if the Item has Commands and this
Form is currently being displayed on a Display
that does not supportCommands
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException - if the provided placement is not valid or is
associated with a placement that does not support commands
java.lang.IllegalStateException - If this method is not called from a
CommandLayoutPolicy.onCommandLayout()
implementation.
java.lang.IllegalStateException - If this Item's owning Form is neither the same
as the Displayable instance passed into the
CommandLayoutPolicy.onCommandLayout() method
nor the current tab of a TabbedPane
|
MIDP3.0 | |||||||||
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