Awesome
<p align="center"><b>A clean and easy way to implement this amazing native Windows taskbar-progressbar functionality in javaFX</b></p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://jitpack.io/#Dansoftowner/FXTaskbarProgressBar"><img src="https://jitpack.io/v/Dansoftowner/FXTaskbarProgressBar.svg"></a> <img alt="GitHub last commit" src="https://img.shields.io/github/last-commit/Dansoftowner/Fxtaskbarprogressbar"> <img alt="GitHub issues" src="https://img.shields.io/github/issues/dansoftowner/fxtaskbarprogressbar"> <img alt="GitHub" src="https://img.shields.io/github/license/Dansoftowner/fxtaskbarprogressbar"> </p>Background
Since Windows 7 there is a taskbar-progressbar feature in Windows systems that basically means that you can see progress on the program's taskbar icon. A good example for this when you copy something using the file explorer:<br> <br> This is very useful because you don't have to open the window to see the progress! The problem is that javaFX doesn't provide this functionality by default... however you can easily implement it with this library!
Compatibility
This library has support for java 8 and java 11 too.<br> <b>The 'v11.x' versions are for java11 users and the 'v8.x' versions are for java 8 users.</b>
Using with java 11
If you use java 11 you have to pass this VM argument: --add-exports javafx.graphics/com.sun.glass.ui=nativejavafx.taskbar
.
Also, you have to mention the nativejavafx.taskbar
module in your module-info.java
file:
module YourModule {
...
requires nativejavafx.taskbar;
}
How to include it to your project
Maven example:
Add JitPack.io to your repositories :
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>jitpack.io</id>
<url>https://jitpack.io</url>
</repository>
</repositories>
Add the dependency:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.Dansoftowner</groupId>
<artifactId>FXTaskbarProgressBar</artifactId>
<version>v11.4</version>
</dependency>
Gradle example
Add the repository:
repositories {
//...
maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
}
Add the dependency:
dependencies {
//...
implementation 'com.github.Dansoftowner:FXTaskbarProgressBar:v11.4'
}
Projects using FXTaskbarProgressBar
If this library is used by your project, let me know in the Discussions
and I will mention that in this section.
Boomega - A modern book explorer & catalog application
How to use it Tutorial
0. Types of progressbar
Before we jump in, we have to know the 4 types of a taskbar-progressbar:<br>
NORMAL
- a progressbar with normal green colorPAUSED
- a progressbar with a yellow colorERROR
- a progressbar with a red colorINDETERMINATE
- a progressbar that doesn't show any fix progressNO_PROGRESS
- a progressbar that doesn't show anything <br><br> All these types are represented by the enum calledcom.nativejavafx.taskbar.TaskbarProgressbar.Type
.
Now let's see how can we actually use this through code.<br> There are multiple ways to create taskbar progressbars with this library:
1.Through static methods:
Firstly you have to import the necessary class:
import com.nativejavafx.taskbar.TaskbarProgressbar;
...and you have to show the javafx Stage before any operation:
primaryStage.show();
Then call the static method:
TaskbarProgressbar.showCustomProgress(primaryStage, 0.5, TaskbarProgressbar.Type.NORMAL);
Well, the code above looks okay, but it's not safe. This functionality isn't supported by every OS.
For example on a Linux system it will definitely throw an UnsupportedSystemException
because it's only available on <b>Windows 7+</b>
systems.<br>
<b>If you use static methods to create taskbar-progressbars you always have to check that the current OS
supports this functionality!</b>
So let's correct the code:
if (TaskbarProgressbar.isSupported()) {
TaskbarProgressbar.showCustomProgress(primaryStage, 0.5, TaskbarProgressbar.Type.NORMAL);
}
...now it is safe!
<b>Result:</b><br>
You have to do a similar thing if you want to show an indeterminate progress:
if (TaskbarProgressbar.isSupported()) {
TaskbarProgressbar.showIndeterminateProgress(primaryStage);
}
<b>Result:</b><br>
To stop the progress:
TaskbarProgressbar.stopProgress(primaryStage);
2. Through instantiation (the recommended way)
Firstly (after you imported the necessary class) create a TaskbarProgressbar
instance with the help of
TaskbarProgressbarFactory
:
TaskbarProgressbar progressbar = TaskbarProgressbarFactory.getTaskbarProgressbar(primaryStage);
Before any operation you have to show the Stage:
primaryStage.show();
After that just use the created instance for the operations:
progressbar.showCustomProgress(0.5, TaskbarProgressbar.Type.NORMAL);
<b><i>Note: in this case to check that the OS supports this functionality is unnecessary because the object checks it automatically!</i></b>
The result is the same:<br>
If you want an indeterminate process:
progressbar.showIndeterminateProgress();
To stop the progress:
progressbar.stopProgress();
Bonus features
A simple method for showing a fully loaded error progressbar
progressbar.showFullErrorProgress();
//equivalent to progressbar.showCustomProgress(100, 100, TaskbarProgressbar.Type.ERROR)
<b>Result:</b><br>
<i>Also:</i>
progressbar.showFullNormalProgress();
progressbar.showFullPausedProgress();
More screenshots
Some more screenshots about what can you do with this library
- A paused progress example:<br>
Code:
progressbar.showCustomProgress(0.7, TaskbarProgressbar.Type.PAUSED);
<br> - An error progress example:<br>
Code:
progressbar.showCustomProgress(0.4, TaskbarProgressbar.Type.ERROR);
<br>
Full demo
A full demo-example class is available here.
Source code
This project has two important branches:
- "master" - for java 8 builds
- "11" - for java 11 builds
Used libraries
- bridj - blazing fast Java / C / C++ interop
- SLF4J - Simple Logging Facade for Java
- Jetbrains Annotations - Annotations for JVM-based languages
Support
If you like this library give it a star!