Question

I'm trying to write a resolution selection dialog that pops up when a program first starts up. To prevent boring the user, I want to implement the fairly standard feature that you can turn off that dialog with a checkbox, but get it back by holding down the alt key at startup.

Unfortunately, there is no obvious way to ask java whether a given key is currently being pressed. You can only register to be informed of new key presses via a KeyListener, but that doesn't help if the keypress starts before the app launches.

Was it helpful?

Solution

public class LockingKeyDemo {
    static Toolkit kit = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit();

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        System.out.println("caps lock2 = "
                + kit.getLockingKeyState(KeyEvent.VK_CAPS_LOCK));
}
}

OTHER TIPS

import java.awt.*;
import java.awt.event.*;
import javax.swing.JFrame;

public class LockingKeyDemo {
    static Toolkit kit = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit();

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        JFrame frame = new JFrame();

        frame.addWindowListener(new WindowAdapter() {
            public void windowActivated(WindowEvent e) {
                System.out.println("caps lock1 = "
                        + kit.getLockingKeyState(KeyEvent.VK_CAPS_LOCK));

                try {
                    Robot robot = new Robot();
                    robot.keyPress(KeyEvent.VK_CONTROL);
                    robot.keyRelease(KeyEvent.VK_CONTROL);
                } catch (Exception e2) {
                    System.out.println(e2);
                }

                System.out.println("caps lock2 = "
                        + kit.getLockingKeyState(KeyEvent.VK_CAPS_LOCK));
            }
        });

        frame.addKeyListener(new KeyAdapter() {
            public void keyReleased(KeyEvent e) {
                System.out.println("caps lock3 = "
                        + kit.getLockingKeyState(KeyEvent.VK_CAPS_LOCK));
            }
        });

        frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
        frame.setSize(200, 200);
        frame.setLocationRelativeTo(null);
        frame.setVisible(true);
    }
}

Well there are two types of key press detection: event based, and polling. If you poll the keyboard for KEY_PRESSED on startup (through a loop with a sleep.thread(timeInMs) constantly checking if your key is down), then you can detect if it's already pressed on startup.

The original question seems to be not answered. The proposed method determines the locking key state like CapsLock, ScrollLock, etc. So it would not work for Alt pressed state.

Consider the following code:

com.sun.jna.platform.KeyboardUtils.isPressed(java.awt.event.KeyEvent.VK_ALT);

The only problem is that this class is an internal Sun's JDK class and not likely to be available in any other JVM. Depend on your project it may or may not be acceptable.

Internally it calls into User32.DLL on Windows:

User32.INSTANCE.GetAsyncKeyState(...)

I don't know much about Java (mostly code in C#) but what about having a small loader program written in C or something that then launches your Java app with some parameters (like whether or not a certain key is down)?

So it appears that you can do this, but only for caps lock et al. Hence, I've switched to using caps lock for this purpose. Not perfect, but OK.

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