Issue
I would like to use the standard JavaFX Alert
class for a confirmation dialog that includes a check box for "Do not ask again". Is this possible, or do I have to create a custom Dialog
from scratch?
I tried using the DialogPane.setExpandableContent()
method, but that's not really what I want - this adds a Hide/Show button in the button bar, and the check box appears in the main body of the dialog, whereas I want the check box to appear in the button bar.
Solution
Yes, it is possible, with a little bit of work. You can override DialogPane.createDetailsButton()
to return any node you want in place of the Hide/Show button. The trick is that you need to reconstruct the Alert
after that, because you will have got rid of the standard contents created by the Alert
. You also need to fool the DialogPane
into thinking there is expanded content so that it shows your checkbox. Here's an example of a factory method to create an Alert
with an opt-out check box. The text and action of the check box are customizable.
public static Alert createAlertWithOptOut(AlertType type, String title, String headerText,
String message, String optOutMessage, Consumer<Boolean> optOutAction,
ButtonType... buttonTypes) {
Alert alert = new Alert(type);
// Need to force the alert to layout in order to grab the graphic,
// as we are replacing the dialog pane with a custom pane
alert.getDialogPane().applyCss();
Node graphic = alert.getDialogPane().getGraphic();
// Create a new dialog pane that has a checkbox instead of the hide/show details button
// Use the supplied callback for the action of the checkbox
alert.setDialogPane(new DialogPane() {
@Override
protected Node createDetailsButton() {
CheckBox optOut = new CheckBox();
optOut.setText(optOutMessage);
optOut.setOnAction(e -> optOutAction.accept(optOut.isSelected()));
return optOut;
}
});
alert.getDialogPane().getButtonTypes().addAll(buttonTypes);
alert.getDialogPane().setContentText(message);
// Fool the dialog into thinking there is some expandable content
// a Group won't take up any space if it has no children
alert.getDialogPane().setExpandableContent(new Group());
alert.getDialogPane().setExpanded(true);
// Reset the dialog graphic using the default style
alert.getDialogPane().setGraphic(graphic);
alert.setTitle(title);
alert.setHeaderText(headerText);
return alert;
}
And here is an example of the factory method being used, where prefs
is some preference store that saves the user's choice
Alert alert = createAlertWithOptOut(AlertType.CONFIRMATION, "Exit", null,
"Are you sure you wish to exit?", "Do not ask again",
param -> prefs.put(KEY_AUTO_EXIT, param ? "Always" : "Never"), ButtonType.YES, ButtonType.NO);
if (alert.showAndWait().filter(t -> t == ButtonType.YES).isPresent()) {
System.exit();
}
And here's what the dialog looks like:
Answered By - ctg