Issue
I'm trying to add localisation functionality to a JavaFX program using FXML. From what I understand, when you create a FXMLLoader
object, you can pass a ResourceBundle
into the FXMLLoader
's href="https://openjfx.io/javadoc/19/javafx.fxml/javafx/fxml/FXMLLoader.html#%3Cinit%3E(java.net.URL,java.util.ResourceBundle)" rel="nofollow noreferrer">constructor like so:
FXMLLoader loader = new FXMLLoader(Application.class.getResource("main-menu.fxml"),
ResourceBundle.getBundle("com.example.myApp.MainMenu");
However, I want to be able to access the ResourceBundle
inside one of my controllers, so that I can do something like this:
class MainMenuController {
// ...
@FXML
protected void onButtonClick() {
welcomeText.setText(localisationBundle.getString("greetMessage");
}
// ...
}
I have put the following initialize method inside my main menu controller...
@FXML
public void initialize(URL location, ResourceBundle bundle) {
this.localisationBundle = bundle;
}
...but it does not get invoked when the program is run, and thus localisationBundle
is null when my button is pressed. The initialize method only gets invoked when I change its signature to have no parameters.
I have seen a suggestion on StackOverflow that my controller should implement Initializable, however the documentation says that this has been superceded.
My question is: Is there a way to get access to the ResourceBundle
that is passed to the FXMLLoader
's constructor? Is Initializable
the only way I can do this or is there a better way?
Thanks in advance :)
Solution
The initialize()
method taking the URL
and ResourceBundle
parameters only gets invoked if you implement Initializable
. This interface has not been deprecated, so I think it is fine to use that approach; however it has been superseded by (to quote the documentation
automatic injection of
location
andresources
properties into the controller.
To do this, you need:
public class MainMenuController {
@FXML
private ResourceBundle resources ;
// if needed:
@FXML
private URL location ;
// ...
@FXML
protected void onButtonClick() {
welcomeText.setText(resources.getString("greetMessage");
}
// ...
}
Answered By - James_D
Answer Checked By - Mildred Charles (JavaFixing Admin)