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JAVA, JSP, SERVLETS, TOMCAT, SERVLETS MANAGER,
Private JVM (Java Virtual Machine),
Private Tomcat Server
Alden Hosting offers private JVM (Java Virtual Machine), Java Server Pages (JSP), Servlets, and Servlets Manager with our Web Hosting Plans
WEB 4 PLAN and
WEB 5 PLAN ,
WEB 6 PLAN .
At Alden Hosting we eat and breathe Java! We are the industry leader in providing
affordable, quality and efficient Java web hosting in the shared hosting marketplace.
All our sites run on our Java hosing platform configured for
optimum performance using Java 1.6, Tomcat 6, MySQL 5, Apache 2.2 and web
application frameworks such as Struts, Hibernate, Cocoon, Ant, etc.
We offer only one type of Java hosting - Private Tomcat. Hosting accounts on the Private
Tomcat environment get their very own Tomcat server. You can start and re-start
your entire Tomcat server yourself.
Lesson: Getting Started with Graphics (The Java™ Tutorials > 2D Graphics)
Lesson: Getting Started with Graphics
The Java 2D™ API is powerful and complex. However, the vast
majority of uses for the Java 2D API utilize a small subset of its capabilities
encapsulated in the java.awt.Graphics class. This lesson covers the most common
needs of applications developers. Less common needs are described later
in the Advanced topics in the Java 2D API lesson.
Most methods of the
Graphics class can be divided into two basic groups:
- Draw and fill methods, enabling you to render basic shapes, text, and images
- Attributes setting methods, which affect how that drawing and filling appears
Methods such as setFont and setColor define how draw and fill methods render.
This figure illustrates how these methods relate to graphic objects:
Drawing methods include:
drawString – For drawing text
g.drawString("Hello", 10, 10);
drawImage – For drawing images
g.drawImage(img,
0, 0, width, height,
0, 0, imageWidth, imageHeight,
null);
drawLine, drawArc, drawRect,
drawOval, drawPolygon – For drawing geometric shapes
g2.draw(new Line2D.Double(0, 0, 30, 40));
Depending on your current need, you can choose one of several methods in the Graphics
class based on the following criteria:
- Whether you want to render the image at the specified location in its original size or
scale it to fit inside the given rectangle
- Whether you prefer to fill the transparent areas of the image with color or keep
them transparent
Fill methods apply to geometric shapes and include fillArc, fillRect,
fillOval, fillPolygon.
Whether you draw a line of text or an image, remember that
in 2D graphics every point is determined by its x and y
coordinates. All of the draw and fill methods need this information which determines
where the text or image should be rendered.
For example, to draw a line, an application calls the following:
java.awt.Graphics.drawLine(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2)
In this code (x1, y1) is the start point of the line, and
(x2, y2) is the end point of the line.
So the code to draw a horizontal line is as follows:
Graphics.drawLine(20, 100, 120, 100);
The demo below accumulates all mentioned techniques.
Move the slider to display various weather
types.
Note: If you don't see the applet running above, you need to install release 6 of the JDK.
The WeatherWizard demo uses the JSlider component
as well as various graphics capabilities to generate and display a specified weather type.
For more information about the JSlider class see the
How to Use Sliders section of the Swing Tutorial.
The paint method of the WeatherPainter class
implements graphics features. The following code draws an image determined by using
the setupWeatherReport() method.
...
origComposite = g2.getComposite();
if (alpha0 != null) g2.setComposite(alpha0);
g2.drawImage(img0,
0, 0, size.width, size.height,
0, 0, img0.getWidth(null), img0.getHeight(null),
null);
if (img1 != null) {
if (alpha1 != null) g2.setComposite(alpha1);
g2.drawImage(img1,
0, 0, size.width, size.height,
0, 0, img1.getWidth(null), img1.getHeight(null),
null);
}
...
The setFont and drawString methods
render the temperature and the weather condition.
...
// Freezing, Cold, Cool, Warm, Hot,
// Blue, Green, Yellow, Orange, Red
Font font = new Font("Serif", Font.PLAIN, 36);
g.setFont(font);
String tempString = feels + " " + temperature+"F";
FontRenderContext frc = ((Graphics2D)g).getFontRenderContext();
...
g.setColor(textColor);
int xTextTemp = rX-(int)boundsTemp.getX();
int yTextTemp = rY-(int)boundsTemp.getY();
g.drawString(tempString, xTextTemp, yTextTemp);
int xTextCond = rX-(int)boundsCond.getX();
int yTextCond = rY-(int)boundsCond.getY() + (int)boundsTemp.getHeight();
g.drawString(condStr, xTextCond, yTextCond);
The fillRect method allows you to draw a rectangle filled with the specified color.
...
Rectangle2D boundsTemp = font.getStringBounds(tempString, frc);
Rectangle2D boundsCond = font.getStringBounds(condStr, frc);
int wText = Math.max((int)boundsTemp.getWidth(), (int)boundsCond.getWidth());
int hText = (int)boundsTemp.getHeight() + (int)boundsCond.getHeight();
int rX = (size.width-wText)/2;
int rY = (size.height-hText)/2;
g.setColor(Color.LIGHT_GRAY);
g2.fillRect(rX, rY, wText, hText);
...
Try to modify the WeatherWizard demo to alter the graphical content.
For example, use the fillRoundRect method instead of fillRect or apply
another font size in the setFont method.
Find the complete code for this applet in the
WeatherWizard.java file. The demo also requires the following images:
weather-cloud.png,
weather-rain.png,
weather-snow.png, and
weather-sun.png located in the images directory.
JAVA, JSP, SERVLETS, TOMCAT, SERVLETS MANAGER,
Private JVM (Java Virtual Machine),
Private Tomcat Server
Alden Hosting offers private JVM (Java Virtual Machine), Java Server Pages (JSP), Servlets, and Servlets Manager with our Web Hosting Plans
WEB 4 PLAN and
WEB 5 PLAN ,
WEB 6 PLAN .
At Alden Hosting we eat and breathe Java! We are the industry leader in providing
affordable, quality and efficient Java web hosting in the shared hosting marketplace.
All our sites run on our Java hosing platform configured for
optimum performance using Java 1.6, Tomcat 6, MySQL 5, Apache 2.2 and web
application frameworks such as Struts, Hibernate, Cocoon, Ant, etc.
We offer only one type of Java hosting - Private Tomcat. Hosting accounts on the Private
Tomcat environment get their very own Tomcat server. You can start and re-start
your entire Tomcat server yourself.
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