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1254

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I have the following code:

private final ImageIcon placeHolder = new ImageIcon(this.getClass().getClassLoader().getResource("Cards\\trans.png"));

But this does not work once my application exported into a .jar file.

+4  A: 

Your "\t" is being compiled as a tab - you need to escape it:

private final ImageIcon placeHolder = new ImageIcon(
    this.getClass().getClassLoader().getResource("Cards\\trans.png"));

Note the double backslash. This may not be the only thing wrong, of course - but it's a start...

In fact, I would specify it with a forward slash instead. That works on both Windows and Unix-based OSes anyway, and it also works with jar files. The only reason I highlighted the double backslash was to raise the point of string escaping in general. Try this:

private final ImageIcon placeHolder = new ImageIcon(
    this.getClass().getClassLoader().getResource("Cards/trans.png"));

Next, make sure you've got the exact correct name for the file, including case. Even though Windows file systems aren't generally case-sensitive, jar files are. If it's actually "cards" instead of "Cards" or "TRANS.png" instead of "trans.png", it won't work.

Jon Skeet
Is there a reason you call getResource on the ClassLoader instead of just the class? (i.e. won't getClass().getResource() work? )
JRL
@JRL: If you call it from the classloader it's relative to the root of the jar file rather than to the class. You can use a leading slash to get the same effect from a call to Class.getResource though.
Jon Skeet