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1006

answers:

5

I'm making a small program in Java using the Robot class. The program takes over the mouse. while in the course of debugging if it starts acting in a way that I don't want it's hard to quit the program, since I can't move the mouse over to the terminate button in eclipse, and I can't use hotkeys to hit it because the mouse is constant clicking in another window, giving that window focus instead.

What I'd like to do is just hook up a keylistener so that when I hit q I can quit the program, but the only way I know how to do this involves making a window, and that window needs focus to capture the input. Is there a way to listen for keyboard or mouse input from anywhere, regardless of what has focus?

A: 

Start the program from a command line in a terminal and use Ctrl-C to terminate it.

Glenn
A: 

Have your program open a second window which displays underneath your main window but is maximised, then your errant mouse clicks will all be received by the maximised window, and it can receive your keyboard input.

banjollity
+2  A: 

Hey Alex,

This is not a trivial problem and Java doesn't give you a way to do it elegantly. You can use a solution like banjollity suggested but even that won't work all the time if your errant mouse clicks open another fullsized window currently open in your taskbar for example.

The fact is, Java by default gives developers very little control over the OS. This is due to 2 main reasons: security (as citied by java documentation) and the fact that different operating systems handle events completely differently and making one unified model to represent all of these would probably not make a whole lot of sense.

So to answer your question, I imagine what you want is some kind of behaviour for your program where it listens for keypresses globally, not just in your application. Something like this will require that you access the functionality offered by your OS of choice, and to access it in Java you are going to need to do it through a Java Native Interface (JNI) layer.

So what you want to do is:

  1. Implement a program in C that will listen for global keypresses on your OS, if this OS is Windows than look for documentation on windows hooks which is well docuemented by Microsoft and MSDN on the web and other places. If your OS is windows or mac OS X then you will need to listen for global keypresses using the X11 development libraries. This can be done on an ubunutu linux distro according to a Howto that I wrote at http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=864566

  2. Hook up your C code to your Java code through JNI. This step is actually the easier step. Follow the procedure that I use in my tutorial at http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=864566 under both windows and linux as the procedure for hooking up your C code to your Java code will be identical on both OSes.

The important thing to remember is that its much easier to get your JNI code working if you first code and debug your C/C++ code and make sure that it is working. Then integrating it with Java is easy.

ldog
A: 

If you're running on Windows try using the Task Manager to kill the errant Java program.

Example: in Windows XP (I don't have a Vista or Win7 machine handy so can't try it on those)

Ctrl-Alt-Del to open Task Manager, Ctrl-Tab to open the processes tab, Tab to move focus to the process list, up/down arrows to find the rogue process (usually identifiable by "javaw" as its image name.) DEL followed by 'Y' to kill it.

finnw
A: 

Had same problem. In my case, robot just controlled a single Windows App, that was maximized. I placed these lines at top of main loop driving the robot:

Color iconCenterColor = new Color(255,0,0); // if program icon is red

if (iconCenterColor.equals(robot.getPixelColor(10,15))) throw new IllegalStateException("robot not interacting with the right app.");

To cancel the robot, just alt-tab to another app. Works great for a simple one app driving robot.

Forgot to negate the test. Then it works great: