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The summary of the above is as follows:
Added a factory class for special JTabbedPane that displays a small 'close' button in each tab. When user clicks the close button a PropertyChangeEvent is fired from the tabbed pane.
How cool is that? The NetBeans APIs come to the rescue, solving a problem in the world of Swing. For details on this issue, see issue 55845 and issue 96754.
So now each tab in my browser has its own Close button. (Though in some cases you'll need to get a build from after today, because of issue 99691). Below, look at the tab for the two web pages, www.cnn.com and www.guardian.co.uk. Both have a Close button right next to the display name in the tab:
Behind the scenes, this is how the JTabbedPane is defined:
browseTabbedPane = new JTabbedPane();
browseTabbedPane = TabbedPaneFactory.createCloseButtonTabbedPane();
browseTabbedPane.addPropertyChangeListener( TabbedPaneFactory.PROP_CLOSE, new PropertyChangeListener() {
public void propertyChange(PropertyChangeEvent evt) {
JTabbedPane pane = (JTabbedPane)evt.getSource();
int sel = pane.getSelectedIndex();
pane.removeTabAt(sel);
}
});
And, by the way, just for context, here's what happens when the JButton is clicked:
private void jButton1ActionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {
try {
WebBrowser wb=new WebBrowser();
wb.setURL(new URL(txtUrl.getText()));
wb.setName(txtUrl.getText());
browseTabbedPane.add(wb);
} catch(Exception ex) {
JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null,ex.getMessage());
}
}
So, in 6.0 there will be a new TabbedPaneFactory class, which will create a special JTabbedPane that displays a small Close button in each tab, exactly as shown above. What happens when the Close button is clicked is up to you. Above, the tab is removed, but anything else could happen there too.
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