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Canvas.java
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1998-09-22
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/*
* @(#)Canvas.java 1.18 98/07/01
*
* Copyright 1995-1998 by Sun Microsystems, Inc.,
* 901 San Antonio Road, Palo Alto, California, 94303, U.S.A.
* All rights reserved.
*
* This software is the confidential and proprietary information
* of Sun Microsystems, Inc. ("Confidential Information"). You
* shall not disclose such Confidential Information and shall use
* it only in accordance with the terms of the license agreement
* you entered into with Sun.
*/
package java.awt;
import java.awt.peer.CanvasPeer;
/**
* A <code>Canvas</code> component represents a blank rectangular
* area of the screen onto which the application can draw or from
* which the application can trap input events from the user.
* <p>
* An application must subclass the <code>Canvas</code> class in
* order to get useful functionality such as creating a custom
* component. The <code>paint</code> method must be overridden
* in order to perform custom graphics on the canvas.
*
* @version 1.18 07/01/98
* @author Sami Shaio
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public class Canvas extends Component {
private static final String base = "canvas";
private static int nameCounter = 0;
/*
* JDK 1.1 serialVersionUID
*/
private static final long serialVersionUID = -2284879212465893870L;
/**
* Constructs a new Canvas.
*/
public Canvas() {
}
/**
* Construct a name for this component. Called by getName() when the
* name is null.
*/
String constructComponentName() {
return base + nameCounter++;
}
/**
* Creates the peer of the canvas. This peer allows you to change the
* user interface of the canvas without changing its functionality.
* @see java.awt.Toolkit#createCanvas(java.awt.Canvas)
* @see java.awt.Component#getToolkit()
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public void addNotify() {
synchronized (getTreeLock()) {
if (peer == null)
peer = getToolkit().createCanvas(this);
super.addNotify();
}
}
/**
* This method is called to repaint this canvas. Most applications
* that subclass <code>Canvas</code> should override this method in
* order to perform some useful operation.
* <p>
* The <code>paint</code> method provided by <code>Canvas</code>
* redraws this canvas's rectangle in the background color.
* <p>
* The graphics context's origin (0, 0) is the top-left corner
* of this canvas. Its clipping region is the area of the context.
* @param g the graphics context.
* @see java.awt.Graphics
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public void paint(Graphics g) {
g.setColor(getBackground());
g.fillRect(0, 0, width, height);
}
boolean postsOldMouseEvents() {
return true;
}
}