Actually OpenCloud does not require a Web server. Simply use Swing rendering instead of HTML/JSP. Here is a small snippet illustrating a very basic Swing tag cloud using OpenCloud library. It can be improved, but it gives you the gist:
import java.util.Random;
import javax.swing.JFrame;
import javax.swing.JLabel;
import javax.swing.JPanel;
import javax.swing.SwingUtilities;
import org.mcavallo.opencloud.Cloud;
import org.mcavallo.opencloud.Tag;
public class TestOpenCloud {
private static final String[] WORDS = { "art", "australia", "baby", "beach", "birthday", "blue", "bw", "california", "canada", "canon",
"cat", "chicago", "china", "christmas", "city", "dog", "england", "europe", "family", "festival", "flower", "flowers", "food",
"france", "friends", "fun", "germany", "holiday", "india", "italy", "japan", "london", "me", "mexico", "music", "nature",
"new", "newyork", "night", "nikon", "nyc", "paris", "park", "party", "people", "portrait", "sanfrancisco", "sky", "snow",
"spain", "summer", "sunset", "taiwan", "tokyo", "travel", "trip", "uk", "usa", "vacation", "water", "wedding" };
protected void initUI() {
JFrame frame = new JFrame(TestOpenCloud.class.getSimpleName());
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
Cloud cloud = new Cloud();
Random random = new Random();
for (String s : WORDS) {
for (int i = random.nextInt(50); i > 0; i--) {
cloud.addTag(s);
}
}
for (Tag tag : cloud.tags()) {
final JLabel label = new JLabel(tag.getName());
label.setOpaque(false);
label.setFont(label.getFont().deriveFont((float) tag.getWeight() * 10));
panel.add(label);
}
frame.add(panel);
frame.setSize(800, 600);
frame.setVisible(true);
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
new TestOpenCloud().initUI();
}
});
}
}
This code is based on the Example 1 of the OpenCloud library
Here is an output of what I got: