问题
I've been using ControlsFX dialogs to show information, but the style of my application is not blue, and does not match dialog style (color, borders) is there a way to change the button color or styles?
回答1:
Note
In a more recent question, this time regarding the new Dialog
API bundled with JDK8u40 early releases, I came with a less hacky and more clean solution, using stylesheets instead of inline styles and lookups.
So I'm updating this question, as openjfx-dialogs
is still the way to have dialogs for the official releases 8u20, 8u25 and 8u31.
New solution
To customize the default style of a dialog with our own css file, we need to take into consideration that the dialog is in fact a new stage, with a new scene, and the root node is a DialogPane
instance.
So once we have some dialog instance:
@Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage) {
Alert alert = new Alert(AlertType.CONFIRMATION);
alert.setTitle("Confirmation Dialog");
alert.setHeaderText("This is a Custom Confirmation Dialog");
alert.setContentText("We override the style classes of the dialog");
...
}
we can access to its dialog pane and add our own style sheet:
DialogPane dialogPane = alert.getDialogPane();
dialogPane.getStylesheets().add(
getClass().getResource("myDialogs.css").toExternalForm());
In order to define our rules we need to know the descriptors already used. For that, we just need to look for dialog.css
file in the openjfx-dialogs.jar
(under the package com.sun.javafx.scene.control.skin.modena), or go to the source code at the repository.
Now we need to provide our custom rules to override the default ones for dialog
and alert
class selectors. The following rules will have the exact same effect as the inline styiling from my first answer.
.dialog > .dialog-pane {
-fx-background-color: greenyellow;
}
.dialog > .dialog-pane > .button-bar {
-fx-font-size: 24px;
-fx-background-color: indianred;
-fx-font-family: "Andalus";
}
.dialog > .dialog-pane > .content.label {
-fx-font-size: 16px;
-fx-font-weight: bold;
-fx-fill: blue;
}
.dialog:header > .dialog-pane .header-panel {
-fx-background-color: cadetblue;
-fx-font-style: italic;
}
.alert.confirmation.dialog-pane {
-fx-graphic: url("lock24.png");
}
回答2:
Since you don't provide the version you are using, I'll go with the new OpenJFX-Dialogs project (source, started since 8.20.7 version), which are by the way the same dialogs we'll have with JDK8u40.
Firts, let's add some alert dialog:
@Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage) {
Alert alert = new Alert(AlertType.CONFIRMATION);
alert.setTitle("Confirmation Dialog");
alert.setHeaderText("This is a Regular Confirmation Dialog");
alert.setContentText("This is the message");
Button button = new Button("Click to display an alert");
button.setOnAction(e->{
Optional<ButtonType> result = alert.showAndWait();
result.ifPresent(System.out::println);
});
Scene scene = new Scene(new StackPane(button), 300, 200);
primaryStage.setScene(scene);
primaryStage.show();
}
Now, to style this dialog, we need an instance of DialogPane
, which is the root node within a dialog, where the header, the content and the buttons are displayed.
Via lookups or via getChildren()
it's easy to find these components.
This is an example of customizing all of the components of the dialog:
@Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage) {
Alert alert = new Alert(AlertType.CONFIRMATION);
alert.setTitle("Confirmation Dialog");
alert.setHeaderText("This is a Custom Confirmation Dialog");
alert.setContentText("We override the style classes of dialog.css");
Button button = new Button("Click to display an alert");
button.setOnAction(e->{
Optional<ButtonType> result = alert.showAndWait();
result.ifPresent(System.out::println);
});
Scene scene = new Scene(new StackPane(button), 300, 200);
primaryStage.setScene(scene);
primaryStage.show();
DialogPane dialogPane = alert.getDialogPane();
// root
dialogPane.setStyle("-fx-background-color: greenyellow;");
// 1. Grid
// remove style to customize header
dialogPane.getStyleClass().remove("alert");
GridPane grid = (GridPane)dialogPane.lookup(".header-panel");
grid.setStyle("-fx-background-color: cadetblue; "
+ "-fx-font-style: italic;");
// custom icon
StackPane stackPane = new StackPane(new ImageView(
new Image(getClass().getResourceAsStream("lock24.png"))));
stackPane.setPrefSize(24, 24);
stackPane.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER);
dialogPane.setGraphic(stackPane);
// 2. ContentText with just a Label
dialogPane.lookup(".content.label").setStyle("-fx-font-size: 16px; "
+ "-fx-font-weight: bold; -fx-fill: blue;");
// 3- ButtonBar
ButtonBar buttonBar = (ButtonBar)alert.getDialogPane().lookup(".button-bar");
buttonBar.setStyle("-fx-font-size: 24px;"
+ "-fx-background-color: indianred;");
buttonBar.getButtons().forEach(b->b.setStyle("-fx-font-family: \"Andalus\";"));
}
And this is how it looks like:
回答3:
Another solution:
dialog.getDialogPane().getScene().getStylesheets().add("css_name.css");
https://bitbucket.org/controlsfx/openjfx-dialogs/src/7273358fd294d486b4959f0c89b24b76c49bec89/src/main/resources/com/sun/javafx/scene/control/skin/modena/dialog.css?at=default
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26808261/action-buttons-css-style-in-javafx-controlfx-dialog