Module java.desktop

Class AccessibleState

java.lang.Object
javax.accessibility.AccessibleBundle
javax.accessibility.AccessibleState

public class AccessibleState extends AccessibleBundle
Class AccessibleState describes a component's particular state. The actual state of the component is defined as an AccessibleStateSet, which is a composed set of AccessibleStates.

The AccessibleBundle.toDisplayString() method allows you to obtain the localized string for a locale independent key from a predefined ResourceBundle for the keys defined in this class.

The constants in this class present a strongly typed enumeration of common object roles. A public constructor for this class has been purposely omitted and applications should use one of the constants from this class. If the constants in this class are not sufficient to describe the role of an object, a subclass should be generated from this class and it should provide constants in a similar manner.

  • Field Details

    • ACTIVE

      public static final AccessibleState ACTIVE
      Indicates a window is currently the active window. This includes windows, dialogs, frames, etc. In addition, this state is used to indicate the currently active child of a component such as a list, table, or tree. For example, the active child of a list is the child that is drawn with a rectangle around it.
      See Also:
    • PRESSED

      public static final AccessibleState PRESSED
      Indicates this object is currently pressed. This is usually associated with buttons and indicates the user has pressed a mouse button while the pointer was over the button and has not yet released the mouse button.
      See Also:
    • ARMED

      public static final AccessibleState ARMED
      Indicates that the object is armed. This is usually used on buttons that have been pressed but not yet released, and the mouse pointer is still over the button.
      See Also:
    • BUSY

      public static final AccessibleState BUSY
      Indicates the current object is busy. This is usually used on objects such as progress bars, sliders, or scroll bars to indicate they are in a state of transition.
      See Also:
    • CHECKED

      public static final AccessibleState CHECKED
      Indicates this object is currently checked. This is usually used on objects such as toggle buttons, radio buttons, and check boxes.
      See Also:
    • EDITABLE

      public static final AccessibleState EDITABLE
      Indicates the user can change the contents of this object. This is usually used primarily for objects that allow the user to enter text. Other objects, such as scroll bars and sliders, are automatically editable if they are enabled.
      See Also:
    • EXPANDABLE

      public static final AccessibleState EXPANDABLE
      Indicates this object allows progressive disclosure of its children. This is usually used with hierarchical objects such as trees and is often paired with the EXPANDED or COLLAPSED states.
      See Also:
    • COLLAPSED

      public static final AccessibleState COLLAPSED
      Indicates this object is collapsed. This is usually paired with the EXPANDABLE state and is used on objects that provide progressive disclosure such as trees.
      See Also:
    • EXPANDED

      public static final AccessibleState EXPANDED
      Indicates this object is expanded. This is usually paired with the EXPANDABLE state and is used on objects that provide progressive disclosure such as trees.
      See Also:
    • ENABLED

      public static final AccessibleState ENABLED
      Indicates this object is enabled. The absence of this state from an object's state set indicates this object is not enabled. An object that is not enabled cannot be manipulated by the user. In a graphical display, it is usually grayed out.
    • FOCUSABLE

      public static final AccessibleState FOCUSABLE
      Indicates this object can accept keyboard focus, which means all events resulting from typing on the keyboard will normally be passed to it when it has focus.
      See Also:
    • FOCUSED

      public static final AccessibleState FOCUSED
      Indicates this object currently has the keyboard focus.
      See Also:
    • ICONIFIED

      public static final AccessibleState ICONIFIED
      Indicates this object is minimized and is represented only by an icon. This is usually only associated with frames and internal frames.
      See Also:
    • OPAQUE

      public static final AccessibleState OPAQUE
      Indicates this object paints every pixel within its rectangular region. A non-opaque component paints only some of its pixels, allowing the pixels underneath it to "show through". A component that does not fully paint its pixels therefore provides a degree of transparency.
      See Also:
    • RESIZABLE

      public static final AccessibleState RESIZABLE
      Indicates the size of this object is not fixed.
      See Also:
    • MULTISELECTABLE

      public static final AccessibleState MULTISELECTABLE
      Indicates this object allows more than one of its children to be selected at the same time.
      See Also:
    • SELECTABLE

      public static final AccessibleState SELECTABLE
      Indicates this object is the child of an object that allows its children to be selected, and that this child is one of those children that can be selected.
      See Also:
    • SELECTED

      public static final AccessibleState SELECTED
      Indicates this object is the child of an object that allows its children to be selected, and that this child is one of those children that has been selected.
      See Also:
    • SHOWING

      public static final AccessibleState SHOWING
      Indicates this object, the object's parent, the object's parent's parent, and so on, are all visible. Note that this does not necessarily mean the object is painted on the screen. It might be occluded by some other showing object.
      See Also:
    • VISIBLE

      public static final AccessibleState VISIBLE
      Indicates this object is visible. Note: this means that the object intends to be visible; however, it may not in fact be showing on the screen because one of the objects that this object is contained by is not visible.
      See Also:
    • VERTICAL

      public static final AccessibleState VERTICAL
      Indicates the orientation of this object is vertical. This is usually associated with objects such as scrollbars, sliders, and progress bars.
      See Also:
    • HORIZONTAL

      public static final AccessibleState HORIZONTAL
      Indicates the orientation of this object is horizontal. This is usually associated with objects such as scrollbars, sliders, and progress bars.
      See Also:
    • SINGLE_LINE

      public static final AccessibleState SINGLE_LINE
      Indicates this (text) object can contain only a single line of text.
    • MULTI_LINE

      public static final AccessibleState MULTI_LINE
      Indicates this (text) object can contain multiple lines of text.
    • TRANSIENT

      public static final AccessibleState TRANSIENT
      Indicates this object is transient. An assistive technology should not add a PropertyChange listener to an object with transient state, as that object will never generate any events. Transient objects are typically created to answer Java Accessibility method queries, but otherwise do not remain linked to the underlying object (for example, those objects underneath lists, tables, and trees in Swing, where only one actual UI Component does shared rendering duty for all of the data objects underneath the actual list/table/tree elements).
      Since:
      1.5
    • MANAGES_DESCENDANTS

      public static final AccessibleState MANAGES_DESCENDANTS
      Indicates this object is responsible for managing its subcomponents. This is typically used for trees and tables that have a large number of subcomponents and where the objects are created only when needed and otherwise remain virtual. The application should not manage the subcomponents directly.
      Since:
      1.5
    • INDETERMINATE

      public static final AccessibleState INDETERMINATE
      Indicates that the object state is indeterminate. An example is selected text that is partially bold and partially not bold. In this case the attributes associated with the selected text are indeterminate.
      Since:
      1.5
    • TRUNCATED

      public static final AccessibleState TRUNCATED
      A state indicating that text is truncated by a bounding rectangle and that some of the text is not displayed on the screen. An example is text in a spreadsheet cell that is truncated by the bounds of the cell.
      Since:
      1.5
  • Constructor Details

    • AccessibleState

      protected AccessibleState(String key)
      Creates a new AccessibleState using the given locale independent key. This should not be a public method. Instead, it is used to create the constants in this file to make it a strongly typed enumeration. Subclasses of this class should enforce similar policy.

      The key String should be a locale independent key for the state. It is not intended to be used as the actual String to display to the user. To get the localized string, use AccessibleBundle.toDisplayString().

      Parameters:
      key - the locale independent name of the state
      See Also: