The Java Tutorials have been written for JDK 8. Examples and practices described in this page don't take advantage of improvements introduced in later releases and might use technology no longer available.
See Java Language Changes for a summary of updated language features in Java SE 9 and subsequent releases.
See JDK Release Notes for information about new features, enhancements, and removed or deprecated options for all JDK releases.
Mouse events notify when the user uses the mouse (or similar input device) to interact with a component. Mouse events occur when the cursor enters or exits a component's onscreen area and when the user presses or releases one of the mouse buttons.
Tracking the cursor's motion involves significantly more system overhead than tracking other mouse events. That is why mouse-motion events are separated into Mouse Motion listener type (see How to Write a Mouse Motion Listener).
To track mouse wheel events, you can register a mouse-wheel listener. See How to Write a Mouse Wheel Listener for more information.
If an application requires the detection of both mouse events and mouse-motion events, use the
MouseInputAdapter
class. This class implements the
MouseInputListener
, a convenient interface that implements the MouseListener
and MouseMotionListener
interfaces. However, the MouseInputListener
interface does not implement the MouseWheelListener
interface.
Alternatively, use the corresponding AWT
MouseAdapter
class, which implements the MouseListener
, MouseMotionListener
, and MouseWheelListener
interfaces.
The following example shows a mouse listener. At the top of the window is a blank area (implemented by a class named BlankArea
). The mouse listener listens for events both on the BlankArea
and on its container, an instance of MouseEventDemo
. Each time a mouse event occurs, a descriptive message is displayed under the blank area. By moving the cursor on top of the blank area and occasionally pressing mouse buttons, you can fire mouse events.
You can find the demo's code in
MouseEventDemo.java
and
BlankArea.java
. Here is the demo's mouse event handling code:
public class MouseEventDemo ... implements MouseListener { //where initialization occurs: //Register for mouse events on blankArea and the panel. blankArea.addMouseListener(this); addMouseListener(this); ... public void mousePressed(MouseEvent e) { saySomething("Mouse pressed; # of clicks: " + e.getClickCount(), e); } public void mouseReleased(MouseEvent e) { saySomething("Mouse released; # of clicks: " + e.getClickCount(), e); } public void mouseEntered(MouseEvent e) { saySomething("Mouse entered", e); } public void mouseExited(MouseEvent e) { saySomething("Mouse exited", e); } public void mouseClicked(MouseEvent e) { saySomething("Mouse clicked (# of clicks: " + e.getClickCount() + ")", e); } void saySomething(String eventDescription, MouseEvent e) { textArea.append(eventDescription + " detected on " + e.getComponent().getClass().getName() + "." + newline); } }
Method | Purpose |
---|---|
mouseClicked(MouseEvent) | Called just after the user clicks the listened-to component. |
mouseEntered(MouseEvent) | Called just after the cursor enters the bounds of the listened-to component. |
mouseExited(MouseEvent) | Called just after the cursor exits the bounds of the listened-to component. |
mousePressed(MouseEvent) | Called just after the user presses a mouse button while the cursor is over the listened-to component. |
mouseReleased(MouseEvent) | Called just after the user releases a mouse button after a mouse press over the listened-to component. |
The
MouseAdapter
class (the AWT adapter class) is abstract. All its methods have an empty body. So a developer can define methods for events specific to the application. You can also use the
MouseInputAdapter
class, which has all the methods available from MouseListener
and MouseMotionListener
.
Method | Purpose |
---|---|
int getClickCount() | Returns the number of quick, consecutive clicks the user has made (including this event). For example, returns 2 for a double click. |
int getX() int getY() Point getPoint() |
Return the (x,y) position at which the event occurred, relative to the component that fired the event. |
int getXOnScreen() int getYOnScreen() int getLocationOnScreen() |
Return the absolute (x,y) position of the event. These coordinates are relative to the virtual coordinate system for the multi-screen environment. Otherwise, these coordinates are relative to the coordinate system associated with the Component's Graphics Configuration. |
int getButton() | Returns which mouse button, if any, has a changed state. One of the following constants is returned: NOBUTTON , BUTTON1 , BUTTON2 , or BUTTON3 . |
boolean isPopupTrigger() | Returns true if the mouse event should cause a popup menu to appear. Because popup triggers are platform dependent, if your program uses popup menus, you should call isPopupTrigger for all mouse-pressed and mouse-released events fired by components over which the popup can appear. See Bringing Up a Popup Menu for more information about popup menus. |
String getMouseModifiersText(int) | Returns a String describing the modifier keys and mouse buttons that were active during the event, such as "Shift", or "Ctrl+Shift". These strings can be localized using the awt.properties file. |
The MouseEvent
class inherits many useful methods from
InputEvent and a couple handy methods from the
ComponentEvent
and
AWTEvent
classes.
Method | Purpose |
---|---|
int getID() (in java.awt.AWTEvent ) |
Returns the event type, which defines the particular action. For example, the MouseEvent id reflects the state of the mouse buttons for every mouse event. The following states could be specified by the MouseEvent id: MouseEvent.MOUSE_PRESSED , MouseEvent.MOUSE_RELEASED , and MouseEvent.MOUSE_CLICKED . |
Component getComponent() (in ComponentEvent ) |
Returns the component that fired the event. You can use this method instead of the getSource method. |
int getWhen() | Returns the timestamp of when this event occurred. The higher the timestamp, the more recently the event occurred. |
boolean isAltDown() boolean isControlDown() boolean isMetaDown() boolean isShiftDown() |
Return the state of individual modifier keys at the time the event was fired. |
int getModifiers() | Returns the state of all the modifier keys and mouse buttons when the event was fired. You can use this method to determine which mouse button was pressed (or released) when a mouse event was fired. The InputEvent class defines these constants for use with the getModifiers method: ALT_MASK , BUTTON1_MASK , BUTTON2_MASK , BUTTON3_MASK , CTRL_MASK , META_MASK , and SHIFT_MASK . For example, the following expression is true if the right button was pressed:
(mouseEvent.getModifiers() & InputEvent.BUTTON3_MASK) == InputEvent.BUTTON3_MASK |
int getModifiersEx() | Returns the extended modifier mask for this event. Extended modifiers represent the state of the mouse button and all modal keys, such as ALT, CTRL, META, just after the event occurred. You can check the status of the modifiers using one of the following predefined bitmasks: SHIFT_DOWN_MASK , CTRL_DOWN_MASK , META_DOWN_MASK , ALT_DOWN_MASK , BUTTON1_DOWN_MASK , BUTTON2_DOWN_MASK , BUTTON3_DOWN_MASK , or ALT_GRAPH_DOWN_MASK . For example, to check that button 1 is down, but that buttons 2 and 3 are up, you would use the following code snippet:
if (event.getModifiersEx() & (BUTTON1_DOWN_MASK | BUTTON2_DOWN_MASK | BUTTON3_DOWN_MASK) == BUTTON1_DOWN_MASK) { ... } |
int getModifiersExText(int) | Returns a string describing the extended modifier keys and mouse buttons, such as "Shift", "Button1", or "Ctrl+Shift". These strings can be localized by changing the awt.properties file. |
The
MouseInfo
class provides methods to obtain information about the mouse pointer location at any time while an application runs.
Method | Purpose |
---|---|
getPointerInfo() | Returns a PointerInfo instance that represents the current location of the mouse pointer. |
getNumberOfButtons() | Returns the number of buttons on the mouse or -1 , if a system does not support a mouse. |
The following table lists the examples that use mouse listeners.
Example | Where Described | Notes |
---|---|---|
MouseEventDemo |
This section | Reports all mouse events that occur within a blank panel to demonstrate the circumstances under which mouse events are fired. |
GlassPaneDemo |
How to Use Root Panes | Uses a subclass of MouseInputAdapter to listen to mouse events and mouse-motion events on the root pane's glass pane. Re-dispatches the events to underlying components. |
TableSortDemo |
How to Use Tables | Listens to mouse events on a table header. Sorts data in the selected column. |
PopupMenuDemo |
How to Use Menus | Displays a popup menu in response to mouse clicks. |
TrackFocusDemo |
How to Use the Focus Subsystem | The custom component, Picture , implements a mouse listener that requests the focus when a user clicks on the component. |