ESC key binding on the Scene

Thiago Milczarek Sayão thiago.sayao at gmail.com
Tue Nov 21 20:14:01 UTC 2023


Andy,

I think you're right about the formatter.

The idea was to let the key propagate if there's nothing to cancel.

For example:
If I want to cancel the edit, one ESC. The second ESC would propagate
because there's nothing to cancel.

Thank you for the reply.



Em ter., 21 de nov. de 2023 às 14:36, Andy Goryachev <
andy.goryachev at oracle.com> escreveu:

> Dear Thiago:
>
>
>
> I don’t think it’s related to undo but to a TextField with a formatter.
>
>
>
> The question is - do you want to disable the standard behavior (updating
> the text using the formatter on ESCAPE) completely?  Or perhaps you do want
> to let TextField invoke cancelEdit() (see TextInputControlBehavior:178) and
> then close the stage?
>
>
>
> In the latter case you might consider adding an event filter on the Stage
> and calling hide() from there in a Platform.runLater()
>
>
>
> What do you think?
>
>
>
> -andy
>
>
>
>
>
> *From: *openjfx-dev <openjfx-dev-retn at openjdk.org> on behalf of Thiago
> Milczarek Sayão <thiago.sayao at gmail.com>
> *Date: *Tuesday, November 21, 2023 at 02:37
> *To: *openjfx-dev <openjfx-dev at openjdk.org>
> *Subject: *ESC key binding on the Scene
>
> Hi,
>
>
>
> I would like to use ESC to close Stages. The problem is that if the focus
> is on a TextField, it consumes the event.
>
>
>
> ESC is the key binding to Undo on the TextField, but it's always consumed,
> even if there's nothing to undo.
>
>
>
> Is this correct? Should it not propagate if there's nothing to undo?
>
>
>
> -- Thiago.
>
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