How to add a package controller to a project created with FXML JavaFX Maven Archetype (Gluon) in Netbeans 12? [duplicate] - maven

My JavaFX application needs to be able to find the FXML files to load them with the FXMLLoader, as well as stylesheets (CSS files) and images. When I try to load these, I often get errors, or the item I'm trying to load simply doesn't load at runtime.
For FXML files, the error message I see includes
Caused by: java.lang.NullPointerException: location is not set
For images, the stack trace includes
Caused by: java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Invalid URL: Invalid URL or resource not found
How do I figure out the correct resource path for these resources?

Short version of answer:
Use getClass().getResource(...) or SomeOtherClass.class.getResource(...) to create a URL to the resource
Pass either an absolute path (with a leading /) or a relative path (without a leading /) to the getResource(...) method. The path is the package containing the resource, with . replaced with /.
Do not use .. in the resource path. If and when the application is bundled as a jar file, this will not work. If the resource is not in the same package or in a subpackage of the class, use an absolute path.
For FXML files, pass the URL directly to the FXMLLoader.
For images and stylesheets, call toExternalForm() on the URL to generate the String to pass to the Image or ImageView constructor, or to add to the stylesheets list.
To troubleshoot, examine the content of your build folder (or jar file), not your source folder.
Placing src in the path when you get a resource is always wrong. The src directory is only available at development and build time, not at deployment and runtime.
Full Answer
Contents
Scope of this answer
Resources are loaded at runtime
JavaFX uses URLs to load resources
Rules for resource names
Creating a resource URL with getClass().getResource(...)
Organizing code and resources
Maven (and similar) standard layouts
Troubleshooting
Scope of this answer
Note that this answer only addresses loading resources (for example FXML files, images, and stylesheets) that are part of the application, and bundled with it. So, for example, loading images that the user chooses from the file system on the machine on which the application is running would require different techniques that are not covered here.
Resources are loaded at runtime
The first thing to understand about loading resources is that they, of course, are loaded at runtime. Typically, during development, an application is run from the file system: that is, the class files and resources required to run it are individual files on the file system. However, once the application is built, it is usually executed from a jar file. In this case, the resources such as FXML files, stylesheets, and images, are no longer individual files on the filesystem but are entries in the jar file. Therefore:
Code cannot use File, FileInputStream, or file: URLs to load a resource
JavaFX uses URLs to load resources
JavaFX loads FXML, Images, and CSS stylesheets using URLs.
The FXMLLoader explicitly expects a java.net.URL object to be passed to it (either to the static FXMLLoader.load(...) method, to the FXMLLoader constructor, or to the setLocation() method).
Both Image and Scene.getStylesheets().add(...) expect Strings that represent URLs. If URLs are passed without a scheme, they are interpreted relative to the classpath. These strings can be created from a URL in a robust way by calling toExternalForm() on the URL.
The recommended mechanism for creating the correct URL for a resource is to use Class.getResource(...), which is called on an appropriate Class instance. Such a class instance can be obtained by calling getClass() (which gives the class of the current object), or ClassName.class. The Class.getResource(...) method takes a String representing the resource name.
Rules for resource names
Resource names are /-separated path names. Each component represents a package or sub-package name component.
Resource names are case-sensitive.
The individual components in the resource name must be valid Java identifiers
The last point has an important consequence:
. and .. are not valid Java identifiers, so they cannot be used in resource names.
These may actually work when the application is running from the filesystem, though this is really more of an accident of the implementation of getResource(). They will fail when the application is bundled as a jar file.
Similarly, if you are running on an operating system that does not distinguish between filenames that differ only by case, then using the wrong case in a resource name might work while running from the filesystem, but will fail when running from a jar file.
Resource names beginning with a leading / are absolute: in other words they are interpreted relative to the classpath. Resource names without a leading / are interpreted relative to the class on which getResource() was called.
A slight variation on this is to use getClass().getClassLoader().getResource(...). The path supplied to ClassLoader.getResource(...) must not begin with a / and is always absolute, i.e. it is relative to the classpath. It should also be noted that in modular applications, access to resources using ClassLoader.getResource() is, under some circumstances, subject to rules of strong encapsulation, and additionally the package containing the resource must be opened unconditionally. See the documentation for details.
Creating a resource URL with getClass().getResource()
To create a resource URL, use someClass.getResource(...). Usually, someClass represents the class of the current object, and is obtained using getClass(). However, this doesn't have to be the case, as described in the next section.
If the resource is in the same package as the current class, or in a subpackage of that class, use a relative path to the resource:
// FXML file in the same package as the current class:
URL fxmlURL = getClass().getResource("MyFile.fxml");
Parent root = FXMLLoader.load(fxmlURL);
// FXML file in a subpackage called `fxml`:
URL fxmlURL2 = getClass().getResource("fxml/MyFile.fxml");
Parent root2 = FXMLLoader.load(fxmlURL2);
// Similarly for images:
URL imageURL = getClass().getResource("myimages/image.png");
Image image = new Image(imageURL.toExternalForm());
If the resource is in a package that is not a subpackage of the current class, use an absolute path. For example, if the current class is in the package org.jamesd.examples.view, and we need to load a CSS file style.css which is in the package org.jamesd.examples.css, we have to use an absolute path:
URL cssURL = getClass().getResource("/org/jamesd/examples/css/style.css");
scene.getStylesheets().add(cssURL.toExternalForm());
It's worth re-emphasizing for this example that the path "../css/style.css" does not contain valid Java resource names, and will not work if the application is bundled as a jar file.
Organizing code and resources
I recommend organizing your code and resources into packages determined by the part of the UI they are associated with. The following source layout in Eclipse gives an example of this organization:
Using this structure, each resource has a class in the same package, so it is easy to generate the correct URL for any resource:
FXMLLoader editorLoader = new FXMLLoader(EditorController.class.getResource("Editor.fxml"));
Parent editor = editorLoader.load();
FXMLLoader sidebarLoader = new FXMLLoader(SidebarController.class.getResource("Sidebar.fxml"));
Parent sidebar = sidebarLoader.load();
ImageView logo = new ImageView();
logo.setImage(newImage(SidebarController.class.getResource("logo.png").toExternalForm()));
mainScene.getStylesheets().add(App.class.getResource("style.css").toExternalForm());
If you have a package with only resources and no classes, for example, the images package in the layout below
you can even consider creating a "marker interface" solely for the purposes of looking up the resource names:
package org.jamesd.examples.sample.images ;
public interface ImageLocation { }
which now lets you find these resources easily:
Image clubs = new Image(ImageLocation.class.getResource("clubs.png").toExternalForm());
Loading resources from a subpackage of a class is also reasonably straightforward. Given the following layout:
we can load resources in the App class as follows:
package org.jamesd.examples.resourcedemo;
import java.net.URL;
import javafx.application.Application;
import javafx.fxml.FXMLLoader;
import javafx.scene.Parent;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
public class App extends Application {
#Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage) throws Exception {
URL fxmlResource = getClass().getResource("fxml/MainView.fxml");
Parent root = FXMLLoader.load(fxmlResource);
Scene scene = new Scene(root);
scene.getStylesheets().add(getClass().getResource("style/main-style.css").toExternalForm());
primaryStage.setScene(scene);
primaryStage.show();
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
Application.launch(args);
}
}
To load resources which are not in the same package, or a subpackage, of the class from which you're loading them, you need to use the absolute path:
URL fxmlResource = getClass().getResource("/org/jamesd/examples/resourcedemo/fxml/MainView.fxml");
Maven (and similar) standard layouts
Maven and other dependency management and build tools recommend a source folder layout in which resources are separated from Java source files, as per the Maven Standard Directory Layout. The Maven layout version of the previous example looks like:
It is important to understand how this is built to assemble the application:
*.java files in the source folder src/main/java are compiled to class files, which are deployed to the build folder or jar file.
Resources in the resource folder src/main/resources are copied to the build folder or jar file.
In this example, because the resources are in folders that correspond to subpackages of the packages where the source code is defined, the resulting build (which, by default with Maven, is in target/classes) consists of a single structure.
Note that both src/main/java and src/main/resources are considered the root for the corresponding structure in the build, so only their content, not the folders themselves, are part of the build. In other words, there is no resources folder available at runtime. The build structure is shown below in the "troubleshooting" section.
Notice that the IDE in this case (Eclipse) displays the src/main/java source folder differently from the src/main/resources folder; in the first case it displays packages, but for the resource folder it displays folders. Make sure you know if you are creating packages (whose names are .-delimited) or folders (whose names must not contain ., or any other character not valid in a Java identifier) in your IDE.
If you are using Maven and decide that for ease of maintenance you'd rather keep your .fxml files next to the .java files that reference them (instead of sticking strictly to the Maven Standard Directory Layout), you can do so. Just tell Maven to copy these files to the same folder in your output directory that it will place the class files generated from those source files into, by including something like the following in your pom.xml file:
<build>
...
<resource>
<directory>src/main/java</directory>
<includes>
<include>**/*.fxml</include>
<include>**/*.css</include>
</includes>
</resource>
...
</build>
If you do this, you can then use an approach like FXMLLoader.load(getClass().getResource("MyFile.fxml")) to have your classes load .fxml resources from the directory which contains their own .class files.
Troubleshooting
If you get errors you do not expect, first check the following:
Make sure you are not using invalid names for your resources. This includes using . or .. in the resource path.
Make sure you are using relative paths where expected, and absolute paths where expected. for Class.getResource(...) the path is absolute if it has a leading /, and relative otherwise. For ClassLoader.getResource(...), the path is always absolute, and must not start with a /.
Remember that absolute paths are defined relative to the classpath. Typically the root of the classpath is the union of all source and resource folders in your IDE.
If all this seems correct, and you still see errors, check the build or deployment folder. The exact location of this folder will vary by IDE and build tool. If you are using Maven, by default it is target/classes. Other build tools and IDEs will deploy to folders named bin, classes, build, or out.
Often, your IDE will not show the build folder, so you may need to check it with the system file explorer.
The combined source and build structure for the Maven example above is
If you are generating a jar file, some IDEs may allow you to expand the jar file in a tree view to inspect its contents. You can also check the contents from the command line with jar tf file.jar:
$ jar -tf resource-demo-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar
META-INF/
META-INF/MANIFEST.MF
org/
org/jamesd/
org/jamesd/examples/
org/jamesd/examples/resourcedemo/
org/jamesd/examples/resourcedemo/images/
org/jamesd/examples/resourcedemo/style/
org/jamesd/examples/resourcedemo/fxml/
org/jamesd/examples/resourcedemo/images/so-logo.png
org/jamesd/examples/resourcedemo/style/main-style.css
org/jamesd/examples/resourcedemo/Controller.class
org/jamesd/examples/resourcedemo/fxml/MainView.fxml
org/jamesd/examples/resourcedemo/App.class
module-info.class
META-INF/maven/
META-INF/maven/org.jamesd.examples/
META-INF/maven/org.jamesd.examples/resource-demo/
META-INF/maven/org.jamesd.examples/resource-demo/pom.xml
META-INF/maven/org.jamesd.examples/resource-demo/pom.properties
$
If the resources are not being deployed, or are being deployed to an unexpected location, check the configuration of your build tool or IDE.
Example image loading troubleshooting code
This code is deliberately more verbose than is strictly necessarily to facilitate adding additional debugging information for the image loading process. It also uses System.out rather than a logger for easier portability.
String resourcePathString = "/img/wumpus.png";
Image image = loadImage(resourcePathString);
// ...
private Image loadImage(String resourcePathString) {
System.out.println("Attempting to load an image from the resourcePath: " + resourcePathString);
URL resource = HelloApplication.class.getResource(resourcePathString);
if (resource == null) {
System.out.println("Resource does not exist: " + resourcePathString);
return null;
}
String path = resource.toExternalForm();
System.out.println("Image path: " + path);
Image image = new Image(path);
System.out.println("Image load error? " + image.isError());
System.out.println("Image load exception? " + image.getException());
if (!image.isError()) {
System.out.println("Successfully loaded an image from " + resourcePathString);
}
return image;
}
External Tutorial Reference
A useful external tutorial for resource location is Eden coding's tutorial:
Where to put resource files in JavaFX.
The nice thing about the Eden coding tutorial is that it is comprehensive. In addition to covering the information on lookups from Java code which is in this question. The Eden tutorial covers topics such as locating resources that are encoded as urls in CSS, or resource references in FXML using an # specifier or fx:include element (which are topics currently not directly covered in this answer).

Related

Get absolute path to directory containing current FreeMarker

In Apache FreeMarker, how can I get the absolute path to the directory containing the current .ftl file?
For example, if I was processing the file /path/to/template.ftl, then I'm searching for a way to get /path/to inside of /path/to/template.ftl.
I've tried .current_template_name and friends, but these really only contain the name of the file, not its absolute path (from which I could get the parent directory). I've also tried absolute_template_name, but this just seems to prepend the name with a / to make the path seem absolute, but it does not resolve to the real absolute path.
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The template paths that templates use are always virtual, and resolved by the TemplateLoader object set in the Configuration. TemplateLoader is just an interface, has multiple implementations, and so is a black box for FreeMarker. The actual location of the template can be inside a jar file, or even in the database table, so in general a template has no path on the file system.
Normally, you set up the TemplateLoader so that it can access all the templates you need. Then you don't need any tricks, and just use template paths.
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How to provide relative path in Include controller in jmeter for test fragment

I have two thread groups from that in one thread I have two include controllers. but I want to provide relative path instead of absolute path so anyone can use this project in their system. as I am uploading this on GitHub.
enter image description here
If the external .jmx script lives at the same folder - just use its filename like Test Fragment.jmx in the Include Controller
If it resides under a folder - specify its relative location
somefolder/Test Fragment.jmx
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../somefolder/Test Fragment.jmx
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Include Controller Documentation
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attaching unit test data to unit tests in visual studio

I heavily make use of unit tests for my developer needs (POCs, unit tests, etc). For one particular test method there was a line that went...
var file = #"D:\data\file.eml";
So I am referencing some file on my file system.
Now in a team when other people are trying to run my "personal" tests (POCs or whatever) they don't have a reference to that file in that path...hence the tests fails. How we'd have to normally make this work is to provide the test data, and allow the user to modify the test code so that it runs on his computer.
Any visual studio way to manage this particular problem?
Whats the benefit in this? Well, people can review the test data (email in my case) as well as the method I wrote for testing, and can raise defects in TFS (the source control system) relating to it if need be.
One way I often handle data files for unit test projects are to set the data files as Resources. (* Note that this link is for vs2010 but I have used this approach through vs2015RC).
In the project with the data file: Project -> Properties -> Resources and choose to add a resource file if you the project doesn't already have one. Select Files in the resource pane and click Add Resource or just drag and drop your data files onto the resource manager. By default resources are marked internal, so to access the resources from another project you have several ways:
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[assembly: InternalsVisibleTo("NameSpace.Of.Other.Assembly.To.Access.Resources")]
Create a simple provider class to abstract away the entire Resource mechanism, such as:
public static class DataProvider
{
public static string GetDataFile(int dataScenarioId)
{
return Properties.Resources.ResourceManager.GetString(
string.Format("resource_file_name_{0}", id));
}
}
Change the resource management to public (not an approach I have used)You can then access the data file (now a resource) from a unit test such as:
[TestCase(1)]
public void X_Does_Y(int id)
{
//Arrange
var dataAsAString = Assembly_With_DataFile.DataProvider.GetScenario(id);
//Act
var result = classUnderTest.X(dataAsAString);
//Assert
Assert.NotNull(result);
}
Note that using data files as resources, the ResourceManager handles the file I/O and returns strings of the file contents.
Update: The test method in the example above is from an NUnit project and is not meant to imply process, but a mechanism by which a data file can be accessed from another project.
What you'd normally do is add the file to your project and check it into TFS. Then make sure the item's settings are:
Build action: Content
Copy to output: If newer
Then put an attribute on your Test method or Test class:
[DeploymentItem("file.eml")]
You can optionally specify an output dircetory:
[DeploymentItem("file.eml", "Directory to place the item")]
If you put the files in subdirectories of your test project, then adjust the attribute accordingly:
[DeploymentItem(#"testdata\file.eml")]
The file will be copied to the working directory of your test project and that makes it easy to access from your test code. Either load the file directly, or pass the path to any method that needs it.
If you tests expect the files in a specific location you can use a simple System.IO.File.Copy() or System.IO.File.Move() to put the item in the place you need it to be.
The process is explained here on MSDN.
I suppose the most straight forward way is to simply add whatever to the project, and set the correct value for Copy To Output Directory. In other words, say your data is in a text file.
Add text file to your test project
Right-click to access properties window
Set copy to output directory field as Always or Copy if newer.
Now if you build the test project, the file gets copied to your output directly. This enables to write unit test code of the fashion:
var dataFile = File.OpenRead("data.txt");

Can I extend the core helpers within a package in Code Igniter?

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Have a look at CodeIgniter Helpers. Specifically the section labelled "Extending" Helpers.
I'm not quite sure what you mean by:
I've put a config folder (although I don't really understant what it
does) in the package folder and a config file in it (so structure is
packages/app_package/config/config.php).
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using an image embedded in a directory of a dll

I have a .NET 4.0 class library with a directory called Resources, with an image called Logo.bmp inside it set to be compiled as an embedded resource.
In my main application I add the dll reference and set a Uri to pack://application:,,,/ResourceImages;component/Resources/logo.bmp and then I try to get the resource stream to that resource (using Application.GetResourceStream(myUri)) but it can't find the resource specified.
If however I put the image in the root directory of my dll and take out the Resources/ it can find and return the resource stream without issue.
Any suggestions?
to anyone else who might be having this particular issue, make sure that you build the string to pass into the new uri BEFORE you make the new call, not during. I changed it so that the pack: location string is all created ahead of time and now it works

Resources