public class Timer extends Object implements Serializable
ActionEvents at specified
 intervals. An example use is an animation object that uses a
 Timer as the trigger for drawing its frames.
 Setting up a timer
 involves creating a Timer object,
 registering one or more action listeners on it,
 and starting the timer using
 the start method.
 For example,
 the following code creates and starts a timer
 that fires an action event once per second
 (as specified by the first argument to the Timer constructor).
 The second argument to the Timer constructor
 specifies a listener to receive the timer's action events.
  int delay = 1000; //milliseconds
  ActionListener taskPerformer = new ActionListener() {
      public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent evt) {
          //...Perform a task...
      }
  };
  new Timer(delay, taskPerformer).start();
 
 Timers are constructed by specifying both a delay parameter
 and an ActionListener. The delay parameter is used
 to set both the initial delay and the delay between event
 firing, in milliseconds. Once the timer has been started,
 it waits for the initial delay before firing its
 first ActionEvent to registered listeners.
 After this first event, it continues to fire events
 every time the between-event delay has elapsed, until it
 is stopped.
 
 After construction, the initial delay and the between-event
 delay can be changed independently, and additional
 ActionListeners may be added.
 
 If you want the timer to fire only the first time and then stop,
 invoke setRepeats(false) on the timer.
 
 Although all Timers perform their waiting
 using a single, shared thread
 (created by the first Timer object that executes),
 the action event handlers for Timers
 execute on another thread -- the event-dispatching thread.
 This means that the action handlers for Timers
 can safely perform operations on Swing components.
 However, it also means that the handlers must execute quickly
 to keep the GUI responsive.
 
 In v 1.3, another Timer class was added
 to the Java platform: java.util.Timer.
 Both it and javax.swing.Timer
 provide the same basic functionality,
 but java.util.Timer
 is more general and has more features.
 The javax.swing.Timer has two features
 that can make it a little easier to use with GUIs.
 First, its event handling metaphor is familiar to GUI programmers
 and can make dealing with the event-dispatching thread
 a bit simpler.
 Second, its
 automatic thread sharing means that you don't have to
 take special steps to avoid spawning
 too many threads.
 Instead, your timer uses the same thread
 used to make cursors blink,
 tool tips appear,
 and so on.
 
 You can find further documentation
 and several examples of using timers by visiting
 How to Use Timers,
 a section in The Java Tutorial.
 For more examples and help in choosing between
 this Timer class and
 java.util.Timer,
 see
 Using Timers in Swing Applications,
 an article in The Swing Connection.
 
 Warning:
 Serialized objects of this class will not be compatible with
 future Swing releases. The current serialization support is
 appropriate for short term storage or RMI between applications running
 the same version of Swing.  As of 1.4, support for long term storage
 of all JavaBeans™
 has been added to the java.beans package.
 Please see XMLEncoder.
java.util.Timer| Modifier and Type | Field and Description | 
|---|---|
| protected EventListenerList | listenerList | 
| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
| Timer(int delay,
     ActionListener listener)Creates a  Timerand initializes both the initial delay and
 between-event delay todelaymilliseconds. | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| void | addActionListener(ActionListener listener)Adds an action listener to the  Timer. | 
| protected void | fireActionPerformed(ActionEvent e)Notifies all listeners that have registered interest for
 notification on this event type. | 
| String | getActionCommand()Returns the string that will be delivered as the action command
 in  ActionEvents fired by this timer. | 
| ActionListener[] | getActionListeners()Returns an array of all the action listeners registered
 on this timer. | 
| int | getDelay()Returns the delay, in milliseconds,
 between firings of action events. | 
| int | getInitialDelay()Returns the  Timer's initial delay. | 
| <T extends EventListener> | getListeners(Class<T> listenerType)Returns an array of all the objects currently registered as
  FooListeners
 upon thisTimer. | 
| static boolean | getLogTimers()Returns  trueif logging is enabled. | 
| boolean | isCoalesce()Returns  trueif theTimercoalesces
 multiple pending action events. | 
| boolean | isRepeats()Returns  true(the default)
 if theTimerwill send
 an action event
 to its listeners multiple times. | 
| boolean | isRunning()Returns  trueif theTimeris running. | 
| void | removeActionListener(ActionListener listener)Removes the specified action listener from the  Timer. | 
| void | restart()Restarts the  Timer,
 canceling any pending firings and causing
 it to fire with its initial delay. | 
| void | setActionCommand(String command)Sets the string that will be delivered as the action command
 in  ActionEvents fired by this timer. | 
| void | setCoalesce(boolean flag)Sets whether the  Timercoalesces multiple pendingActionEventfirings. | 
| void | setDelay(int delay)Sets the  Timer's between-event delay, the number of milliseconds
 between successive action events. | 
| void | setInitialDelay(int initialDelay)Sets the  Timer's initial delay, the time
 in milliseconds to wait after the timer is started
 before firing the first event. | 
| static void | setLogTimers(boolean flag)Enables or disables the timer log. | 
| void | setRepeats(boolean flag)If  flagisfalse,
 instructs theTimerto send only one
 action event to its listeners. | 
| void | start()Starts the  Timer,
 causing it to start sending action events
 to its listeners. | 
| void | stop()Stops the  Timer,
 causing it to stop sending action events
 to its listeners. | 
protected EventListenerList listenerList
public Timer(int delay,
             ActionListener listener)
Timer and initializes both the initial delay and
 between-event delay to delay milliseconds. If delay
 is less than or equal to zero, the timer fires as soon as it
 is started. If listener is not null,
 it's registered as an action listener on the timer.delay - milliseconds for the initial and between-event delaylistener - an initial listener; can be nulladdActionListener(java.awt.event.ActionListener), 
setInitialDelay(int), 
setRepeats(boolean)public void addActionListener(ActionListener listener)
Timer.listener - the listener to addTimer(int, java.awt.event.ActionListener)public void removeActionListener(ActionListener listener)
Timer.listener - the listener to removepublic ActionListener[] getActionListeners()
ActionListeners or an empty
         array if no action listeners are currently registeredaddActionListener(java.awt.event.ActionListener), 
removeActionListener(java.awt.event.ActionListener)protected void fireActionPerformed(ActionEvent e)
e - the action event to fireEventListenerListpublic <T extends EventListener> T[] getListeners(Class<T> listenerType)
FooListeners
 upon this Timer.
 FooListeners
 are registered using the addFooListener method.
 
 You can specify the listenerType argument
 with a class literal, such as FooListener.class.
 For example, you can query a Timer
 instance t
 for its action listeners
 with the following code:
 
ActionListener[] als = (ActionListener[])(t.getListeners(ActionListener.class));If no such listeners exist, this method returns an empty array.
listenerType - the type of listeners requested;
          this parameter should specify an interface
          that descends from java.util.EventListenerFooListeners
          on this timer,
          or an empty array if no such
          listeners have been addedClassCastException - if listenerType doesn't
          specify a class or interface that implements
          java.util.EventListenergetActionListeners(), 
addActionListener(java.awt.event.ActionListener), 
removeActionListener(java.awt.event.ActionListener)public static void setLogTimers(boolean flag)
System.out whenever the timer goes off.flag - true to enable logginggetLogTimers()public static boolean getLogTimers()
true if logging is enabled.true if logging is enabled; otherwise, falsesetLogTimers(boolean)public void setDelay(int delay)
Timer's between-event delay, the number of milliseconds
 between successive action events. This does not affect the initial delay
 property, which can be set by the setInitialDelay method.delay - the delay in millisecondssetInitialDelay(int)public int getDelay()
setDelay(int), 
getInitialDelay()public void setInitialDelay(int initialDelay)
Timer's initial delay, the time
 in milliseconds to wait after the timer is started
 before firing the first event. Upon construction, this
 is set to be the same as the between-event delay,
 but then its value is independent and remains unaffected
 by changes to the between-event delay.initialDelay - the initial delay, in millisecondssetDelay(int)public int getInitialDelay()
Timer's initial delay.setInitialDelay(int), 
setDelay(int)public void setRepeats(boolean flag)
flag is false,
 instructs the Timer to send only one
 action event to its listeners.flag - specify false to make the timer
             stop after sending its first action eventpublic boolean isRepeats()
true (the default)
 if the Timer will send
 an action event
 to its listeners multiple times.setRepeats(boolean)public void setCoalesce(boolean flag)
Timer coalesces multiple pending
 ActionEvent firings.
 A busy application may not be able
 to keep up with a Timer's event generation,
 causing multiple
 action events to be queued.  When processed,
 the application sends these events one after the other, causing the
 Timer's listeners to receive a sequence of
 events with no delay between them. Coalescing avoids this situation
 by reducing multiple pending events to a single event.
 Timers
 coalesce events by default.flag - specify false to turn off coalescingpublic boolean isCoalesce()
true if the Timer coalesces
 multiple pending action events.setCoalesce(boolean)public void setActionCommand(String command)
ActionEvents fired by this timer.
 null is an acceptable value.command - the action commandpublic String getActionCommand()
ActionEvents fired by this timer. May be
 null, which is also the default.public void start()
Timer,
 causing it to start sending action events
 to its listeners.stop()public boolean isRunning()
true if the Timer is running.start()public void stop()
Timer,
 causing it to stop sending action events
 to its listeners.start()public void restart()
Timer,
 canceling any pending firings and causing
 it to fire with its initial delay. Submit a bug or feature 
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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