Chapter 14
Responding to Keystrokes and Mouse Clicks
In This Chapter
Creating code to handle mouse clicks (and other such events)
Writing and using a Java interface
In the late 1980s, I bought my first mouse. I paid $100 and, because I didn’t really need a mouse, I checked with my wife before buying it. (At the time, my computer ran a hybrid text/windowed environment. Anything that I could do with a mouse, I could just as easily do with the Alt key.)
Now it’s the 21st century. The last ten mice that I got were free. Ordinary ones just fall into my lap somehow. A few exotic mice were on sale at the local computer superstore. One cost $10 and came with a $10 rebate.
As I write this chapter, I’m using the most recent addition to my collection — an official For Dummies mouse. This yellow and white beauty has a little compartment filled with water. Instead of a snowy Atlantic City scene, the water surrounds a tiny Dummies Man charm. It’s so cute. It was a present from the folks at Wiley Publishing.
Go On . . . Click That Button
In previous chapters, I create windows that don’t do much. A typical window displays some information but doesn’t have any interactive elements. Well, the time has come to change all that. This chapter’s first example is a window with a button on it. When the ...