Alexey,

> Does the input map of JTextArea contain shortcuts for Cut, Copy and Paste?

When I call (on my Mac, using openJDK 17)
UIManager.getDefaults().get("TextArea.focusInputMap”)
… I get an InputMap with: “copy-to-clipboard”, “cut-to-clipboard”, and “paste-from-clipboard”.

The code I tested against is:
InputMap inputMap = (InputMap) 
UIManager.getDefaults().get("TextArea.focusInputMap");
Map<Object, Collection<KeyStroke>> map = new TreeMap<>();
for (KeyStroke keyStroke : inputMap.keys()) {
Object key = inputMap.get(keyStroke);
Collection value = map.get(key);
if (value == null) {
value = new HashSet();
map.put(key, value);
    }
value.add(keyStroke);
}
for (Map.Entry<Object, Collection<KeyStroke>> e : map.entrySet()) {
System.out.println(e);
}

Previous tests showed the same naming convention on Windows for JTextFields; I don’t know how standardized that naming convention is across all platforms / L&F’s.

 - Jeremy


------ Original Message ------
From mark.yagnatin...@barclays.com
To alexey.iva...@oracle.com; micklen...@gmail.com; client-libs-dev@openjdk.org
Date 3/5/24, 11:48:48 AM
Subject RE: how to get find out the keyboard shortcut for the paste action?

Thanks, this was educational.  I never even thought about how localization 
might affect all this.

-----Original Message-----
From: Aleksei Ivanov <alexey.iva...@oracle.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 5, 2024 10:41 AM
To: Yagnatinsky, Mark : Markets Pre Trade <mark.yagnatin...@barclays.com>; 
micklen...@gmail.com; client-libs-dev@openjdk.org
Subject: Re: how to get find out the keyboard shortcut for the paste action?


CAUTION: This email originated from outside our organisation - 
alexey.iva...@oracle.com Do not click on links, open attachments, or respond 
unless you recognize the sender and can validate the content is safe.
Hello Mark,

As far as I know, the shortcuts are localisable. For example, you use
Ctrl+S to save a file in an English version, yet users of Spanish
version of Windows use Ctrl+G (for Guardar) instead.

At the same time, the most common actions — Cut, Copy and Paste as well as Undo 
and Redo — usually have the same shortcuts across all languages and OS, 
although macOS uses Cmd instead of Ctrl. However, the shortcut for Redo is not 
as standard, Ctrl+Shift+Z and Ctrl+Y are used, both could be mapped at the same 
time.

I wonder what is the shortcut for Undo in German versions since German keyboard 
layout has Z and Y keys swapped. Does anyone know?

So, the shortcuts used in an application are controlled by the application and 
the shortcuts can be localised.

For this reason, the shortcuts are usually “hardcoded”.


@Jeremy
Does the input map of JTextArea contain shortcuts for Cut, Copy and Paste?

On 2024-03-04 20:42, mark.yagnatin...@barclays.com wrote:

 Thanks!  I don’t have a particularly deep motivation here, other than
 curiosity.

 If you’re wondering how my curiosity got piqued initially, it was
 something like this:

 A while ago, someone at work was adding copy/paste support to some
 component that didn’t have it.

 I noticed that they “hardcoded” the shortcut “ctrl C”.

 And I thought to myself:

 Swing already “knows” that this is the right keyboard shortcut, in the
 sense that all components that support copy/paste “out of the box” use it.

 It would be nice if there was some way to ASK it to tell me what it
 “knows”.

 *From:* Jeremy Wood <micklen...@gmail.com>
 *Sent:* Sunday, March 3, 2024 11:30 PM
 *To:* Yagnatinsky, Mark : Markets Pre Trade
 <mark.yagnatin...@barclays.com>; client-libs-dev@openjdk.org
 *Subject:* Re[2]: how to get find out the keyboard shortcut for the
 paste action?

 CAUTION: This email originated from outside our organisation -
micklen...@gmail.com Do not click on links, open attachments, or
 respond unless you recognize the sender and can validate the content
 is safe.

 > But now I have a new question…

 > Is there any way to get the “usual” letter for a “common” operation?

 Hmm. Good question. Not that I know of.

 > Again, one could create a scratch text area and grovel through its
 input map, but that seems hacky.

 I agree sifting through the L&F seems hacky.

 I don’t think I understand exactly what you’re trying to implement
 here. If you give me a more concrete example: maybe I (or someone on
 this list) can offer a more concrete suggestion?

 I’ll add some context in case this speaks to your question.

 By default Swing gets this information in places like
 BasicTextUI#getInputMap(), which calls:

 InputMap shared=     (InputMap)DefaultLookup./get/(editor, this,
 getPropertyPrefix() + ".focusInputMap”);

 The following works on my Mac & Windows machine (I think using JDK
 19), but I wouldn’t be surprised if it fails in other platforms /
 L&F’s. It feels brittle, but it might (?) have potential:

 private KeyStroke getCopyKeyStroke() {

 InputMap inputMap = (InputMap)
 UIManager.getDefaults().get("TextField.focusInputMap"); for (KeyStroke
 keyStroke : inputMap.keys()) { Object action =
 inputMap.get(keyStroke); if ("copy-to-clipboard".equals(action)) {
 return keyStroke;         }     } /// this will show all the default
 keystrokes // System.out.println(Arrays.asList(inputMap.allKeys()));
 /return null; }

 Regards,

  - Jeremy

 ------ Original Message ------

 From mark.yagnatin...@barclays.com

 To micklen...@gmail.com; client-libs-dev@openjdk.org

 Date 3/3/24, 6:00:46 PM

 Subject RE: how to get find out the keyboard shortcut for the paste
 action?

     Thanks for the response!  I didn’t expect to get one at this point
 J

     It does indeed answer my question!

     (Though you didn’t quite get the name right: there’s no Ex at the
 end…

     I take it you’ve done some Windows programming at some point)

     But now I have a new question…

     Is there any way to get the “usual” letter for a “common” operation?

     For instance, lots of programs support copy and paste.

     Is there a way to ask Java “what is the standard letter for paste”
     and get back “V”?

     Again, one could create a scratch text area and grovel through its
     input map, but that seems hacky.

--
Regards,
Alexey

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