Displaying image in Java tutorial shows how to display an image in Java.
last modified January 27, 2024
Displaying image in Java tutorial shows how to display an image in Java.
Beginner programmers often have problems with displaying an image in a project. The problem lies in correctly identifying the path to the image file. The key part is to realize that the relative path to the image file starts from the project directory. This tutorial was created to make things clear.
Here we provide the source code for displaying an image in Java.
com/zetcode/DisplayImage.java
package com.zetcode;
import java.awt.Container; import java.awt.EventQueue; import javax.swing.GroupLayout; import javax.swing.ImageIcon; import javax.swing.JComponent; import javax.swing.JFrame; import javax.swing.JLabel;
public class DisplayImage extends JFrame {
public DisplayImage() {
initUI();
}
private void initUI() {
ImageIcon ii = loadImage();
JLabel label = new JLabel(ii);
createLayout(label);
setTitle("Image");
setLocationRelativeTo(null);
setDefaultCloseOperation(EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
}
private ImageIcon loadImage() {
var ii = new ImageIcon("src/main/resources/sid.png");
return ii;
}
private void createLayout(JComponent... arg) {
Container pane = getContentPane();
var gl = new GroupLayout(pane);
pane.setLayout(gl);
gl.setAutoCreateContainerGaps(true);
gl.setHorizontalGroup(gl.createSequentialGroup()
.addComponent(arg[0])
);
gl.setVerticalGroup(gl.createParallelGroup()
.addComponent(arg[0])
);
pack();
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
EventQueue.invokeLater(() -> {
var ex = new DisplayImage();
ex.setVisible(true);
});
}
}
The example creates a Java Swing application and uses an ImageIcon component to display the image.
private ImageIcon loadImage() {
var ii = new ImageIcon("src/main/resources/sid.png");
return ii;
}
The important part is here. The ImageIcon takes the file path to the image. This file path depends on the build tool we use.
The first example builds the Java application with command line tools.
src └── main ├── java │ └── com │ └── zetcode │ └── DisplayImage.java └── resources └── sid.png
This is the project structure.
$ javac src/main/java/com/zetcode/DisplayImage.java -d bin
The application is compiled with the javac tool.
bin │ └── com │ └── zetcode │ └── DisplayImage.class └── src └── main ├── java │ └── com │ └── zetcode │ └── DisplayImage.java └── resources └── sid.png
After compiling the source code, we have a Java class file created in the bin/com/zetcode subdirectory.
$ java -cp bin com.zetcode.DisplayImage
We run the application with the java command.
In this section, we use the Ant build tool to create the project.
build.xml src └── main ├── java │ └── com │ └── zetcode │ └── DisplayImage.java └── resources └── sid.png
This is the project structure.
build.xml
<?xml version=“1.0”?> <project name=“DisplayImage” default=“compile”>
<target name=“init”> <mkdir dir=“build/classes”/> </target>
<target name=“compile” depends=“init”> <javac includeantruntime=“false” srcdir=“src” destdir=“build/classes”/> </target>
<target name=“clean”> <delete dir=“build”/> </target> </project>
This is the Ant build file. We have tasks for creating directories, compiling source code, and cleaning up.
$ ant Buildfile: /home/jano/Documents/prog/java/display-image/ant-ver/build.xml
init: [mkdir] Created dir: /home/jano/Documents/prog/java/display-image/ant-ver/build/classes
compile: [javac] Compiling 1 source file to /home/jano/Documents/prog/java/display-image/ant-ver/build/classes
BUILD SUCCESSFUL Total time: 0 seconds
We build the project.
$ java -cp build/classes/ com.zetcode.DisplayImage
We run the program.
We create a Maven/Gradle application and copy the image into the resources folder.
Figure: Using IntelliJ IDEA
After creating the source file and copying the image, we can run the program.
java Reading/Loading an Image - tutorial
In this article we have showed how to display an image in Java.
My name is Jan Bodnar, and I am a passionate programmer with extensive programming experience. I have been writing programming articles since 2007. To date, I have authored over 1,400 articles and 8 e-books. I possess more than ten years of experience in teaching programming.
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