The valueChanging
property of the slider indicates if the slider is in the process of being changed. It is an observable property, so you can attach a listener directly to it, and respond when the value stops changing:
durSlider.valueChangingProperty().addListener(new ChangeListener<Boolean>() {
@Override
public void changed(ObservableValue<? extends Boolean> obs, Boolean wasChanging, Boolean isNowChanging) {
if (! isNowChanging) {
mediaPlayer.seek(Duration.seconds(durSlider.getValue()));
}
}
});
This won't change the position of the player if the user clicks on the "track" on the slider, or uses the keyboard to move it. For that, you can register a listener with the value property. You need to be careful here, because the value is also going to change via your time listener. In theory, the time listener should set the value of the slider, and then that should cause an attempt to set the current time of the player to the exact value it already has (which would result in a no-op). However, rounding errors will likely result in a lot of small adjustments, causing the "static" you are observing. To fix this, only move the media player if the change is more than some small minimum amount:
private static double MIN_CHANGE = 0.5 ; //seconds
// ...
durSlider.valueProperty().addListener(new ChangeListener<Number>() {
@Override
public void changed(ObservableValue<? extends Number> obs, Number oldValue, Number newValue) {
if (! durSlider.isValueChanging()) {
double currentTime = mediaPlayer.getCurrentTime().toSeconds();
double sliderTime = newValue.doubleValue();
if (Math.abs(currentTime - sliderTime) > 0.5) {
mediaPlayer.seek(newValue.doubleValue());
}
}
}
});
Finally, you don't want your time listener to move the slider if the user is trying to drag it:
ChangeListener<Duration> timeListener = new ChangeListener<Duration>() {
@Override
public void changed(
ObservableValue<? extends Duration> observableValue,
Duration duration,
Duration current) {
if (! durSlider.isValueChanging()) {
durSlider.setValue(current.toSeconds());
}
}
};
Here's a complete example (using lambdas for brevity):
import javafx.application.Application;
import javafx.geometry.Pos;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.control.Slider;
import javafx.scene.layout.BorderPane;
import javafx.scene.layout.HBox;
import javafx.scene.media.Media;
import javafx.scene.media.MediaPlayer;
import javafx.scene.media.MediaView;
import javafx.stage.Stage;
import javafx.util.Duration;
public class VideoPlayerTest extends Application {
private static final String MEDIA_URL =
"http://download.oracle.com/otndocs/products/javafx/oow2010-2.flv";
private static final double MIN_CHANGE = 0.5 ;
@Override
public void start(Stage primaryStage) {
MediaPlayer player = new MediaPlayer(new Media(MEDIA_URL));
MediaView mediaView = new MediaView(player);
Slider slider = new Slider();
player.totalDurationProperty().addListener((obs, oldDuration, newDuration) -> slider.setMax(newDuration.toSeconds()));
BorderPane root = new BorderPane(mediaView, null, null, slider, null);
slider.valueChangingProperty().addListener((obs, wasChanging, isChanging) -> {
if (! isChanging) {
player.seek(Duration.seconds(slider.getValue()));
}
});
slider.valueProperty().addListener((obs, oldValue, newValue) -> {
if (! slider.isValueChanging()) {
double currentTime = player.getCurrentTime().toSeconds();
if (Math.abs(currentTime - newValue.doubleValue()) > MIN_CHANGE) {
player.seek(Duration.seconds(newValue.doubleValue()));
}
}
});
player.currentTimeProperty().addListener((obs, oldTime, newTime) -> {
if (! slider.isValueChanging()) {
slider.setValue(newTime.toSeconds());
}
});
Scene scene = new Scene(root, 540, 280);
primaryStage.setScene(scene);
primaryStage.show();
player.play();
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
launch(args);
}
}