Get to the point
Looking at only the first question:
Can anyone please tell me how to pause and how to stop a running program in Java by pressing a certain key on the keyboard? When pausing, I also want it to resume when hitting a certain key (for example the same key). What I don't want is a function to pause it temporary until a certain amount of time has passed or a function in the code to pause or stop it automatically. It should only pause/stop when I'm telling the program to do so by pressing a certain key.
If you need my code, it's something like this:
[code]
Stack Overflow is not a discussion forum. Ask the question you want to ask. Do not use conversational language - just ask. Rearrange in order to explain things as you go. If you have existing code, it will usually be better to show it before the question. Do, however, explain the context briefly (what the code is trying to do). Thus:
I have this code to play a tune when the user clicks a button:
[code]
Now I want the program to stop when a specific key is pressed, and resume only when a specific key (perhaps the same key) is pressed. How can I implement this?
Notice how much shorter that is? The main thing that has been cut out is the "what I don't want" part - because there is no reason to expect that someone would give you those things, if you directly ask for what you actually want. (Well, they might show you code with a function that pauses or resumes, because that is a component of the most natural way to solve the problem - all you need to do is make it so that pressing the key calls that function.)
Make sure that the code can be copied and pasted as is. Make sure it does not contain syntax errors (unless your question is about fixing a syntax error). If you need to explain something in the middle of the code, use valid comment syntax. Do not try to mark up code with boldface, etc. - it doesn't work.
Avoid irrelevant details. The code doesn't have to be, and usually should not be, simply an except of your code; it should be something self-contained that represents the problem. Rather than explaining that you omitted complex code to get a value to pass to a function, just show passing the value. It doesn't matter if it's the value you have in your actual code. Just show passing a value that will demonstrate the problem. If the value is selected by a user interface, pick something the user could select and hard-code it. (Unless, of course, the question is about that part of the user interface.)
Don't add more than necessary. If the question is about one specific part of the UI, don't show the code that creates or maintains other parts of the UI. If the question is about what happens when you click a button, skip the code for making the button pretty. On the other hand, if the question is purely about the UI layout, skip the event handling code. If the original code uses multiple resources, but the problem can be demonstrated using only one, then show only one.
Thus:
import org.jfugue.pattern.Pattern;
import org.jfugue.player.Player;
import java.awt.event.ActionEvent;
import java.awt.event.ActionListener;
import javax.swing.*;
public class playSong extends JFrame implements ActionListener
{
Player player = new Player();
Pattern pattern = new Pattern();
pattern.add("C4i");
pattern.setTempo(120);
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
this.add(panel);
JButton song = new JButton();
panel.add(song);
song.setSize(100, 100);
song.addActionListener(e -> { player.play(pattern); });
}
I haven't used Java seriously in many years, so I may have gotten that wrong, but you get the idea.
Make sure the problem is well defined, and makes sense to ask
Rather than binding a keypress, why not make it so that another button pauses and/or restarts the song? Do you really want to stop the program? What actually does that mean? (I assume it does not include, "stop listening for events", since otherwise there would be no way to interact and tell the program to resume.) What actually needs to pause - only the playing of the song? Every observable thing the program is doing (animations etc.)? Should other parts of the UI become inactive? What exactly is the rule?
Also: what is the actual difficulty? Do you know how to make the program respond to a key press and do something as a result of that event? Do you know how to stop the Player
? If you stop the Player
, do you know how to resume the music from the same place again? If you put these things together, does it solve the problem? If not, why not? If you're missing exactly one of these pieces of information, then focus the question on the missing part. If you know how to do all those things, but can't put it together, then we are doing to need a more detailed explanation of how you are trying to put the pieces together and what goes wrong when you try. But most likely at that point, you have a relatively simple problem (a typo or basic logical error) that doesn't make a question that can help others.