80
votes

In Swing you can simply use setDefaultCloseOperation() to shut down the entire application when the window is closed.

However in JavaFX I can't find an equivalent. I have multiple windows open and I want to close the entire application if a window is closed. What is the way to do that in JavaFX?

Edit:

I understand that I can override setOnCloseRequest() to perform some operation on window close. The question is what operation should be performed to terminate the entire application?

stage.setOnCloseRequest(new EventHandler<WindowEvent>() {
    @Override
    public void handle(WindowEvent event) {
        stop();
    }
});

The stop() method defined in Application class does nothing.

13

13 Answers

92
votes

The application automatically stops when the last Stage is closed. At this moment, the stop() method of your Application class is called, so you don't need an equivalent to setDefaultCloseOperation()

If you want to stop the application before that, you can call Platform.exit(), for example in your onCloseRequest call.

You can have all these information on the javadoc page of Application : http://docs.oracle.com/javafx/2/api/javafx/application/Application.html

69
votes

Some of the provided answers did not work for me (javaw.exe still running after closing the window) or, eclipse showed an exception after the application was closed.

On the other hand, this works perfectly:

primaryStage.setOnCloseRequest(new EventHandler<WindowEvent>() {
    @Override
    public void handle(WindowEvent t) {
        Platform.exit();
        System.exit(0);
    }
});
28
votes

For reference, here is a minimal implementation using Java 8 :

@Override
public void start(Stage mainStage) throws Exception {

    Scene scene = new Scene(new Region());
    mainStage.setWidth(640);
    mainStage.setHeight(480);
    mainStage.setScene(scene);

    //this makes all stages close and the app exit when the main stage is closed
    mainStage.setOnCloseRequest(e -> Platform.exit());

    //add real stuff to the scene...
    //open secondary stages... etc...
}
21
votes
stage.setOnCloseRequest(new EventHandler<WindowEvent>() {
    @Override
    public void handle(WindowEvent event) {
        Platform.exit();
        System.exit(0);
    }
});
3
votes

Did you try this..setOnCloseRequest

setOnCloseRequest(EventHandler<WindowEvent> value)   

There is one example

3
votes

Using Java 8 this worked for me:

@Override
public void start(Stage stage) {
    Scene scene = new Scene(new Region());
    stage.setScene(scene);

    /* ... OTHER STUFF ... */

    stage.setOnCloseRequest(e -> {
        Platform.exit();
        System.exit(0);
    });
}
2
votes

For me only following is working:

primaryStage.setOnCloseRequest(new EventHandler<WindowEvent>() {
    @Override
    public void handle(WindowEvent event) {

        Platform.exit();

        Thread start = new Thread(new Runnable() {
            @Override
            public void run() {
                //TODO Auto-generated method stub
                system.exit(0);     
            }
        });

        start.start();
    }
});
2
votes

Instead of playing around with onCloseRequest handlers or window events, I prefer calling Platform.setImplicitExit(true) the beginning of the application.

According to JavaDocs:

"If this attribute is true, the JavaFX runtime will implicitly shutdown when the last window is closed; the JavaFX launcher will call the Application.stop() method and terminate the JavaFX application thread."

Example:

@Override
void start(Stage primaryStage) {
    Platform.setImplicitExit(true)
    ...
    // create stage and scene
}
0
votes

This seemed to work for me:

EventHandler<ActionEvent> quitHandler = quitEvent -> {

        System.exit(0);

    };
    // Set the handler on the Start/Resume button
    quit.setOnAction(quitHandler);
0
votes

Try

 System.exit(0);

this should terminate thread main and end the main program

0
votes

getContentPane.remove(jfxPanel);

try it (:

-1
votes

in action button try this : stage.close();


exemple:

Stage stage =new Stage();

BorderPane root=new BorderPane();

Scene scene=new Scene();

Button b= new Button("name button");

       b.setOnAction(new EventHandler<ActionEvent>() {
   
       @Override
        public void handle(ActionEvent event) {

                 stage.close();
               
            }
            });

root.getChildren().add(b);

stage.setTitle("");

stage.setScene(scene);

stage.show();

-2
votes

You MUST override the "stop()" method in your Application instance to make it works. If you have overridden even empty "stop()" then the application shuts down gracefully after the last stage is closed (actually the last stage must be the primary stage to make it works completely as in supposed to be). No any additional Platform.exit or setOnCloseRequest calls are need in such case.