The "create-app" target created a Griffon MVC Triad for you in the models, views, and controllers directory named after the application. Hence you already have a model class DemoConsoleModel in the models directory.

The application model for this application is simple: it contains properties that hold the script to be evaluated and the results of the evaluation. Make sure you paste the following code into griffon-app/models/democonsole/DemoConsoleModel.groovy.

package democonsole

import groovy.beans.Bindable

class DemoConsoleModel { String scriptSource @Bindable def scriptResult @Bindable boolean enabled = true }

The controller is also trivial: throw the contents of the script from the model at a groovy shell, then store the result back into the model. Make sure you paste the following code into griffon-app/controllers/democonsole/DemoConsoleController.groovy.

package democonsole

class DemoConsoleController { private GroovyShell shell = new GroovyShell()

// these will be injected by Griffon def model def view

def executeScript = { evt = null -> model.enabled = false def result try { result = shell.evaluate(model.scriptSource) } finally { model.enabled = true model.scriptResult = result } } }

The Griffon framework will inject references to the other portions of the MVC triad if fields named model, view, and controller are present in the model or controller. This allows us to access the view widgets and the model data if needed

The executeScript method will be used in the view for the button action. Hence the evt parameter, and the default value so it can be called without an action event.

Finally, the Griffon framework can be configured to inject portions of the builders it uses. By default, the Threading classes are injected into the controller, allowing the use of the edt, doOutside and doLater methods from SwingBuilder.

You may notice that there's no explicit threading management. All Swing developers know they must obey the Swing Rule: long running computations must run outside of the EDT; all UI components should be queried/modified inside the EDT. It turns out Griffon is aware of this rule, making sure an action is called outside of the EDt by default, all bindings made to UI components via the model will be updated inside the EDT also. We'll setup the bindings in the next example.

The view classes contain the visual components for your application. Please paste the following code into griffon-app/views/democonsole/DemoConsoleView.groovy.

package democonsole

application(title:'DemoConsole', pack:true, locationByPlatform:true, iconImage: imageIcon('/griffon-icon-48x48.png').image, iconImages: [imageIcon('/griffon-icon-48x48.png').image, imageIcon('/griffon-icon-32x32.png').image, imageIcon('/griffon-icon-16x16.png').image]) { panel(border:emptyBorder(6)) { borderLayout()

scrollPane(constraints:CENTER) { textArea(text:bind(target: model, 'scriptSource'), enabled: bind { model.enabled }, columns: 40, rows: 10) }

hbox(constraints:SOUTH) { button("Execute", actionPerformed: controller.executeScript, enabled: bind { model.enabled }) hstrut 5 label 'Result:' hstrut 5 label text: bind { model.scriptResult } } } }

The view script is a fairly straightforward SwingBuilder script. Griffon will execute these groovy scripts in context of it's UberBuilder (a composite of the SwingBuilder and whatever else is thrown in).

Now to get the application running. You can do this by calling the run-app command:


griffon run-app

This command should compile all sources and package the application, you'll see a similar result as depicted by the following screenshot after a few seconds

Standalone mode is not the only way to run your application, try the following command to run it in webstart mode: run-webstart. Conversely run-applet will run your application in applet mode. The best of all is that you did not have to touch a single line of configuration in order to switch modes!