Hi! I have been posted content of ccna1 final exam (latest and only question.) I will post the answer and insert image on sunday. If you care, please subscribe your email an become a first person have full test content. Subcribe now Some question have not content because this question have images content. So that can you wait for me? SUNDAY 1. A user sees the command prompt: Router(config-if)# . What task can be performed at this mode? Reload the device. Perform basic tests. Configure individual interfaces. Configure individual terminal lines. 2. Refer to the exhibit. Host A attempts to establish a TCP/IP session with host C. During this attempt, a frame was captured with the source MAC address 0050.7320.D632 and the destination MAC address 0030.8517.44C4. The packet inside the captured frame has an IP source address 192.168.7.5, and the destination IP address is 192.168.219.24. At which point in the network was this packet captured? leaving host A leaving ATL leaving...
Cisco Certified Network Associate Exam,640-802 CCNA All Answers ~100/100. Daily update
It appears that the Cursor class does not have a "blank" cursor to begin with, so one could define a new "blank" cursor using the Toolkit.createCustomCursor method.
ReplyDeleteHere's one way I've tried which seems to work:
// Transparent 16 x 16 pixel cursor image.
BufferedImage cursorImg = new BufferedImage(16, 16, BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_ARGB);
// Create a new blank cursor.
Cursor blankCursor = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().createCustomCursor(
cursorImg, new Point(0, 0), "blank cursor");
// Set the blank cursor to the JFrame.
mainJFrame.getContentPane().setCursor(blankCursor);
Edit
Regarding the comment about everything inside the JFrame ending up without a cursor, it seems that the Components which are contained in the JFrame will end up inheriting the cursor of the container (the JFrame), so if it is a requirement to have a certain Component have the cursor appear, one would have to manually set the desired cursor.
For example, if there is a JPanel contained in the JFrame, then one could set the cursor of that JPanel to the system's default using the Cursor.getDefaultCursor method:
JPanel p = ...
// Sets the JPanel's cursor to the system default.
p.setCursor(Cursor.getDefaultCursor());
frame.setCursor(frame.getToolkit().createCustomCursor(
ReplyDeletenew BufferedImage(3, 3, BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_ARGB), new Point(0, 0),
"null"));
When using the LWJGL under Mac OS you need to do this:
ReplyDeleteSystem.setProperty("apple.awt.fullscreenhidecursor","true");
I solve this problem much easier:
ReplyDeletefinal Timer cursorTimer = new Timer(2000, new ActionListener() {
@Override
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
getContentPane().setCursor(null);
}
});
cursorTimer.start();
addMouseMotionListener(new MouseMotionAdapter() {
@Override
public void mouseMoved(MouseEvent e) {
getGlassPane().setCursor(Cursor.getDefaultCursor());
cursorTimer.restart();
}
});