The Graphics class is the abstract base class for
all graphics contexts that allow an application to draw onto
components that are realized on various devices, as well as
onto off-screen images.
A Graphics object encapsulates state information needed
for the basic rendering operations that Java supports. This
state information includes the following properties:
Component object on which to draw.
Graphics.setXORMode).
Coordinates are infinitely thin and lie between the pixels of the output device. Operations that draw the outline of a figure operate by traversing an infinitely thin path between pixels with a pixel-sized pen that hangs down and to the right of the anchor point on the path. Operations that fill a figure operate by filling the interior of that infinitely thin path. Operations that render horizontal text render the ascending portion of character glyphs entirely above the baseline coordinate.
The graphics pen hangs down and to the right from the path it traverses. This has the following implications:
All coordinates that appear as arguments to the methods of this
Graphics object are considered relative to the
translation origin of this Graphics object prior to
the invocation of the method.
All rendering operations modify only pixels which lie within the
area bounded by the current clip, which is specified by a Shape
in user space and is controlled by the program using the
Graphics object. This user clip
is transformed into device space and combined with the
device clip, which is defined by the visibility of windows and
device extents. The combination of the user clip and device clip
defines the composite clip, which determines the final clipping
region. The user clip cannot be modified by the rendering
system to reflect the resulting composite clip. The user clip can only
be changed through the setClip or clipRect
methods.
All drawing or writing is done in the current color,
using the current paint mode, and in the current font.
java.awt.Component, java.awt.Graphics.clipRect(int, int, int, int), java.awt.Graphics.setColor(java.awt.Color), java.awt.Graphics.setPaintMode(), java.awt.Graphics.setXORMode(java.awt.Color), java.awt.Graphics.setFont(java.awt.Font)