I have main JPanel which is Borderlayout with added 4 JPANELS: NORTH(Green), WEST(Red), CENTER(Gray), SOUTH(Blue). I want to reduce width size of WEST(Red) Jpanel, or increase width size of Center(Grey) Jpanel.
Screenshot:
Here is my code:
frame = new JFrame("FreshPos baza podataka");
frame.setExtendedState(JFrame.MAXIMIZED_BOTH);
// Main paneel
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
panel.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
panel.setBorder( BorderFactory.createEmptyBorder(10,10,10,10) );
frame.getContentPane().add(panel);
//West panel;
JPanel panelWest = new JPanel(new GridLayout(14,0,0,2));
panelWest.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(300, 300));
panelWest.setBorder( BorderFactory.createEmptyBorder(100,0,0,0) );
panel.add(panelWest, BorderLayout.WEST);
panelWest.setBackground(Color.red);
for (int i = 0; i < MAX_TABLES; i++) {
buttonsTables[i] = new JButton(tables[i]);
buttonsTables[i].setMaximumSize(new Dimension(Integer.MAX_VALUE, buttonsTables[i].getMinimumSize().height));
panelWest.add(buttonsTables[i]);
panelWest.add(Box.createVerticalStrut(10));
}
//South panel;
JPanel southPanel = new JPanel(); // Donji layout za dugmice
southPanel.setBorder( BorderFactory.createEmptyBorder(20,0,0,0) );
panel.add(southPanel, BorderLayout.SOUTH);
southPanel.setBackground(Color.BLUE);
JButton buttonDodaj = new JButton("Dodaj");
southPanel.add(buttonDodaj);
JButton buttonIzmeni = new JButton("Izmeni");
southPanel.add(buttonIzmeni);
JButton butonObrisi = new JButton("Obrisi");
southPanel.add(butonObrisi);
//North panel;
JPanel northPanel = new JPanel(); // Donji layout za dugmice
northPanel.setBorder( BorderFactory.createEmptyBorder(0,10,0,0) );
panel.add(northPanel, BorderLayout.NORTH);
northPanel.setBackground(Color.green);
JButton buttonImport = new JButton("Importuj fajl");
buttonImport.addActionListener(new java.awt.event.ActionListener() {
public void actionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {
importActionPerformed(evt);
}
});
northPanel.add(buttonImport, BorderLayout.WEST);
JButton ButtonRecord = new JButton("Snimi fajl");
northPanel.add(ButtonRecord, BorderLayout.WEST);
// Central panel
JPanel centerPanel = new JPanel(new BorderLayout());
centerPanel.setBackground(Color.GRAY);
panel.add(centerPanel, BorderLayout.CENTER);
I want to reduce width size of WEST(Red) Jpanel
panelWest.setBorder( BorderFactory.createEmptyBorder(100,0,0,0) );
So why is the width of your Border so large?
A Border is for "extra" space around the components.
So the width of your panel is the width of the buttons plus the width of the border.
Edit:
panelWest.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(300, 300));
Don't hardcode a preferred size. The layout manager will calculate the size based on the above logic. Get rid of that statement.
Edit 2:
// buttonsTables[i].setMaximumSize(new Dimension(Integer.MAX_VALUE, buttonsTables[i].getMinimumSize().height));
Get rid of any logic that attempts to control the size of a component. The point of using layout managers is to let the layout manager do the size calcualtions.
So for your buttons panel you need to nest panels to prevent the buttons from taking all the space.
You can do something like:
JPanel wrapper = new JPanel();
wrapper.add(buttonsPanel);
...
//panel.add(panelWest, BorderLayout.WEST);
panel.add(wrapper, BorderLayout.WEST);
By default a JPanel uses a FlowLayout which will respect the preferred size of any component added to it.
Another option is to use a GridBagLayout with the wrapper panel. By default the panel will then be displayed in the "center" of the available space. So it will be vertically centered and you won't need the EmptyBorder.
Related
I am trying to add a scrollbar in jpanel with null layout.
I want to create a form. This should should display few buttons at the bottom at all times.Any content inside form should maintain it's size and ratio even if the parent container is resized.
Here is what I've come with. I have a panel with borderlayout and added buttons at the south of border. Then created another jpanel to contain form that is added at the center of parent jpanel. Since I want form to maintain it's ratio I went with null layout for inner panel. But I want it to display scrollbar when content is not fully visible. enter image description here
Now adding inner jpanel into scrollpane and adding scrollpanel into parent panel (.add(scrollpane, BorderLayout.CENTER)) doesn't give desired format.
Is there any thing that I can do to get desired format?
Here is code Sample:
public static void main(String[] args) {
JFrame jFrame = new JFrame();
jFrame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
jFrame.setSize(new Dimension(1000, 700));
Container c = jFrame.getContentPane();
c.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
bottomPanel(c);
centerPanel(c); //scrollbar should go in this panel
jFrame.setVisible(true);
}
private static void centerPanel(Container c) {
JPanel centerPanel = new JPanel();
centerPanel.setLayout(null);
JButton button = new JButton("This jObject should not resize when window resizes and also should maintain relative position.");
button.setBounds(new Rectangle(10, 10, 600, 50));
JButton button1 = new JButton("Just like it works in this code. Just Add ScrollPane to centerPanel That is in green backround");
button1.setBounds(new Rectangle(10, 70, 600, 50));
JButton button2 = new JButton("For clearity");
button2.setBounds(new Rectangle(10, 130, 600, 50));
centerPanel.add(button);
centerPanel.add(button1);
centerPanel.add(button2);
centerPanel.setBackground(Color.GREEN);
c.add(centerPanel, BorderLayout.CENTER);
}
private static void bottomPanel(Container c) {
JPanel bottomPanel = new JPanel(); //Buttons that goes at the bottom of screen will go in here
JPanel bottomInnerPanel = new JPanel();
bottomInnerPanel.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
bottomPanel.setLayout(new GridLayout());
bottomInnerPanel.add(new JButton("Add"), BorderLayout.WEST);
bottomInnerPanel.add(new JButton("Search"), BorderLayout.EAST);
bottomPanel.add(bottomInnerPanel);
bottomPanel.setBorder(BorderFactory.createLineBorder(Color.BLACK));
c.add(bottomPanel, BorderLayout.SOUTH);
}
I'm not able to set the height of a JComboBox, I searched in the web but didn't found the right answer.
As you can see from the image below the combo box fills nearly all the panel height and I'd like it to have a smaller height.
I tried setting size with getPreferredSize() method but it didn't work, it worked only for other components like the button.
My code
private JComponent firstPanel()
{
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
panel.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
JLabel spesaAnnuaSingola = new JLabel();
spesaAnnuaSingola.setText("Spesa Annua Singola");
panel.add(spesaAnnuaSingola, BorderLayout.NORTH);
JComboBox<String> listaSpese = new JComboBox<String>();
panel.add(listaSpese, BorderLayout.CENTER);
JTextField speseAnnuaSingolaTF = new JTextField();
speseAnnuaSingolaTF.setText("");
speseAnnuaSingolaTF.setEditable(false);
panel.add(speseAnnuaSingolaTF, BorderLayout.LINE_START);
JButton button = new JButton("CALCOLA")
{
public Dimension getPreferredSize()
{
return new Dimension(150,50);
};
};
JPanel leftflowpanel = new JPanel( new FlowLayout(FlowLayout.LEFT) );
leftflowpanel.add(speseAnnuaSingolaTF);
panel.add(leftflowpanel, BorderLayout.SOUTH);
JPanel rightflowpanel = new JPanel( new FlowLayout(FlowLayout.RIGHT) );
rightflowpanel.add(button);
panel.add(rightflowpanel, BorderLayout.SOUTH);
return panel;
}
And then:
public StatsPanel()
{
setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
this.setExtendedState(JFrame.MAXIMIZED_BOTH);
GridBagConstraints c = new GridBagConstraints();
// I will need a grid layout
this.setLayout(new GridLayout(1, 1, 30, 30));
JPanel panelLeft = new JPanel(new BorderLayout());
panelLeft.setBorder(BorderFactory.createEmptyBorder(20, 10, 20, 50));
panelLeft.add(firstPanel(), BorderLayout.NORTH);
c.fill = GridBagConstraints.VERTICAL;
c.gridx = 0;
c.gridy = 0;
this.add(panelLeft);
}
JComboBox<String> listaSpese = new JComboBox<String>();
panel.add(listaSpese, BorderLayout.CENTER);
You add your combo box to the CENTER of the BorderLayout, which gets all the extra space of the frame. Don't add the combo box to the CENTER.
Instead you will need to nest panels. So create a panel for the NORTH of the BorderLayout. Then this panel will contain both your label and your combo box. Maybe use a vertical BoxLayout for this panel. Then both the label and the combo box will be displayed at their preferred heights.
Read the section from the Swing on Layout Manager for more information. The point is you can nest multiple panels each using a different layout to achieve your desired layout.
I recently started working with Java and I am not too sure how to put my BoxedLayout Panel in the middle of my `JFrame. At the moment, I have the following:
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
panel.setLayout(new BoxLayout(panel, BoxLayout.Y_AXIS));
JLabel quizLabel = new JLabel("Java Quiz",SwingConstants.CENTER);
quizLabel.setForeground(Color.BLUE);
quizLabel.setFont(new Font("Arial", Font.BOLD, 20));
quizLabel.setOpaque(true);
panel.add(quizLabel);
JLabel newLineLabel = new JLabel(" ",SwingConstants.CENTER);
newLineLabel.setOpaque(true);
panel.add(newLineLabel);
JLabel createdByLabel = new JLabel("Created By",SwingConstants.CENTER);
createdByLabel.setOpaque(true);
panel.add(createdByLabel);
JLabel nameLabel = new JLabel("XXX",SwingConstants.CENTER);
nameLabel.setOpaque(true);
panel.add(nameLabel);
contentPane.add(panel, BorderLayout.CENTER);
contentPane is taken from my frame. This gives me the following output:
I want the three labels inside the panel to appear in the middle of the Frame.
Because it is the only panel on the screen, the BoxLayout will fill the entire frame and thus depending on how your JComponents are created in the panel, it will show it like that on the frame too.
What I would do if I were you, is created a BorderLayout as a container for your BoxLayout.
This way, you can set your BoxLayout as the center of the Borderlayout.
See if this code works:
//This will fill your frame
JPanel containerPanel = new JPanel(new BorderLayout());
contentPane.add(containerPanel);
//this is the BoxPanel you wnat your components to be organized in
JPanel boxPanel = new JPanel(new BoxLayout());
//Add all your components to the boxPanel
//add your panel with all the components to the container panel
containerPanel.add(boxPanel, BorderLayout.CENTER);
The easiest way is to use a GridBagLayout. Using the default constraints a single component will be centered in the panel:
//contentPane.add(panel, BorderLayout.CENTER);
contentPane.setLayout( new GridBagLayout() );
contentPane.add(panel, new GridBagConstraints());
I've searched a fair amount and I cannot locate a good, simple answer to this problem.
I want a box layout (superPanel), which contains an upper and lower JPanel (mainPanel and footerPanel). The upper will contain further JPanels (leftPanel and rightPanel).
Consider the code below, I find that when I resize the window, the mainPanel gets larger, and so does the footer. The footer should always stay the same size, below the mainPanel, at the bottom of the frame.
frame = new JFrame("Frame");
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
JPanel container = new JPanel();
container.setLayout(new BoxLayout(container, BoxLayout.Y_AXIS));
JPanel superPanel = new JPanel();
JPanel mainPanel = new JPanel();
JPanel leftPanel = new JPanel();
JPanel rightPanel= new JPanel();
JPanel footerPanel = new JPanel();
footerPanel.setBackground(Color.GREEN);
mainPanel.setBackground(Color.RED);
mainPanel.add(leftPanel);
mainPanel.add(rightPanel);
mainPanel.setLayout(new FlowLayout(FlowLayout.LEFT));
leftPanel.add(new JButton("left"));
rightPanel.add(new JButton("right"));
footerPanel.add(new JButton("footer"));
container.add(mainPanel);
container.add(footerPanel);
frame.add(container);
frame.pack();
frame.setVisible(true);
Anybody know why this is occurring? If you run this you'll see that red and green both grow in size as the window is resized. What I want to see is the red getting larger, while the green remains the same size.
Glue doesn't work, and I don't want to have to use GridBagLayout unless I have to (please explain why I should if need be)
Thanks
When you want a "main" section and side sections which don't change size, you usually want a BorderLayout:
container.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
container.add(mainPanel, BorderLayout.CENTER);
container.add(footerPanel, BorderLayout.PAGE_END);
Try to use GridBagLayout with fill.BOTH, weightx = 1 and weighty = 1 for the main panel and fill.NONE, weightx = 0 and weighty = 0 for the footer panel or use Miglayout which is really easy and with it you can do all what you want.
BorderLayout is what you want on your container, adding the mainPanel to the center and footerPanel to the south. Try the following changes on your code:
frame = new JFrame("Frame");
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
JPanel container = new JPanel();
container.setLayout(new BorderLayout()); // Use BorderLayout instead of BoxLayout
JPanel superPanel = new JPanel();
JPanel mainPanel = new JPanel();
JPanel leftPanel = new JPanel();
JPanel rightPanel = new JPanel();
JPanel footerPanel = new JPanel();
footerPanel.setBackground(Color.GREEN);
mainPanel.setBackground(Color.RED);
mainPanel.add(leftPanel);
mainPanel.add(rightPanel);
mainPanel.setLayout(new FlowLayout(FlowLayout.LEFT));
leftPanel.add(new JButton("left"));
rightPanel.add(new JButton("right"));
footerPanel.add(new JButton("footer"));
container.add(mainPanel, BorderLayout.CENTER); // Add mainPanel to the central area
container.add(footerPanel, BorderLayout.SOUTH); // Add footePanel to the bottom
frame.add(container);
frame.pack();
frame.setVisible(true);
The BorderLayout determines that a component added to the CENTER area will expand both horizontally and vertically to follow the container. The SOUTH area can only expand horizontally while EAST and WEST can only expand vertically. Keep in mind that every layout manager class has its own rules on how to divide the container space among components and how they are resized.
I have my code in this format, but the jpanels are not listening the size i set. All the three panels are in the same size when i run the code. Is there any way to adjust them?
JPanel mainpanel = new JPanel(mainPanel,BoxLayout.Y_AXIS);
JPanel tablepanel1 = new JPanel();
tablepanel1.setSize(900,400);
JPanel selectionpanel = new JPanel(new GridBagLayout());
selectionpanel.setSize(900,100);
JPanel tablepanel2 = new JPanel();
tablepanel2.setSize(900,400);
mainpanel.add(tablepanel1);
mainpanel.add(selectionpanel);
mainpanel.add(tablepanel2);
frame.add(mainpanel);
frame.setSize(900,900);
Did you mean to use BoxLayout for mainpanel?:
JPanel mainpanel = new JPanel();
mainpanel.setLayout(new BoxLayout(mainpanel, BoxLayout.Y_AXIS));
This layout manager only listens to preferred sizes rather than the component size. The best way is to override getPreferredSize:
JPanel selectionpanel = new JPanel() {
#Override
public Dimension getPreferredSize() {
return new Dimension(900, 400);
}
};
Also better to use JFrame#pack rather than setting dimensions for the frame.