I not able to getting the proper JinternalFrame. In my application in main JFrame I have one disktopPane that contains GridLayout.
When I call JInternalFrame by click on button I am getting that internalFrame, but that fix to a particular Grid box only, and I am not able to maximize the InternalFrame.
How can I solve the probleam?
below is my GUI:
I am doing Code through NetBeans.
How Can I fix this issue ?
Don't use a jdesktoppane. Use a normal JFrame with a JPanel with your components and the gridbaglayout.
For the windows floating above the main JFrame use new JFrame's with setAlwaysOnTop(true) and make sure they have your main JFrame as root.
Related
So far I got that we can remove the minimize/maximize etc buttons from a jframe (header).
How can I remove just the Maximize button from a JFrame?
How to hide the default minimize/maximize and close buttons on JFrame window in Java?
Is there a way to add a custom button in a jframe(header)? I am trying to extend the default available jframe buttons feature and add my own "always on top" into it. If this is not possible then I would like to add some pinning icon into the jframe (header) to replicate "always on top" feature for a jframe (or jinternalframe).
This feature that I am trying to implement is similar to what we see on a linux machines with gui which enable us to keep a folder always in top.
enter image description here
Here's a thought, how about instead, you remove the JFrame header:
frameName.setUndecorated(true);
And simply create your own using a JPanel. With this method, you can fully customize a JFrame header!
I'm new to Java and actually designing the GUI for an application.
My main is a JFrame with 5 buttons and 1 panel which will have the "content", for the first button for example, I've designed a Jframe which has a JTabbedPane.
Now I would like to know how can I incorporate the content from that frame to the "content" panel when clicking on the button ?
I tried to use .add but I get:
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: adding a window to a container
(seems we can't add Jframe to Jpanel).
I also tried the setVisible way but it doesn't meet what I need since it will hide the panel completely and I will get a tiny window with the buttons.
![Jframe content][1]
![Main Jframe with buttons and Jpanel to show the jframe content][2]
The code is generated by netbeans, and I forgot to mention that I did research on adding a Jframe into another Jframe but here isn't my problem at all.
I tried by changing the Jframe by JInternalFrame but clicking on button doesn't do anything.
Button has
contentPanel.add(new GestionUtilisateur());
So basically when you click on the "Gestion Utilisateur" button for example, you get that JTabbedPane that has to appear in the content area (which is blank here)
You should not be putting JFrames inside JPanels. If you have multiple panels you would like to display, depending on something like a button, look in to LAYOUTS.
In particular, it sounds like a CardLayout would work well for your needs. CardLayouts allow you to swap which panel is displayed in a frame by bringing it to the "front" of a list of panels. This would let you display your JTabbedPane on one button click, then click another to change the content pane.
JFrame can not be added in a JPanel.
use JInternalFrame
Make and hold references to JPanels containing your content. A JFrame is really just that, it's a frame (though you can add a single component to it).
You can't add a JFrame to a JPanel. If you want multiple components to be visible use layouts such as BorderLayout, GridBag, etc. Check out some of the Swing layout tutorials here.
Content should be designed as JPanel (you can design it with drag&drop just like JFrame) but if you really have to put a JFrame to JPanel for some reason, you can do it by
myJPanel.add(myJFrame.getContentPane());
however i would suggest modification of your program.
I have an open-source java swing application like this:
http://i47.tinypic.com/dff4f7.jpg
You can see in the screenshot, there is a JPanel divided into two area, left and right area. The left area has many text links. When I click the SLA Criteria link, it will pop-up the SLA Criteria window. The pop-up window is JFrame object.
Now, I'm trying to put the pop-up window into right area of the JPanel, so that means no pop-up window anymore, i.e. when I click the SLA Criteria link, its contents will be displayed at the right area of the JPanel. The existing content of the right area of JPanel will not be used anymore. The concept is just same like in the java api documentation page: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api. You click the link in the left frame, you'll get the content displayed at the right frame.
The example illustration is like this:
(note: it's made and edited using image editor, this is not a real screenshot of working application)
http://i48.tinypic.com/5vrxaa.jpg
So, I would like to know is there a way to put JFrame into JPanel?
I'm thinking of using JInternalFrame, is it possible? Or is there another way?
UPDATE:
Source code:
http://pastebin.com/tiqRbWP8 (VTreePanel.java, this is the panel with left & right area divisions)
http://pastebin.com/330z3yuT (CPanel.java, this is the superclass of VTreePanel and also subclass from JPanel)
http://pastebin.com/MkNsbtjh (AWindow.java, this is the pop-up window)
http://pastebin.com/2rsppQeE (CFrame.java, this is the superclass of AWindow and also subclass from JFrame)
Instead of trying to embed the frame, you want to embed the frame's content.
There is (at least) one issue I can see with this.
The menu bar is controlled by the frame's RootPane.
Create you're self a new JPanel. Set it's layout to BorderLayout.
Get the menu bar from the frame (using JFrame#getJMenuBar) and added to the north position of you new panel.
Get the frames ContentPane and add it to the center position of the panel.
There is undoubtedly countless other, application specific issues you will run into trying to do this...
No, you don't want to "put a JFrame into a JPanel" and your illustration above doesn't demonstrate this either. Instead it's showing a subordinate window on top of (not inside of) another window. If you absolutely need to display a new subordinate window, I'd recommend that you create and display a JDialog. The tutorials will explain how to do this, or if you get stuck post your code attempt and we'll help you work with this.
Edit 1
You state:
I need to convert from the pop-up window style into the jpanel content style. It's just like the java api documentation page style: docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api When you click the text in left frame, it doesn't show any pop-up, right? The content is displayed at right frame directly. So that's basicly my goal. The source code is quite big. I will try to paste the source code if possible.
What you are looking for is to simply implement a MouseListener in a JList or JTable, and when responding to the click get the content based on the selection made. This has nothing to do with placing a JFrame in a JPanel and all to do with writing the correct program logic. Again, display it in a modal JDialog -- but that's all secondary to your writing the correct non-GUI logic. You're really barking up the wrong tree here. Forget about JFrames, forget about JPanels for the moment and instead concentrate on how you're going to extract the SLA Criteria data when it is clicked on.
Edit 2
I think I see what you're trying to do -- instead of JFrames and JDialogs, use JPanels and swap them using a CardLayout which would allow you to swap views.
I had skimming the source codes, I saw that the AWindow.java has internal panel (APanel.java) to hold the window's content, and it also has a public method to return the content panel object (getAPanel()). With this, I can use it for fetching the window's contents into other container.
Finally, I decided to use JTabbedPane in the right area of VTreePanel for displaying the pop-up window's contents.
You cannot put a Jframe into a JPanel. Instead you should try to create a separate panel that has functionalities like your JFrame and embed that into your JPanel.
Since you can put a JPanel into another JPanel but not a JFrame into another JPanel
I have two JFrames. Both are visible at same time.
One JFrame takes the whole screen..its just plain white. (it is acting as a background). And other JFrame is a small box with buttons/texts and other swing components.
The problem I get is when I click the big JFrame area, the JFrame box minimizes. So how do I specify java to make sure the JFrame box is always on top of the JFrame background?
Use a JInternalFrame
Make the JFrame box a JPanel box.
Your application should only have one JFrame.
JFrame is a TopLevel Component and therefore usually you don't put a JFrame into another. If you want to put your smaller jframe into your bigger I would subclass either JDialog or a JPanel.
In general, an application should only have a single JFrame. Other windows should be dialogs.
The problem I get is when I click the big JFrame area, the JFrame box minimizes.
When you use the dialog make sure you specify the frame as the owner of the dialog:
JFrame frame = new JFrame();
JDialog dialog = new JDialog(frame);
If the main frame is ever minimized, the dialog will also be minimized. When the frame is restored the dialog will always display on top of the frame.
use Jdialog with setModal(false) for your small window ,
probably you want something similar to gimp
look at gimp toolbox , only X at title , means its a Dialog.
hope that's help
I am creating a Java applet, and I am trying to add a JFrame to it. I am calling:
add(new MyJFrameSubclass());
But when I launch the application, my JFrame isn't shown until I resize the window.
This may be too elementary of a suggestion, but sticking in a validate() or repaint() can sometimes solve problems that seem complicated.
A simple fix is to add a frame.show(); after you add your JFrame, I had the same issue and this seemed to help, the frame being the name of your JFrame.
JFrame and JApplet are both top-level containers. Instead of trying to have both containers present at once, put your content in a lightweight container such as JPanel; then add that JPanel to either a JFrame (for local use) or a JApplet (for the browser). This example shows the approach.