I have a frame which is set to:
setExtendedState(JFrame.MAXIMIZED_BOTH);
Now I have a Jtable and on the Design phase of eclipse I have exactly fitted to the frame:
But when I run the program I have so much wasted space on the right side as this:
How can I extend this to fill up the empty space on the right side?
To make JTable fill the available space, put it inside a JPanel which has a BorderLayout layout manager.
JTable table = new JTable();
// Set up table, add data
yourFrame.getContentPane().add( new JScrollPane( table ), BorderLayout.CENTER );
UPDATE: as suggested by camickr
you don't need the getContentPane(). Since JDK4 you can just add components directly to the frame and then will be added to the content pane automatically.
yourFrame.add( new JScrollPane( table ), BorderLayout.CENTER
If you have just the JTable the following code should work for you:
JFrame jframe = new JFrame();
jframe.setExtendedState(JFrame.MAXIMIZED_BOTH);
JTable jtable = new JTable();
jtable.setBackground(Color.yellow);
jframe.getContentPane().add(jtable);
jframe.setVisible(true);
If you need to add more components to the JFrame I suggest you to use a layout in this way
JFrame jframe = new JFrame();
jframe.setExtendedState(JFrame.MAXIMIZED_BOTH);
GridLayout layout = new GridLayout(); //chose your favorite
JTable jtable = new JTable();
jtable.setBackground(Color.yellow);
Container contentPane = jframe.getContentPane();
contentPane.setLayout(layout);
contentPane.add(jtable);
jframe.setVisible(true);
Related
I am working with JDBC.
My Class has a JFrame with a JTabbedPane to display my JPanels with the UI's for my different methods.
On this panel I want to display a result set in a JTable with to additional columns of buttons.
This is all currently working when I display it on a new JFrame but not when I try to display it on the existing one. Could somebody please explain why.
JTabbedPane tabbedPane = new JTabbedPane(JTabbedPane.TOP);
contentPane.add(tabbedPane, BorderLayout.CENTER);
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
tabbedPane.addTab("Main", null, panel, null);
panel.setLayout(null);
JTable table = new JTable(model);
DisplayButtonColumn testWithButtons1 = new DisplayButtonColumn(table,
displayHandler.getColCount());
DisplayButtonColumn testWithButtons2 = new DisplayButtonColumn(table,
displayHandler.getColCount() + 1);
panel.add(new JScrollPane(table));
// JFrame f = new JFrame();
// f.setSize(1000, 500);
// f.getContentPane().add(new JScrollPane(table));
// f.setVisible(true);
panel.setLayout(null);
The problem is the null layout. Don't do that. Swing is designed to be used with layout managers and not doing that will lead to trouble almost without exception. Using absolute layout would require you to manually manage the bounds to the components, and you're not doing that. If you need something else than the default FlowLayout, just create one that matches your needs:
panel.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
(It would be also possible to add to JTabbedPane without the helper panel, but I suppose you want more components in the tab).
I have been searching around for an easy way to implement a JScrollPlane. I am trying to add it to a JPanel, and it will contain a dynamic number of JPanels (which will be filled with other stuff).
Here is my (failing miserably) attempt to make said JScrollPane:
final JPanel info = new JPanel();
final JScrollPane infoS = new JScrollPane(info,ScrollPaneConstants.VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_AS_NEEDED,ScrollPaneConstants.HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_AS_NEEDED);
info.setLayout(new GridLayout(0,1));
info.setLocation(10,78);
info.setSize(420,490);
infoS.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(600, 600));
gui.add(infoS);
The primary problem you're having is the fact that the default layout manager's layout is set to FlowLayout, which means that the JScrollPane will want to use it's preferred size to be layout with, which may not fill the entire panel.
Instead, use a BorderLayout
final JPanel info = new JPanel(new BorderLayout()); // <-- Change me :D
final JScrollPane infoS = new JScrollPane(info,ScrollPaneConstants.VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_AS_NEEDED,ScrollPaneConstants.HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_AS_NEEDED);
// These are bad ideas, setLocation and setSize won't work, as the panel should be
// under the control of a layout manager
//info.setLocation(10,78);
//info.setSize(420,490);
//infoS.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(600, 600));
gui.add(infoS);
In this example, a series of nested panels are added to a panel having BoxLayout. That panel is used to create a JScrollPane which is then added to a JFrame.
public class BoxTest extends JPanel {
...
JScrollPane jsp = new JScrollPane(this,
JScrollPane.VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_ALWAYS,
JScrollPane.HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_NEVER);
...
JFrame f = new JFrame();
f.add(jsp); // BorderLayout.CENTER, by default
How can I get the scroller around my JList component in the code given below? It doesn't seem to work properly :(
public class JButtonO extends JFrame{
String[] values = {"henry", "Michael","Uche","John","Ullan","Nelly",
"Ime","Lekan","Austine","jussi","Ossi","Imam","Empo","Austine","Becky",
"Scholar","Ruth", "Anny"};
public JButtonO()
{
super("the button");
this.setSize(400,200);
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
JLabel label = new JLabel("Output Items:");
label.setAlignmentX(1);
label.setAlignmentY(1);
JList conList = new JList(values);
conList.setVisibleRowCount(3);
JScrollPane scroller = new JScrollPane(conList);
panel.add(label);
panel.add(scroller);
panel.add(conList);
this.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
this.add(panel);
this.setVisible(true);
}
Adding the JScrollPane scroller that includes the JList conList to the JPanel panel is enough.
The mistake is that you are adding the JList a second time.
JScrollPane scroller = new JScrollPane(conList);
panel.add(label);
panel.add(scroller);
panel.add(conList); // <---THIS LINE SHOULD BE DELETED...
Look, I may not answering what you need, because I don´t remember to much of swing layout. I don´t work with it a long time ago...
But removing setting a layout (I remember) on your JPanel it works with this code:
public JButtonO() {
super("the button");
this.setSize(400, 200);
// Create a panel with a borderlayout
JPanel jpanel = new JPanel(new BorderLayout());
JLabel label = new JLabel("Output Items:");
label.setAlignmentX(1);
label.setAlignmentY(1);
// Add Label to top of layout
jpanel.add(label, BorderLayout.NORTH);
JList conList = new JList(values);
conList.setVisibleRowCount(3);
JScrollPane scroller = new JScrollPane(conList);
//AddScroll to center
jpanel.add(scroller);
//Add Panel to JFrame
this.add(jpanel);
this.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
this.setVisible(true);
}
I think the problems is the default layoutmaneger of JPanel. Because of how it works your scroll was not "srink" enough to create scrolls...
Hope it helps, even without too much explanation...
ACTUALLY: After I post the answer I saw your mistake. Now I can explain what is wrong. You already added your JList inside your JScrollPane here:
JScrollPane scroller = new JScrollPane(conList);
But after that you put it inside the JPanel:
panel.add(conList);
this changes where yout JList will be displayed, and let the JScroll empty again. Without components it will be displayed with size 0x0 and will not be draw (even being there).
Now I think I helped =D
The JScrollPane has settings called the scrollbar policies which say when the scrollbars are to be displayed. You can set them using JScrolPane(Component,int,int) constructor, or by calling setVerticalScrollBarPolicy() and setHorizontalScrollBarPolicy(). The default policies are "as needed", meaning the scrollbar is only displayed if the component is too large to display whole. So if your list fits inside the window, the scrolbars will not be visible, but will become visible when you e.g. make the window smaller using the mouse. You can change one or both policies to "always" using corresponding constants in order to make the scrollbar(s) always visible if that's what you need.
I currently have multiple jpanels on a jframe. I can add all of the jpanels fine to the jframe but when I try and add a jscrollpane, nothing shows up. Essentially I just want a jscrollbar/pane on the jframe so that I can scroll down as the size of the jpanels goes off screen. This is the main code that I used:
JPanel Jpanel = new JPanel();
JScrollPane Jpane = new JScrollPane();
frame.getContentPane().add(Jpanel);
frame.getContentPane().add(Jpane);
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks
1) code that you posted caused that (JFrame has implemented by default BorderLayout, and there only one JComponent can to fill concrete area or layst added JComponent), only frame.getContentPane().add(Jpane); is possible to dispay on the screen
2) you have to accept that you can put to the JScrollPane only one JComponent
3) JScrollPane works correctly if is there used proper LayoutManager (not AbsoluteLayout) and in the case that Dimmension of JComponent is wider that JViewport from JScrollPane
This has already been answered with the correct way to do it. The only thing I can think of that you might have done wrong (since it's not working), is that you're adding the panels to the jframe.
When you put a panel inside a scrollpane, you need to add the scrollpane to the JFrame, and not add the panel to the JFrame:
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
JScrollPane scrollPane = new JScrollPane(panel);
add(scrollPane); // or if you have a panel inside a panel, add the pane to that panel. ie west.add(scrollPane);
You need to add the JPanel to the scroll pane, then add the scrollpane to the frame.
One of the way of doing it is when creating the JScrollPane, with the constructor :
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
JScrollPane scrollPane = new JScrollPane(panel);
What you could do is this:
JPanel Jpanel = new JPanel();
JScrollPane Jpane = new JScrollPane(Jpanel);
frame.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
frame.add(Jpane, BorderLayout.CENTER);
The reason your panels aren't showing is beacause your frame doesn't know where to put them. It needs a layoutmanager.
Here you can find some basic layoutmanagers:
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/uiswing/layout/using.html
I have a JPanel subclass on which I add buttons, labels, tables, etc. To show on screen it I use JFrame:
MainPanel mainPanel = new MainPanel(); //JPanel subclass
JFrame mainFrame = new JFrame();
mainFrame.setTitle("main window title");
mainFrame.getContentPane().add(mainPanel);
mainFrame.setLocation(100, 100);
mainFrame.pack();
mainFrame.setVisible(true);
mainFrame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
But when I size the window, size of panel don't change. How to make size of panel to be the same as the size of window even if it was resized?
You can set a layout manager like BorderLayout and then define more specifically, where your panel should go:
MainPanel mainPanel = new MainPanel();
JFrame mainFrame = new JFrame();
mainFrame.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
mainFrame.add(mainPanel, BorderLayout.CENTER);
mainFrame.pack();
mainFrame.setVisible(true);
This puts the panel into the center area of the frame and lets it grow automatically when resizing the frame.
You need to set a layout manager for the JFrame to use - This deals with how components are positioned. A useful one is the BorderLayout manager.
Simply adding the following line of code should fix your problems:
mainFrame.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
(Do this before adding components to the JFrame)
If the BorderLayout option provided by our friends doesnot work, try adding ComponentListerner to the JFrame and implement the componentResized(event) method. When the JFrame object will be resized, this method will be called. So if you write the the code to set the size of the JPanel in this method, you will achieve the intended result.
Ya, I know this 'solution' is not good but use it as a safety net.
;)
From my experience, I used GridLayout.
thePanel.setLayout(new GridLayout(a,b,c,d));
a = row number, b = column number, c = horizontal gap, d = vertical gap.
For example, if I want to create panel with:
unlimited row (set a = 0)
1 column (set b = 1)
vertical gap= 3 (set d = 3)
The code is below:
thePanel.setLayout(new GridLayout(0,1,0,3));
This method is useful when you want to add JScrollPane to your JPanel. Size of the JPanel inside JScrollPane will automatically changes when you add some components on it, so the JScrollPane will automatically reset the scroll bar.
As other posters have said, you need to change the LayoutManager being used. I always preferred using a GridLayout so your code would become:
MainPanel mainPanel = new MainPanel();
JFrame mainFrame = new JFrame();
mainFrame.setLayout(new GridLayout());
mainFrame.pack();
mainFrame.setVisible(true);
GridLayout seems more conceptually correct to me when you want your panel to take up the entire screen.