I have a JLabel in a horizontally re-sizable JPanel. The JLabel auto re-sizes its width to fit the JPanel. If I insert a long line of text (such as "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa") the JLabel doesn't truncate the text. Instead, the width re-sizes to fit the text, causing also an ugly re-sizing of the JPanel.
Instead, I want my text to be truncated with an elipse (...). The JLabel width must not inherit from the text's length but only from the JPanel width.
Try following:
final JLabel label = ...
...
label.setText("prototype text to define size");
final Dimension size = label.getPreferredSize();
label.setMinimumSize(size);
label.setPreferredSize(size);
...
label.setText(...);
Use a different layout or set a max size on the JLabel.
You need to disable 'Horizontal Resizable' when you define a max- and preferedsize
Related
I have a Label object with a text in it...
Label label = new Label(text);
..and I get the height by...
label.pack();
GlyphLayout layout = label.getGlyphLayout();
float height = layout.height;
When I add them to a table I just said
Table t = new Table();
t.add(label).width(200).height(height);
Currently I work on a chat window and each entry of the
window is a Label containing a colored name and text, like...
Note: The debug lines are drawn. Please ignore the blue line, it's from another table in the scene
Now my question: The 1-liner has a glyphlayout height of 38 and the 3-liner 139. Does someone know why there's such a big gap between the 2 entries resp. why the 3-liner height doesn't seem to be correct? No extra spacing / padding.
I would appreciate any ideas to solve this.
SOLVED:
My post was incomplete, sorry. I set the width of the label before calling...
label.setWidth(x); // where x was < chatbox width
label.pack();
So the GlyphLayout assumed a width which was smaller than the actual chatbox width. The result is of course a bigger height...
Thanks a lot to the libgdx IRC, especially Tomski :)
I'm trying to fill a JPanel with a neat grid containing as many JLabels as will fit into the JPanel. The size of the JPanel can vary, and the size of the JLabels depends on the label text, the icon included in the JLabel, and the font being used to render the label text.
GridLayout myLayout = new GridLayout();
JPanel myPanel = new JPanel(myLayout);
List<JLabel> myLabels = ...
int panelWidth = myPanel.getWidth();
int panelHeight = myPanel.getHeight();
if (panelWidth == 0 || panelHeight == 0) return;
int maxLabelWidth = 0, maxLabelHeight = 0;
for (JLabel label : myLabels) {
int labelWidth = ???
int labelHeight = ???
if (labelWidth > maxLabelWidth) maxLabelWidth = labelWidth;
if (labelHeight > maxLabelHeight) maxLabelHeight = labelHeight;
}
// Use panelHeight, panelWidth, maxLabelHeight and maxLabelWidth to compute
// rows and columns available for myLayout
myLayout.setRows(nRows); myLayout.setColumns(nColumns);
for (JLabel label : myLabels) {
myPanel.add(label);
// stop if we reach nRows*nColumns labels
}
I've tried myPanel.getGraphics().getFontMetrics().getHeight() to get the height of text, but when the font is large and myPanel is small, the text is taller than labelHeight, and the bottom and top get cut off.
I've tried label.getIcon().getIconHeight() to get the height of the icon, but using this value always cuts off the top and bottom of the icons.
I've tried label.getSize() to get the height and width of the JLabel, but that usually returns 0 height and 0 width. I've tried label.getPreferredSize() but that generally returns a value that's too small.
I've tried label.getGraphics().getFontMetrics().stringWidth(label.getText()) to get the width of the string, and then added that to label.getIcon().getIconWidth() and label.getIcon().getIconTextGap() but that comes up with a value a little larger or smaller than label.getPreferredSize(), and in any case still too small - sometimes the label text is cut off at the end.
At one point I tried adding a constant to each width and height; that prevented cut-off text and icons, but of course it left too much blank space around the JLabels. Is there a way to get an accurate size for each JLabel for this usage?
I have multiple JTextAreas inside a JPanel. I am using a BoxLayout to make them align vertically and fill the width of the container.
It works, but they seem to expand to fill the entire height as well.
What I really want is simple - a text area that wraps text where I can control the width but allow the height to scale dynamically as more lines are added. The above method was just my best attempt at it. If there is a solution that uses a different layout manager, different text component, etc, that works.
minimal verifiable example below:
public static void main(String[] args) {
JFrame frame = new JFrame();
frame.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(300, 300));
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
JPanel textAreas = new JPanel();
textAreas.setLayout(new BoxLayout(textAreas, BoxLayout.Y_AXIS));
JTextArea area1 = new JTextArea();
area1.append("this is a string");
area1.setLineWrap(true);
area1.setWrapStyleWord(true);
textAreas.add(area1);
JTextArea area2 = new JTextArea("and another that is much longer, so that it wraps to the next line");
area2.setLineWrap(true);
area2.setWrapStyleWord(true);
textAreas.add(area2);
JScrollPane scrollPane = new JScrollPane();
scrollPane.setViewportView(textAreas);
frame.add(scrollPane);
frame.pack();
frame.setVisible(true);
}
I have done research on this topic on my own, including looking at different layout managers (http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/uiswing/layout/visual.html), and checking other questions on the site, but I haven't had much luck.
TLDR: Can I make it so each element of a layout has a height that scales to its content but a fixed width? If so how?
What I really want is simple - a text area that wraps text where I can control the width but allow the height to scale dynamically as more lines are added.
The BoxLayout respects the maximum size so the text area grows to fill all the space available in the panel. You can override the getMaximumSize() method to return the preferred height by using something like:
JTextArea area1 = new JTextArea()
{
public Dimension getMaximumSize()
{
Dimension d = super.getMaximumSize();
d.height = getPreferredSize().height;
return d;
}
};
It works...
Not really. Make the frame wider and the text will unwrap. Then shrink the frame and the scrollbar will appear. That is the text will not wrap again
What you need to do is force the panel added to the scroll pane to be the same width as the viewport. This will allow wrapping to work properly.
You do this by implementing the Scrollable interface on the panel. Specifically you need to override the getScrollableTracksViewportWidth() method to return true.
Or an easier solution is to use the Scrollable Panel class which allows you to set properties of the panel to control this behaviour.
You can replace a JPanel with the ScrollablePanel:
//JPanel textAreas = new JPanel();
ScrollablePanel textAreas = new ScrollablePanel();
textAreas.setScrollableWidth( ScrollablePanel.ScrollableSizeHint.FIT );
Edit:
If there is a solution that uses a different layout manager
Without overriding the getMaximumSize() method of the text areas and when using the Scrollable Panel you should be able to use the following layout managers.
The GridBagLayout allows you to specify the "weightx" constraint. This will allow the component to fill all the available space in the panel.
Or if you don't like specifying all the constrains of the GridBagLayout you could use the Relative Layout which support vertical/horizontal layout of components at their preferred size.
You would just need to use the following to force the component to fill the horizontal space:
//textAreas.setLayout(new BoxLayout(textAreas, BoxLayout.Y_AXIS));
RelativeLayout rl = new RelativeLayout(RelativeLayout.Y_AXIS);
rl.setFill( true );
textAreas.setLayout(rl);
I've got a Jlist inside a JScrollPane and I've set a prototype value so that it doesn't have to calculate the width for big lists, but just uses this default width.
Now, the problem is that the Jlist is for some reason replacing the end of an element with dots (...) so that a horizontal scrollbar will never be shown.
How do I disable with "wrapping"? So that long elements are not being replaced with dots if they are wider than the Jlist's width?
I've reproduced the issue in a small example application. Please run it if you don't understand what I mean:
import javax.swing.*;
import java.awt.*;
public class Test
{
//window
private static final int windowWidth = 450;
private static final int windowHeight = 500;
//components
private JFrame frame;
private JList classesList;
private DefaultListModel classesListModel;
public Test()
{
load();
}
private void load()
{
//create window
frame = new JFrame("Test");
frame.setSize(windowWidth, windowHeight);
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
frame.setUndecorated(true);
frame.getRootPane().setWindowDecorationStyle(JRootPane.PLAIN_DIALOG);
//classes list
classesListModel = new DefaultListModel();
classesList = new JList(classesListModel);
classesList.setPrototypeCellValue("prototype value");
classesList.setSelectionMode(ListSelectionModel.SINGLE_SELECTION);
classesList.setVisibleRowCount(20);
JScrollPane scrollClasses = new JScrollPane(classesList, JScrollPane.VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_AS_NEEDED, JScrollPane.HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_AS_NEEDED);
for (int i = 0; i < 200; i++)
{
classesListModel.addElement("this is a long string, does not fit in width");
}
//panel
JPanel drawingArea = new JPanel();
drawingArea.setBackground(Color.white);
drawingArea.add(scrollClasses);
frame.add(drawingArea);
//set visible
frame.setVisible(true);
}
}
Even if you force horizontal scrollbar, you still won't be able to scroll because the element is actually not wider than the width because of the dot (...) wrapping.
Thanks in advance.
Scrollbars appear automatically when the preferred size of the component added to the scrollpane is greater than the size of the scrollpane.
By using the setPrototypeCellValue(...) method you are affecting the way the list calculates its preferred size, which means you are responsible for providing the proper value that ensures the strings will not be truncated.
So the simple solution is not not use that method, but in addition you will need to set the preferred size of the scrollpane to be whatever you want. Then the horizontal scrollbars will appear if required.
My answer to that question is that first find the longest element in the list then use
setPrototype method on that elements
When you call classesList.setPrototypeCellValue("prototype value") you are telling the JList classesList to limit its maximum width to the length of the string "prototype value". (See javadocs)
Then later on when you populate the list with the strings "this is a long string, does not fit in width", no wonder it does not fit in the width! Because the width of the prototype you gave it is smaller than the width of the string you are filling the list with.
The JScrollPane will automatically show the scrollbars and you usually don't need to adjust their behavior. The JList will also automatically adjust its width to try and show the maximum width item in the list. The problem occurs when you tell the JList to fix its width by calling the setPrototypeCellValue().
If you comment out
classesList.setPrototypeCellValue("prototype value");
or replace it with
classesList.setPrototypeCellValue("this is a long string, does not fit in width");
then it will function as you expected it to.
I set my JPanel to GridLayout (6,6), with dimension (600,600)
Each cell of the grid will display one pictures with different widths and heights.
The picture first add to a JLabel, and the JLabel then added to the cells.
How can retrieved the coordinate of the pictures in the cells and not the coordinate of cells? So far the out give these coordinate which equal height and width even on screen the pictures showed in different sizes.
e.g.
java.awt.Rectangle[x=100,y=100,width=100,height=100]
java.awt.Rectangle[x=200,y=100,width=100,height=100]
java.awt.Rectangle[x=300,y=100,width=100,height=100]
The reason why I used GridLayout instead of gridBagLayout is that, I want each pictures to have boundary. If I use GridBagLayout, the grid will expand according to the picture size.
I want grid size to be in fix size.
JPanel pDraw = new JPanel(new GridLayout(6,6));
pDraw.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(600,600));
for (int i =0; i<(6*6); i++)
{
//get random number for height and width of the image
int x = rand.nextInt(40)+(50);
int y = rand.nextInt(40)+(50);
ImageIcon icon = createImageIcon("bird.jpg");
//rescale the image according to the size selected
Image img = icon.getImage().getScaledInstance(x,y,img.SCALE_SMOOTH);
icon.setImage(img );
JLabel label = new JLabel(icon);
pDraw.add(label);
}
for(Component component:components)
{
//retrieve the coordinate
System.out.println(component.getBounds());
}
EDITED: I have tried this but not working :-(
for(Component component: pDraw.getComponents()){
System.out.println(((JLabel)component).getIcon());
}
How can I get output like these?
java.awt.Rectangle[x=300,y=100,width=50,height=40]
java.awt.Rectangle[x=400,y=400,width=60,height=50]
Do your images appear at the desired size ?
i think so.
Anyway, from what your code seems to do, I guess it gets the labels size, and not the icons size. JLabel, like any JComponent, are in fact Container instance. As such, their size depends upon constraints. As a consequence, in a GridLayout, a JLabel will have the size of a cell, whereas the contained Icon will have the size of the image.
As a consquence, to get image size, you have to call ((JLabel) component).getIcon() to be able to retrieve effective image dimension.