I need to totally align components to the JTextArea components, I am currently using a BoxLayout and I already used the setAlignmentX and setHorizontalAlignment to LEFT but it's not working. Here I upload an image to make clearer what I mean. For example look at "+ Pla PLAMARC" it's clearly not aligned with the text area component.
By the moment this is the code:
//Declarations
private JLabel nomPla;
private JTextArea infoPla;
private JScrollPane textAreaScroll;
//Inside the constructor
nomPla = new JLabel();
infoPla = new JTextArea(2, 50);
textAreaScroll = new JScrollPane(infoPla);
this.setLayout(new BoxLayout(this, BoxLayout.Y_AXIS));
nomPla.setAlignmentX(Component.LEFT_ALIGNMENT);
nomPla.setHorizontalAlignment(nomPla.LEFT);
textAreaScroll.setAlignmentX(Component.CENTER_ALIGNMENT);
this.setBorder(new EmptyBorder(new Insets(25, 25, 25, 25)));
this.add(nomPla, BorderLayout.NORTH);
this.add(textAreaScroll, BorderLayout.NORTH); //Orientacions
I am clearly telling nomPla to be on the leftside, but this is not the same as the JTextArea.
How is this done then?
I already used the setAlignmentX and
The setAlignmentX(...) needs to be applied to all the components you add to the BoxLayout if you want all to be left aligned with respect to the BoxLayout.
Edit:
I just want the labels to be on the left side, not the JTextArea components..
Then you need to use a wrapper panel for the BoxLayout Panel.
For example:
JPanel wrapper = new JPanel( new FlowLayout(FlowLayout.CENTER) );
wrapper.add(yourBoxLayoutPanel);
frame.add(wrapper);
Now all the components in the BoxLayout will be left aligned and the BoxLayout panel will be center aligned in the wrapper panel.
Layout management is about nesting panels with different layout manager to achieve you desired effect.
I'm trying Swing programming but I can't do what I want.
I would like to place a top bar button with 2 lines of button but I just have 1 line in my case.
Here is my code:
Container contentPane = getContentPane();
contentPane.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
setMinimumSize(new Dimension(1000,500));
setMaximumSize(new Dimension(1000,500));
JPanel panelButton = new JPanel();
JPanel panelTopButton = new JPanel();
JPanel panelBottomButton = new JPanel();
panelTopButton.add(dashboard);
panelTopButton.add(journal);
panelTopButton.add(myPlans);
panelTopButton.add(myFavorites);
panelTopButton.add(shoppingCart);
panelBottomButton.add(profile);
panelBottomButton.add(notifications);
panelButton.add(panelTopButton, BorderLayout.NORTH);
panelButton.add(panelBottomButton, BorderLayout.SOUTH);
contentPane.add(panelButton,BorderLayout.NORTH);
//Display
setSize(400,120);
setVisible(true);
setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
I have this
And I want this
Can somebody help me?
You need one panel for each line.
Try to do this:
JPanel panelButtonsL1 = new JPanel();
JPanel panelButtonsL2 = new JPanel();
panelButtonsL1.add(dashboard);
panelButtonsL1.add(journal);
panelButtonsL1.add(myPlans);
panelButtonsL1.add(myFavorites);
panelButtonsL1.add(shoppingCart);
panelButtonsL2.add(profile);
panelButtonsL2.add(notifications);
The default layour of JPanel is FlowLayout. Bear in mind that layout is very important to work with swing component disposition.
Define the bottom panel as GridLayout.
JPanel panelButton = new JPanel(new GridLayout(2, 1)); // 2 rows x 1 column
panelButton.add(panelButtonsL1);
panelButton.add(panelButtonsL2);
Details of GridLayout you can find on API.
You can achieve that using a GridLayout: assign a GridLayout to panelButton with two rows and one column, and then add the two panels to it.
According to what you want there is a simpler alternative by continue using the default FlowLayout from the panel. It is more appropriate than using GridLayout since you wanted the last 2 buttons to move to the next row and center itself.
If you use GridLayout, the buttons at the next row are likely going to be directly below one of the buttons above. Here are 2 ways to get what you want.
Method 1. Reduce the width of the main panel holding your buttons:
Dosing so, you will have to add the main panel using BorderLayout.CENTER.
Method 2. Add the buttons to a sub-panel of smaller width and add it to the main panel. All your buttons will be added to the smaller sub-panel:
I am making a copy of the apple calendar application, and I am having trouble aligning the month name and year name with the center of my screen, while aligning the left and right buttons with the left and right sides of the screen. Here is my code:
final JPanel months = new JPanel();
months.setLayout(new BoxLayout(months,BoxLayout.X_AXIS));
months.add(back, BorderLayout.WEST); //back is a JButton
JLabel monthName = new JLabel(this.monthNames[this.month]+" ", SwingConstants.CENTER);
JLabel year = new JLabel("" + this.year, SwingConstants.CENTER);
monthName.setFont(new Font("Helvetica", 0, 24));
year.setFont(new Font("Helvetica", 0, 24));
monthName.setHorizontalAlignment(JLabel.CENTER);
months.add(monthName, BorderLayout.CENTER);
months.add(year, BorderLayout.CENTER);
months.add(front, BorderLayout.EAST);
add(months);
Yet it shows up like this:
months.setLayout(new BoxLayout(months,BoxLayout.X_AXIS));
You are using a BoxLayout. A BoxLayout just adds the components horizontally to the panel. The WEST, CENTER, EAST constrains are only used by a BorderLayout so they are ignored by the BoxLayout.
months.add(monthName, BorderLayout.CENTER);
months.add(year, BorderLayout.CENTER);
When using a BorderLayout you can only add a single component to a region of the layout. So if you want to add two components to the CENTER you need to first create a panel and add the components to the panel.
So your basic code might be something like:
JPanel centerPanel = new JPanel();
centerPanel.add(month);
centerPanel.add(year);
JPanel mainPanel = new JPanel( new BorderLayout() );
mainPanel.add(westButton, BorderLayout.WEST);
mainPanel.add(centerPanel, BorderLayout.CENTER);
mainPanel.add(eastButton, BorderLayout.EAST);
In jframe, I use miglayout for main jpanel position.
in the left panel, I have 2 jpanel, I use boxlayout.
ComponentPanel is the top left position and PropertyPanel is at the bottom left position.
leftPanel = new JPanel();
leftPanel.setLayout(new BoxLayout(leftPanel, BoxLayout.Y_AXIS));
leftPanel.setMinimumSize(new Dimension(600, 600));
add(leftPanel, BorderLayout.WEST);
componentPanel = new ComponentPanel();
propertyPanel = new PropertyPanel();
in the propertyPanel constructor, i do
setLayout(new MigLayout("debug"));
i get this
why panel is setted to right?
if i add dynamically some space is added.
I tried to use fill to the miglayout constructor without success.
in green is the leftPanel
in red is the componentPanel
http://imagepaste.nullnetwork.net/img/1354548433miglayout3.jpg
Using BorderLayout instead of BoxLayout seem better...
leftPanel.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
leftPanel.add(componentPanel, BorderLayout.NORTH);
leftPanel.add(propertyPanel,BorderLayout.SOUTH);
BoxLayout problem?
I have written a code in java using swing, so that I will have a JscrollPane added to JPanel and then I will add buttons of fixed size to JPanel in vertical fashion
JPanel panel=new JPanel();
panel.setBackground(Color.WHITE);
int v=ScrollPaneConstants.VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_ALWAYS;
int h=ScrollPaneConstants.HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_ALWAYS;
JScrollPane jsp=new JScrollPane(panel,v,h);
jsp.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(600,600));
jsp.setBounds(150,670,850,200);
frame.add(jsp);
then I am adding buttons to it at run time.
for(i=0;i<n;i++)
{
button[i]=new JButton();
button[i].setBounds(20,y,120,120);
button[i].setSize(120,120);
button[i].setToolTipText(file[i].toString());
button[i].setIcon(Icon);
panel.add(button[i]);
y=y+140;
}
I want to add a buttons one below the other...(i.e I want a vertical scrollbar)
i.e. button1
button2
'
'
but above code is giving me buttons in a line (i.e. I am getting horizontal scrollbar)
i.e. button1 button2...
another problem is the size of the buttons. Using btn.setSize() is not affecting size at all...
can anybody help me?
You must use an appropriate Layoutmanager like GridLayout, Boxlayout or GridBagLayout for the panel.
It depends what else you want to put into the panel.
GridLayout is easier to use IMO:
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
panel.setLayout(new GridLayout(0, 1)); // any number of rows, 1 column
...
panel.add(button[i]);
BoxLayout is almost as easy:
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
panel.setLayout(new BoxLayout(panel, BoxLayout.Y_AXIS));
...
panel.add(button[i]);
GridBagLayout is more powerful, allowing more than one column, components spanning more than one cell, ... needs a GridBagConstraints to add the elements:
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
panel.setLayout(new GridBagLayout());
GridBagConstraints constraints = new GridBagConstraints(
0, RELATIVE, // x = 0, y = below previous element
1, 1, // cell width = 1, cell height = 1
0.0, 0.0 // how to distribute space: weightx = 0.0, weighty = 0,0
GridBagConstraints.CENTER, // anchor
GridBagConstraints.BOTH, // fill
new Insets(0, 0, 0, 0), // cell insets
0, 0); // internal padding
...
panel.add(button[i], constraints);
Have a look at this tutorial: Laying Out Components Within a Container (The visual guide is a good start point)
EDIT:
you can also lay out the components by hand, that is, specify the location and size of each component in the container. For this you must set the LayoutManager to null so the default manager gets removed.
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
panel.setLayout(null);
...
button[i].setLocation(x, y);
button[i].setSize(width, heigth);
// OR button[i].setBounds(x, y, width, height);
panel.add(button[i]);
You need to define an appropriate LayoutManager for your JPanel, which is responsible for how the Components added to it are positioned. The default LayoutManager is FlowLayout, which lays out Components left-to-right. For laying out Components vertically you should consider using BoxLayout or GridBagLayout.
You have to set LayoutManager for JPanel or use Box(BoxLayout.Y_AXIS) instead.
For the size of buttons use preferredSize
For your layout problem you need to change the layout manager to one that does a vertical layout. For playing around purposes you can use BoxLayout like this:
panel.setLayout(new BoxLayout(panel, BoxLayout.Y_AXIS));
This is much easier if you let the layout manager do its work.
In Swing, the way the components are layout over other component ( a panel for instance ) is using a layout manager.
It is used to avoid having to compute the coordinates of all the components against each other each time the container component resizes, or a new component is added.
There are different layout mangers, the one that you need here is BoxLayout.
By using this layout you don't need to specify the button position, nor its size. The layout manager query each component and use that information to place them in the correct position and size.
For instance the following frame
Was created this ( modified version of your ) code:
import javax.swing.*;
import java.awt.*;
public class ScrollTest {
private JPanel panel;
private Icon[] icons = new Icon[3];
public void main() {
panel =new JPanel();
// Use top to bottom layout in a column
panel.setLayout( new BoxLayout( panel, BoxLayout.Y_AXIS ));
panel.setBackground(Color.WHITE);
int v=ScrollPaneConstants.VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_ALWAYS;
int h=ScrollPaneConstants.HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_ALWAYS;
JScrollPane jsp=new JScrollPane(panel,v,h);
jsp.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(600,600));
jsp.setBounds(150,670,850,200);
JFrame frame = new JFrame();
frame.add(jsp);
// my addition to load sample icons
loadImages();
// simulate dynamic buttons
addButtons();
frame.pack();
frame.setVisible( true );
}
void loadImages() {
icons[0] = new ImageIcon( "a.png" );
icons[1] = new ImageIcon( "b.png" );
icons[2] = new ImageIcon( "c.png" );
}
void addButtons() {
for( int i = 0 ; i < icons.length ; i++ ) {
JButton button = new JButton();
Icon icon = icons[i];
button.setIcon( icon );
// Set the button size to be the same as the icon size
// The preferred size is used by the layout manager
// to know what the component "better" size is.
button.setPreferredSize( new Dimension( icon.getIconWidth(),
icon.getIconHeight() ) );
// This is IMPORTANT. The maximum size is used bythe layout manager
// to know "how big" could this component be.
button.setMaximumSize( button.getPreferredSize() );
panel.add( button );
}
}
public static void main( String ... args ) {
new ScrollTest().main();
}
}
I hope this helps.
One can also get a vertical scrolling for JPanel with SpringLayout. It's possible if panel's vertical size will be defined by setting a constraint SpringLayout.SOUTH. This can be done like this:
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
SpringLayout panelLayout = new SpringLayout();
panel.setLayout(panelLayout);
// Adding components to the panel here
// .....
// That's what defines panel's exact size and makes its scrolling possible
panelLayout.putConstraint(SpringLayout.SOUTH, panel, 0,
SpringLayout.SOUTH, lastComponentOfThePanel);
JScrollPane panelScrollPane = new JScrollPane(panel);
where lastComponentOfThePanel is a component at the bottom of a panel.
Hope this will help somebody. In my opinion, SpringLayout is very powerful layout manager, and sometimes it's very difficult or almost impossible to replace this one with GridBagLayout.
What about?
JScrollPane scrollPane = new JScrollPane(yourpanel);
container.add(scrollPane);