Java Swing JFrame Layout

柔情痞子 提交于 2019-11-28 09:15:53
Ibrahim

Add your components to a JPanel and then add that panel to the ContentPane of JFrame.

JFrame window = new JFrame();
JPanel mainframe = new JPanel();

window.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
window.setBounds(0,0,200,200);

JButton jb = new JButton();
jb.setText("Leech");

mainframe.add(jb);

JTextField link = new JTextField(50);
mainframe.add(link);

window.getContentPane().add(mainframe);
window.pack();
window.setVisible(true);

The default layout on a JFrame is a BorderLayout. Calling the add method on a Container with such a layout is equivalent to a call add(..., BorderLayout.CENTER). Each of the locations of the BorderLayout can contain only one element. Hence making two calls

mainframe.add(jb);
mainframe.add(link);

results in a CENTER containing the last component you added. If you want to avoid this you can either add it to different locations, or use another layout manager (for example a FlowLayout) by calling JFrame#setLayout

Instead of adding directly Components to the JFrame, use a JPanel as container with the desired LayoutManager.

Here you can find several tutorials on layout managers.

Basically in Swing the LayoutManager is responsible for laying out the children Components (establishing their position and their size), so every container component you use inside your app, should be configured with the appropiate LayoutManager.

guest

JFrame's default Layout Manager is BorderLayout. If you want the automatic layout, you may use the FlowLayout:

mainframe.setLayout(new FlowLayout());

If you want to specify coordinates by setBounds() method, you have to cancel the setting of layout manager on JFrame:

mainframe.setLayout(null);
jb.setBounds(10,10,100,50);
link.setBounds(10,70,180,100);

if you see BorderLayout Documentation mainframe.add(jb); is equals to mainframe.add(jb,BorderLayout.CENTER); mainframe.add(link); is equals to mainframe.add(jb,BorderLayout.CENTER);

so it just show the last one

You can also use something like Flow Layout which is the default layout used by JPanel. It is used to arrange components in a line or a row. For example from left to right or from right to left:

Flow layout arranges components in line and if no space left all remaining components goes to next line. Align property determines alignment of the components as left, right, center etc.

To use it you will need to set JFrame layout by using JFrame.setLayout(layout) and to pass flow layout as a parameter.

Following example shows components arranged in flow layout:

package example.com;

import java.awt.BorderLayout;
import java.awt.FlowLayout;
import javax.swing.JButton;
import javax.swing.JFrame;

public class FlowLayoutExample {

    FlowLayoutExample(){
        JFrame frame = new JFrame("Flow Layout");
        JButton button, button1, button2, button3, button4;
        button = new JButton("button 1");
        button1 = new JButton("button 2");
        button2 = new JButton("button 3");
        button3 = new JButton("button 4");
        button4 = new JButton("button 5");
        frame.add(button);
        frame.add(button1);
        frame.add(button2);
        frame.add(button3);
        frame.add(button4);
        frame.setLayout(new FlowLayout());
        frame.setSize(300,300);  
        frame.setVisible(true);  

    }
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        new FlowLayoutExample();
    }
}

Check out to learn more about JFrame layouts.

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