- Don't use setLocation, setBounds, null layouts or absolute positioning.
- Instead use the layout managers including perhaps nested JPanels, each using its own layout manager to achieve pleasing easy to maintain GUI's.
- For more help, show a picture of what you're trying to achieve, what you actually are achieving, and post a minimal working example, code that is small, that compiles and runs, and shows us your problem.
e.g.,
import java.awt.GridBagConstraints;
import java.awt.GridBagLayout;
import java.awt.Insets;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;
import javax.swing.*;
@SuppressWarnings("serial")
public class InputForm extends JPanel {
private static final int COLUMNS = 10;
private static final int GAP = 3;
private static final Insets LABEL_INSETS = new Insets(GAP, GAP, GAP, 15);
private static final Insets TEXTFIELD_INSETS = new Insets(GAP, GAP, GAP, GAP);
private String[] labelTexts;
private Map<String, JTextField> fieldMap = new HashMap<String, JTextField>();
public InputForm(String[] labelTexts) {
this.labelTexts = labelTexts;
setLayout(new GridBagLayout());
for (int i = 0; i < labelTexts.length; i++) {
String text = labelTexts[i];
JTextField field = new JTextField(COLUMNS);
fieldMap.put(text, field);
addLabel(text, i);
addTextField(field, i);
}
}
public String[] getLabelTexts() {
return labelTexts;
}
private void addTextField(JTextField field, int row) {
GridBagConstraints gbc = new GridBagConstraints();
gbc.gridwidth = 1;
gbc.gridheight = 1;
gbc.gridx = 1;
gbc.gridy = row;
gbc.anchor = GridBagConstraints.EAST;
gbc.fill = GridBagConstraints.HORIZONTAL;
gbc.insets = TEXTFIELD_INSETS;
gbc.weightx = 1.0;
gbc.weighty = 1.0;
add(field, gbc);
}
private void addLabel(String text, int row) {
GridBagConstraints gbc = new GridBagConstraints();
gbc.gridwidth = 1;
gbc.gridheight = 1;
gbc.gridx = 0;
gbc.gridy = row;
gbc.anchor = GridBagConstraints.WEST;
gbc.fill = GridBagConstraints.BOTH;
gbc.insets = LABEL_INSETS;
gbc.weightx = 1.0;
gbc.weighty = 1.0;
add(new JLabel(text), gbc);
}
public String getFieldText(String key) {
String text = "";
JTextField field = fieldMap.get(key);
if (field != null) {
text = field.getText();
}
return text;
}
private static void createAndShowGui() {
String[] labelTexts = new String[] { "Width of Frame:",
"Height of Frame:", "# OF Balls:", "Color:" };
InputForm inputForm = new InputForm(labelTexts);
int result = JOptionPane.showConfirmDialog(null, inputForm, "Input Form",
JOptionPane.OK_CANCEL_OPTION, JOptionPane.PLAIN_MESSAGE);
if (result == JOptionPane.OK_OPTION) {
for (String text : labelTexts) {
System.out.printf("%20s %s%n", text, inputForm.getFieldText(text));
}
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
createAndShowGui();
}
});
}
}
Which will display like so:
The beauty of this code, is if you wish to add another field, say a line thickness field, and want to add it so that it is second to last, then the only change needed to the code would be to change this:
String[] labelTexts = new String[] { "Width of Frame:",
"Height of Frame:", "# OF Balls:", "Color:" };
to this:
String[] labelTexts = new String[] { "Width of Frame:",
"Height of Frame:", "# OF Balls:", "Line Thickness:", "Color:" };
Which results in:
No need to have to calculate how to change the Color label or JTextField's locations as the layout manager does all the hard work for you.
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