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Laying Out Components Within a Container
How to Use FlowLayout
Note: This lesson covers writing layout code by hand, which can be challenging. If you are not interested in learning all the details of layout management, you might prefer to use the GroupLayout layout manager combined with a builder tool to lay out your GUI. One such builder tool is the
NetBeans IDE. Otherwise, if you want to code by hand and do not want to use GroupLayout, then GridBagLayout is recommended as the next most flexible and powerful layout manager.
The
FlowLayout class
provides a very simple layout manager
that is used, by default, by the JPanel objects.
The following figure represents a snapshot of an application that uses the flow layout:
Click the Launch button
to run FlowLayoutDemo using
Java™ Web Start
(download JDK 6).
Alternatively, to compile and run the example yourself,
consult the
example index.
The complete code of this demo is in the
FlowLayoutDemo.java file.
The FlowLayout class puts components in a row,
sized at their preferred size.
If the horizontal space in the container
is too small to put all the components in one row,
the FlowLayout class uses multiple rows.
If the container is wider than necessary
for a row of components,
the row is, by default, centered horizontally within the container.
To specify that the row is to aligned either to the left or right, use
a FlowLayout constructor that takes an alignment argument.
Another constructor of the FlowLayout class specifies
how much vertical or horizontal padding
is put around the components.
The code snippet below creates a FlowLayout object and the components it manages.
FlowLayout experimentLayout = new FlowLayout();
...
compsToExperiment.setLayout(experimentLayout);
compsToExperiment.add(new JButton("Button 1"));
compsToExperiment.add(new JButton("Button 2"));
compsToExperiment.add(new JButton("Button 3"));
compsToExperiment.add(new JButton("Long-Named Button 4"));
compsToExperiment.add(new JButton("5"));
Select either the Left to Right or Right to Left option and click the Apply orientation button to set up the component's orientation.
The following code snippet applies the Left to Right components orientation to the experimentLayout.
compsToExperiment.setComponentOrientation(
ComponentOrientation.LEFT_TO_RIGHT);
The following table lists constructors of the FlowLayout class.
| Constructor |
Purpose |
FlowLayout() |
Constructs a new FlowLayout object with a centered alignment and horizontal and vertical gaps with the default size of 5 pixels. |
FlowLayout(int align) |
Creates a new flow layout manager with the indicated alignment and horizontal and vertical gaps with the default size of 5 pixels.
The alignment argument can be FlowLayout.LEADING, FlowLayout.CENTER, or FlowLayout.TRAILING. When the FlowLayout object controls a container with a left-to right component orientation (the default), the LEADING value specifies the components to be left-aligned and the TRAILING value specifies the components to be right-aligned. |
FlowLayout (int align, int hgap, int vgap) |
Creates a new flow layout manager with the indicated alignment and the indicated horizontal and vertical gaps. The hgap and vgap arguments specify the number of pixels to put between components. |
The following table lists code examples that use the FlowLayout class and
provides links to related sections.