1

The JMenu behaves normally until a JButton is used to update a JTable on the JFrame. Then the JMenu is mostly hidden by a JPanel (see images below). Shouldn't the JMenu always be on top when it is selected? Why has it been pushed to the back? The code that updates the table on jButtonAddActionPerformed is.

public class MyClass extends javax.swing.JFrame {
    private void jButtonAddActionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {
        DefaultTableModel model = (DefaultTableModel) jTable.getModel();
        model.addRow(new Object[]{"", DEFAULT_ON, DEFAULT_OFF});
        int lastRow = jTable.getRowCount() - 1;
        jTable.setValueAt(lastRow + 1, lastRow, 0);
    }                                                  
...

Expected

alt text

Broken

alt text

3
  • How was this JPanel added? Can you share that code? Oct 12, 2010 at 14:46
  • It looks like you are mixing AWT and Swing code.
    – Goibniu
    Oct 12, 2010 at 14:50
  • @Faisal. I am just using the GUI from current version of NetBeans to add components. Using a JLabel instead of a JPanel fixed it.
    – jacknad
    Oct 12, 2010 at 15:47

2 Answers 2

5

Probably because you are using a Canvas when you should be using a JPanel. Canvas is an AWT component and is painted on top of Swing components. Don't use AWT components in a Swing application.

Edit:

If you really need to use an AWT component then you need a current release of the JDK. See Mixing Heavy and Light Components.

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  • Using a JLabel instead of a JPanel fixed it.
    – jacknad
    Oct 12, 2010 at 15:47
3

I'd suggest reading Mixing Heavyweight and Lightweight Components for more information.

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