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I have created a Java application (project) in NetBeans, in which I have designed a JFrame with menu bar, and different JPanels. I want these JPanels to appear inside the JFrame on action of different menu items, so that whenever the menu items are clicked different JPanels should appear inside the JFrame. I have designed both JFrame & JPanel separately, but I couldn't link them together.

Please help me out friends.

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Your use of multiple JPanels is unconventional. Have you considered a JTabbedPane instead? – Zach Scrivena Jan 30 at 11:42

5 Answers

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You could use Card Layout for this. A Card Layout can contain many components (JPanel in your case), and you can switch between them. It's easy to add a card layout in the netbeans palette.

Doc:

http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/api/java/awt/CardLayout.html

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the problem is not with the layout, actually after clicking on the menu item, its not doing ANYTHING means it does not perform any action, in action performed i used "new JPanel1();", is tht correct, or what else should i add in the code to add JPanel in JFrame during run time. – Gaurav Jan 30 at 12:32
You could have all your panels created at creation of the frame. I would maybe suggest that you have a main panel with a CardLayout: mainPanel.setLayout(new java.awt.CardLayout()); then you could just: mainPanel.add("new", new); where new is a JPanel – Yngve Sneen Lindal Jan 30 at 14:23
To change your view to the panel "new" you do: CardLayout layout = (CardLayout) mainPanel.getLayout(); layout.show(mainPanel, "new"); This would be the code in your action listener. Maybe there's some other more elegant ways to do this, but this will work. – Yngve Sneen Lindal Jan 30 at 14:25
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It appears from one of your comments that you wish to dynamically create the JPanels when the buttons are clicked. If this is the case then CardLayout is not ideal. It is relatively easy to achieve the same effect yourself. The code will look something like this:

public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent event) {
    Container contentPane = frame.getContentPane();
    contentPane.removeAll();
    contentPane.add(new YourPanel());
    contentPane.invalidate();
    contentPane.repaint();
}

That assumes that the changing panel is the only component in the frame. If it is not then add a JPanel with a BorderLayout to the content pane in Matisse and then add the new panels to that rather than the content pane.

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If you want the menus to react to clicks, you need to add Listeners to the menu items, Which in response will show the correct panel.

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The Matisse GUI builder has pretty good support for the "JTabbedPane" control, if that's what you're looking for. You can drag the TabbedPane container into your forms, then drag other containers onto it to create new tabs.

If you're looking for more advanced behavior, such as hiding/showing different containers when the user presses different buttons, you will need to write some code; the GUI builder isn't equipped to handle this.

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after changing the panel in JFrame do the frameObj.pack();

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