From the layout manual:
A JavaFX application can manually lay out the UI by setting the position and size properties for each UI element. However, an easier option is to make use of layout panes. The JavaFX SDK provides several layout panes for the easy setup and management of classic layouts such as rows, columns, stacks, tiles, and others. As a window is resized, the layout pane automatically repositions and resizes the nodes that it contains according to the properties for the nodes.
There are 6 Panels in javaFX such as: BorderPane, StackPane, GridPane, FlowPane,TilePane and AnchorPane.
StackPane
Stack pane allows you to place many nodes one on top of an other.
StackPane root = new StackPane();
Button btn1 = new Button(" 1 ");
Button btn2 = new Button("22222222");
root.getChildren().addAll(btn2, btn1);
root.setStyle("-fx-background-color: #87CEFA;");
GridPane
GridPane allows you to create a flexible grid of rows and columns and position each node in exact place.
GridPane grid = new GridPane();
grid.setPadding(new Insets(10, 10, 10, 10));
grid.setMinSize(300, 300);
grid.setVgap(5);
grid.setHgap(5);
Text username = new Text("Username:");
grid.add(username, 0, 0);
TextField text = new TextField();
text.setPrefColumnCount(10);
grid.add(text, 1, 0);
Text password = new Text("Password:");
grid.add(password, 0, 1);
TextField text2 = new TextField();
text2.setPrefColumnCount(10);
grid.add(text2, 1, 1);
grid.setStyle("-fx-background-color: #D8BFD8");
FlowPane
Flow Pane lays all nodes one after an other in the order they were added.
FlowPane flow = new FlowPane();
flow.setPadding(new Insets(10, 10, 10, 10));
flow.setStyle("-fx-background-color: DAE6F3;");
flow.setHgap(5);
flow.getChildren().addAll(left, center);
TilePane
TilePane is similar to the flow pane. All nodes are placed in a grid in the same order they were added.
TilePane tile = new TilePane();
tile.setPadding(new Insets(10, 10, 10, 10));
tile.setPrefColumns(2);
tile.setStyle("-fx-background-color: #CD5C5C;");
HBox hbox2 = new HBox(8); // spacing = 8
hbox2.getChildren().addAll(top, left, center);
tile.getChildren().add(hbox2);
AnchorPane
AnchorPane allows you to position nodes in the top, bottom, left side, right side, or center of the pane.
AnchorPane anchorpane = new AnchorPane();
Button buttonSave = new Button("Save");
Button buttonCancel = new Button("Cancel");
anchorpane.setStyle("-fx-background-color: #A9A9A9;");
HBox hb = new HBox();
hb.getChildren().addAll(buttonSave, buttonCancel);
anchorpane.getChildren().addAll(hb);
anchorpane.setMinSize(300, 100);
AnchorPane.setRightAnchor(hb, 10.0);
BorderPane
BorderPane splits the scene in five regions such as: top, bottom, left, right, and center. Where you can adjust added nodes. BorderPane also allows you to add different panes in each region as shown in my example. However you cannot use the same pane more than once.
BorderPane pane = new BorderPane();
pane.setLeft(anchorpane);
pane.setCenter(root);
pane.setRight(grid);
pane.setTop(flow);
pane.setBottom(tile);
Scene scene = new Scene(pane, 300, 250);
Pane
is a UI element ("Node") that contains other UI elements ("child nodes") and manages the layout of those nodes within thePane
. There are several predefinedPane
types (subclasses ofPane
) that differ in how they lay out their child nodes.