3

When I use the code below it doesn't alter the size at all, it still fills the area in the grid.

JPanel displayPanel = new JPanel(new GridLayout(4, 2));

JTextField titleText = new JTextField("title");

displayPanel.add(titleText);

titleText.setSize(200, 24);

4 Answers 4

18

From the api on GridLayout:

The container is divided into equal-sized rectangles, and one component is placed in each rectangle.

Try using FlowLayout or GridBagLayout for your set size to be meaningful. Also, @Serplat is correct. You need to use setPreferredSize( Dimension ) instead of setSize( int, int ).

    JPanel displayPanel = new JPanel();
    // JPanel displayPanel = new JPanel( new GridLayout( 4, 2 ) );
    // JPanel displayPanel = new JPanel( new BorderLayout() );
    // JPanel displayPanel = new JPanel( new GridBagLayout() );

    JTextField titleText = new JTextField( "title" );

    titleText.setPreferredSize( new Dimension( 200, 24 ) );

    // For FlowLayout and GridLayout, uncomment:
    displayPanel.add( titleText );

    // For BorderLayout, uncomment:
    // displayPanel.add( titleText, BorderLayout.NORTH );

    // For GridBagLayout, uncomment:
    // displayPanel.add( titleText, new GridBagConstraints( 0, 0, 1, 1, 1.0,
    // 1.0, GridBagConstraints.CENTER, GridBagConstraints.NONE,
    // new Insets( 0, 0, 0, 0 ), 0, 0 ) );
2
  • I like the GridBagLayout after doing a bit of research on it. However, what do the two sets of numbers mean? The ones after the first bracket and the ones in and around Insets?
    – Jon
    Nov 30, 2010 at 11:16
  • The api will explain it better than I: download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/awt/… Nov 30, 2010 at 18:12
2

With a BorderLayout you need to use setPreferredSize instead of setSize

1

Try to play with

setMinSize()
setMaxSize()
setPreferredSize()

These method are used by layout when it decide what should be the size of current element. The layout manager calls setSize() and actually overrides your values.

1

Any component added to the GridLayout will be resized to the same size as the largest component added. If you want a component to remain at its preferred size, then wrap that component in a JPanel and then the panel will be resized:

JPanel displayPanel = new JPanel(new GridLayout(4, 2)); 
JTextField titleText = new JTextField("title"); 
JPanel wrapper = new JPanel( new FlowLayout(0, 0, FlowLayout.LEADING) );
wrapper.add( titleText );
displayPanel.add(wrapper); 
//displayPanel.add(titleText); 

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