GridLayout
GridLayout
arranges components into regularly spaced rows and columns. The
components are arbitrarily resized to fit the grid; their minimum and
preferred sizes are consequently ignored.
GridLayout is most useful for arranging
identically sized objects—perhaps a set of
JPanels, each using a different layout manager.
GridLayout takes the number of rows and columns in
its constructor. If you subsequently give it too many objects to
manage, it adds extra columns to make the objects fit. You can also
set the number of rows or columns to zero, which means that you
don’t care how many elements the layout manager packs in that
dimension. For example, GridLayout(2,0) requests a
layout with two rows and an unlimited number of columns; if you put
ten components into this layout, you’ll get two rows of five
columns each.[45]
The following example sets a GridLayout with three
rows and two columns as its layout manager; the results are shown in
Figure 16.3.
//file: Grid.java import java.awt.*; import java.awt.event.*; import javax.swing.*; public class Grid extends JPanel { public Grid( ) { setLayout(new GridLayout(3, 2)); add(new JButton("One")); add(new JButton("Two")); add(new JButton("Three")); add(new JButton("Four")); add(new JButton("Five")); } public static void main(String[] args) { JFrame f = new JFrame("Grid"); f.addWindowListener(new WindowAdapter( ) { public void windowClosing(WindowEvent e) { System.exit(0); } }); f.setSize(200, 200); f.setLocation(200, 200); f.setContentPane(new ...Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
and much more.
Read now
Unlock full access