Question

So I have a class called CalendarPanel that extends JPanel. It uses a null layout. How would I use CalendarPanel as a regular component? When I put it in another JPanel and then add it to a window, it disappears. It is only visible when I add it directly to a window.

EDIT: And yes, I realize using a JPanel with a null layout is bad practice. CalendarPanel is actually someone else's code, and I'm trying to use it for my purposes without having to refactor it.

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Solution

It is only visible when I add it directly to a window.

That is because a window uses a BorderLayout by default and will automatically resize the panel to fit in the window.

When I put it in another JPanel and then add it to a window, it disappears.

The is because a JPanel uses a FlowLayout by default and a flow layout respects the preferred size of the components added to it. Since you are using a null layout your panel doesn't have a preferred size so nothing gets painted.

That is why you should NOT use null layout. Instead use layout managers because they do all this extra work for you.

OTHER TIPS

NOTE: it is a very bad idea in general to use a null layout. Use a LayoutManager instead.

If you insist on using a null layout, you're going to have to position the JPanel manually as mentioned in the documentation. Here's an example.

enter image description here

import java.awt.BorderLayout;
import java.awt.FlowLayout;
import java.awt.event.ActionEvent;
import java.awt.event.ActionListener;

import javax.swing.JButton;
import javax.swing.JFrame;
import javax.swing.JPanel;
import javax.swing.JTextField;
import javax.swing.SwingUtilities;

public class Test extends JFrame {
   static int defaultX = 10;
   static int defaultY = 10;
   static int defaultW = 150;
   static int defaultH = 50;

   public Test() {
      super("Test");
      setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);

      // here is the outer JPanel
      final JPanel outer = new JPanel(new BorderLayout());
      JPanel inner = new JPanel(new BorderLayout());
      // here is the main component we want to see
      // when the outer panel is added to the null layout
      JButton mainComponent = new JButton("Test");
      inner.add("Center", mainComponent);
      outer.add("Center", inner);

      JPanel c = (JPanel)getContentPane();

      // This panel has a null layout!
      final JPanel nullLayoutPanel = new JPanel();
      nullLayoutPanel.setLayout(null);
      c.add("Center", nullLayoutPanel);

      // set the bounds of the outer panel manually
      // when using the null layout!
      nullLayoutPanel.add(outer);
      outer.setBounds(defaultX, defaultY, defaultW, defaultH);

      JPanel controlPanel = new JPanel(new FlowLayout(FlowLayout.CENTER, 10, 10));
      final JTextField x = new JTextField(""+defaultX, 3);
      final JTextField y = new JTextField(""+defaultY, 3);
      final JTextField w = new JTextField(""+defaultW, 3);
      final JTextField h = new JTextField(""+defaultH, 3);
      JButton b = new JButton("Resize");
      b.addActionListener(
         new ActionListener() {
            public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
               try {
                  outer.setBounds(
                        Integer.parseInt(x.getText()),
                        Integer.parseInt(y.getText()),
                        Integer.parseInt(w.getText()),
                        Integer.parseInt(h.getText())
                  );
                  outer.revalidate();
               } catch(Exception ex) {}
            }
         }
      );
      controlPanel.add(x);
      controlPanel.add(y);
      controlPanel.add(w);
      controlPanel.add(h);
      controlPanel.add(b);
      c.add("South", controlPanel);
   }

    public static void main(String[] argv) {
       SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
          public void run() {
             Test p = new Test();
             p.setSize(300, 200);
             p.setVisible(true);
          }
      });
    }
}
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