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How to Use Scroll Panes (The Java™ Tutorials >
Creating a GUI with JFC/Swing > Using Swing Components)
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Creating a GUI with JFC/Swing
>
Using Swing Components
How to Use Scroll Panes
A
JScrollPane provides a scrollable view of a component.
When screen real estate is limited,
use a scroll pane to display
a component that is large or
one whose size can change dynamically.
Other containers used to save screen space include
split panes and
tabbed panes.
The code to create a scroll pane can be minimal.
For example, here's a picture of a demo program that
puts a text area in a scroll pane
because the text area's size grows dynamically
as text is appended to it:
Here's the code
that creates the text area,
makes it the scroll pane's client,
and adds the scroll pane to a container:
//In a container that uses a BorderLayout:
textArea = new JTextArea(5, 30);
...
JScrollPane scrollPane = new JScrollPane(textArea);
...
setPreferredSize(new Dimension(450, 110));
...
add(scrollPane, BorderLayout.CENTER);
The boldface line of code
creates the JScrollPane,
specifying the text area as the scroll pane's client.
The program doesn't invoke any methods on the JScrollPane object,
since the scroll pane handles everything automatically:
creating the scroll bars when necessary,
redrawing the client when the user moves the scroll knobs,
and so on.
You might have noticed that the preceding code
sets the preferred size of the scroll pane's container.
In the Java look and feel,
this preferred size happens to be a bit less tall
than required for the text area to display the 5 rows that we requested
when creating it,
so the scroll bar initially displays a vertical scroll bar.
If we didn't restrict the size of the scroll pane's container,
the scroll pane would be big enough
for the text area to display the full 5 rows and 30 columns
specified with the JTextArea constructor.
Refer to
Sizing a Scroll Pane
for information about techniques
for making a scroll pane the size you want.
The rest of this section discusses the following topics:
How a Scroll Pane Works
Here is a snapshot of an application
that uses a customized scroll pane
to view a large photograph:
The scroll pane in this application looks very different
from the one in the previous demo program.
Rather than displaying text, this scroll pane contains a large image.
The scroll pane also has two scroll bars, a row header, a column header,
and four corners, three of which have been customized.
Try this::
- Click the Launch button to run the Scrollpane Demo using
Java™ Web Start (download JDK 6).
Alternatively, to compile and run the example yourself,
consult the
example index.
- Move the knobs on the scroll bars.
Watch the image scroll and the horizontal and vertical rulers scroll along.
- If you have a mouse with a wheel
(which is generally between the mouse buttons)
use the mouse wheel to scroll the image vertically.
- Click the cm toggle in the upper left corner
of the scroll pane.
The units on the row and column headers change to inches
(or back to centimeters).
- Click the arrow buttons on the scroll bars.
Also, try clicking on the track above or below the knob
on the vertical scroll bar, or to the left or right of the horizontal one.
- Move the cursor over the image and press the cursor.
Continuing to press the cursor, drag to a point outside the image
and pause.
The visible area of the image moves toward the cursor.
This scroll-by-dragging functionality is enabled by
the scroll pane, and with the
JComponent API,
but it is implemented by the custom component
that displays the image.
- Resize the window.
Notice that the scroll bars disappear when the scroll pane
is large enough to display the entire image
and reappear again when the scroll pane is too small to
show the entire image.
The ScrollDemo program establishes the scroll pane's client
when creating the scroll pane:
//Where the member variables are declared:
private ScrollablePicture picture;
...
//Where the GUI is created:
picture = new ScrollablePicture( ... );
JScrollPane pictureScrollPane = new JScrollPane(picture);
The scroll pane's client is also known as the
view or viewport view.
You can change the client dynamically by calling the
setViewportView method.
Note that JScrollPane
has no corresponding
getViewportView method.
If you need to refer to the client object again,
you can either
cache it in a variable
or invoke getViewport().getViewportView()
on the scroll pane.
When the user manipulates the scroll bars in a scroll pane,
the area of the client that is visible changes accordingly.
This picture shows the relationship between the scroll pane
and its client and indicates the
classes that the scroll pane commissions to help:
A scroll pane uses a
JViewport instance to manage the visible area of the client.
The viewport is responsible for
for positioning and sizing the client,
based on the positions
of the scroll bars,
and displaying it.
A scroll pane may use two separate instances of
JScrollBar for the scroll bars. The scroll bars provide the
interface for the user to manipulate the visible area.
The following figure shows the three areas of a scroll bar:
the knob (sometimes called the thumb), the (arrow) buttons, and the track.
When the user moves the knob on the vertical scroll bar up and down,
the visible area of the client moves up and down. Similarly, when the user
moves the knob on the horizontal scroll bar to the right and
left, the visible area of the client moves back and forth accordingly.
The position of the knob relative to its track
is proportionally equal to
the position of the visible area relative to the client.
In the Java look and feel and some others,
the size of the knob gives a visual clue
as to how much of the client is visible.
By clicking a arrow button,
the user can scroll by a unit increment.
By clicking within the track,
the user can scroll by a block increment.
If the user has a mouse with a wheel,
then the user can scroll vertically using the mouse wheel.
The amount that the mouse wheel scrolls
is platform dependent.
For example, by default on Windows XP,
the mouse wheel scrolls three unit increments;
the Mouse control panel allows you
to specify a different number of unit increments
or to use a block increment instead.
More information about unit and block increments is in
Implementing a Scrolling-Savvy Client.
Typical programs don't directly instantiate or
call methods on a viewport or scroll bar.
Instead, programs achieve their scrolling
behavior using the JScrollPane API
and the API discussed in
Implementing a Scrolling-Savvy Client.
Some scrolling-savvy components such as
JList, JTable,
and JTree also provide
additional API
to help you affect their scrolling behavior.
Setting the Scroll Bar Policy
On startup, the scroll pane in the ScrollDemo
application has two scroll bars.
If you make the window very large,
both scroll bars disappear because they are no longer needed.
If you then shrink the height of the window without
changing its width,
the vertical scroll bar reappears.
Further experimentation will show that
in this application
both scroll bars disappear and reappear as needed.
This behavior is controlled by the scroll pane's
scroll bar policy,
Actually, it's two policies:
each scroll bar has its own.
ScrollDemo doesn't explicitly set
the scroll pane's scroll bar policies —
it uses the default.
You can set the policies when you create the scroll pane
or change them dynamically.
Of the constructors provided by JScrollPane,
these two let you set the scroll bar policies
when you create the scroll pane:
JScrollPane(Component, int, int)
JScrollPane(int, int)
The first int specifies the policy for the vertical
scroll bar; the second specifies the policy for the horizontal scroll bar.
You can also set the policies dynamically with the
setHorizontalScrollBarPolicy
and
setVerticalScrollBarPolicy methods.
With both the constructors and the methods, use
one of the following constants defined
in the
ScrollPaneConstants interface (which is implemented by JScrollPane):
| Policy | Description
|
VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_AS_NEEDED
HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_AS_NEEDED
|
The default.
The scroll bar appears when the viewport is smaller than the client
and disappears when the viewport is larger than the client.
|
VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_ALWAYS
HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_ALWAYS
|
Always display the scroll bar.
The knob disappears if the viewport is large enough
to show the whole client.
|
VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_NEVER
HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_NEVER
|
Never display the scroll bar.
Use this option if you don't want the user to directly control
what part of the client is shown,
or if you want them to use only non-scroll-bar techniques
(such as dragging).
|
Providing Custom Decorations
The area drawn by a scroll pane consists of up to nine parts:
the center, four sides, and four corners.
The center is the only component that is always
present in all scroll panes.
Besides scroll bars,
the sides can contain
column and row headers.
A corner component is visible
only if both sides that intersect at that corner
contain visible components.
As shown in the figure, the scroll pane in ScrollDemo
has custom row and column headers.
Additionally, because all four sides are populated,
all four corners are present.
The program customizes three of the corners —
two just fill their area with the same color as the Rules,
and the other contains a toggle button.
The fourth corner, the lower right corner,
is the default provided by the scroll pane.
Notice that because the row and column headers are always present
in this example,
the toggle button is also always present.
If a corner contains a control
that the user needs access to all the time,
make sure the sides that intersect at the corner are always present.
For example,
if this application placed the toggle
in the lower right corner where the scroll bars intersect,
then the toggle would disappear if the user
resized the window and even one of the scroll bars disappeared.
The scroll pane's row and column headers are provided
by a custom JComponent subclass,
Rule,
that draws a ruler in centimeters or inches.
Here's the code that creates and sets the scroll pane's row
and column headers:
//Where the member variables are defined:
private Rule columnView;
private Rule rowView;
...
//Where the GUI is initialized:
ImageIcon david = createImageIcon("images/youngdad.jpeg");
...
//Create the row and column headers.
columnView = new Rule(Rule.HORIZONTAL, true);
rowView = new Rule(Rule.VERTICAL, true);
...
pictureScrollPane.setColumnHeaderView(columnView);
pictureScrollPane.setRowHeaderView(rowView);
You can use any component
for a scroll pane's row and column headers.
The scroll pane puts the row and column headers
in JViewPorts of their own.
Thus, when scrolling horizontally, the column header follows along,
and when scrolling vertically, the row header follows along. Make sure the
row and column have the same width and height as the view, because JScrollPane does not
enforce these values to have the same size. If one differs from the other, you are
likely to not get the desired behavior.
As a JComponent subclass,
our custom Rule class puts its rendering code
in its paintComponent method.
The Rule rendering code takes care
to draw only within the current clipping bounds,
to ensure speedy scrolling.
Your custom row and column headers should do the same.
You can also use any component for the corners of a scroll pane.
ScrollDemo illustrates this by putting a toggle
button in the upper left corner,
and custom
Corner
objects in the upper right and lower left corners.
Here's the code that creates
the Corner objects and calls setCorner to place them:
//Create the corners.
JPanel buttonCorner = new JPanel(); //use FlowLayout
isMetric = new JToggleButton("cm", true);
isMetric.setFont(new Font("SansSerif", Font.PLAIN, 11));
isMetric.setMargin(new Insets(2,2,2,2));
isMetric.addItemListener(this);
buttonCorner.add(isMetric);
...
//Set the corners.
pictureScrollPane.setCorner(JScrollPane.UPPER_LEFT_CORNER,
buttonCorner);
pictureScrollPane.setCorner(JScrollPane.LOWER_LEFT_CORNER,
new Corner());
pictureScrollPane.setCorner(JScrollPane.UPPER_RIGHT_CORNER,
new Corner());
Remember that the size of each corner is determined by
the size of the sides intersecting there.
For some components
you must take care that the specific instance
of the component fits in its corner.
For example, the program sets the font and margins
on the toggle button so that
it fits within the space established by the headers.
It's not an issue with the Corner class
because that class colors its entire bounds,
whatever they happen to be, with a solid color.
As you can see from the code, constants indicate the corner positions.
This figure shows the constant for each position:
The constants are defined in the
ScrollPaneConstants interface, which JScrollPane implements.
Implementing a Scrolling-Savvy Client
To customize the way that a client component interacts
with its scroll pane,
you can make the component implement the
Scrollable interface.
By implementing Scrollable,
a client can specify both
the size of the viewport used to view it
and the amount to scroll for clicks on the different controls on a scroll bar. You can also
specify if the view should track the size of the viewport. This is typically used when the viewport
is bigger than the view, but the view should fill the available space.
Note: If you can't or don't want to implement a scrollable client,
you can specify the unit and block increments
using the
setUnitIncrement
and
setBlockIncrement
methods of
JScrollBar.
For example, the following code sets the unit increment
for vertical scrolling to 10 pixels:
scrollPane.getVerticalScrollBar().setUnitIncrement(10);
Here again are the three control areas of a scroll bar:
the knob, the buttons, and the track.
You might have noticed when manipulating the scroll bars
in ScrollDemo that clicking the buttons
scrolls the image to a tick boundary.
You might also
have noticed that clicking in the track scrolls the
picture by a "screenful". More generally, the button
scrolls the visible area by a unit increment and the track
scrolls the visible area by a block increment.
The behavior you see in the example is not the scroll pane's default
behavior, but is specified by the client
in its implementation of the Scrollable interface.
The client for the ScrollDemo program is
ScrollablePicture.
ScrollablePicture is a subclass of JLabel
that provides implementations of all five Scrollable methods:
-
getScrollableBlockIncrement
-
getScrollableUnitIncrement
-
getPreferredScrollableViewportSize
-
getScrollableTracksViewportHeight
-
getScrollableTracksViewportWidth
ScrollablePicture implements the Scrollable
interface primarily to affect the unit and block increments.
However, it must provide implementations for all five methods.
Thus, it provides reasonable defaults for the other three methods
that you might want to copy for your scrolling-savvy classes.
The scroll pane calls the client's
getScrollableUnitIncrement
method whenever the user clicks
one of the buttons on the scroll bar. This is true as long as the client implements Scrollable.
This method returns the number of pixels to scroll.
An obvious implementation of this method returns the
number of pixels between tick marks on the header rulers.
ScrollablePicture, however, does something different:
It returns the value required to position the image on
a tick mark boundary. Here's the implementation:
public int getScrollableUnitIncrement(Rectangle visibleRect,
int orientation,
int direction) {
//Get the current position.
int currentPosition = 0;
if (orientation == SwingConstants.HORIZONTAL) {
currentPosition = visibleRect.x;
} else {
currentPosition = visibleRect.y;
}
//Return the number of pixels between currentPosition
//and the nearest tick mark in the indicated direction.
if (direction < 0) {
int newPosition = currentPosition -
(currentPosition / maxUnitIncrement)
* maxUnitIncrement;
return (newPosition == 0) ? maxUnitIncrement : newPosition;
} else {
return ((currentPosition / maxUnitIncrement) + 1)
* maxUnitIncrement
- currentPosition;
}
}
If the image is already on a tick mark boundary, this method returns
the number of pixels between ticks. Otherwise, it returns the number
of pixels from the current location to the nearest tick.
Likewise,
the scroll pane calls the client's getScrollableBlockIncrement
method each time the user clicks on the track, but only if the client implements Scrollable.
Here's
ScrollablePicture's implementation of this method:
public int getScrollableBlockIncrement(Rectangle visibleRect,
int orientation,
int direction) {
if (orientation == SwingConstants.HORIZONTAL)
return visibleRect.width - maxUnitIncrement;
else
return visibleRect.height - maxUnitIncrement;
}
This method returns the height of the visible rectangle minus a tick mark.
This behavior is typical, but true if scrolling vertically, otherwise, it's the width.A block increment should be slightly smaller than the viewport to leave a little of the previous visible area for context.
For example, a text area might leave one or two lines of text for context
and a table might leave a row or column (depending on the scroll direction).
ScrollablePicture.java
has one more bit of code
that's not required by
the Scrollable interface,
but is common in scrollable components:
a mouse motion listener
that lets the user scroll
the picture by dragging from it.
The boldface code in the following snippet
implements scrolling by dragging:
public class ScrollablePicture extends JLabel
implements Scrollable,
MouseMotionListener {
...
public ScrollablePicture(...) {
...
setAutoscrolls(true); //enable synthetic drag events
addMouseMotionListener(this); //handle mouse drags
}
...
public void mouseDragged(MouseEvent e) {
//The user is dragging us, so scroll!
Rectangle r = new Rectangle(e.getX(), e.getY(), 1, 1);
scrollRectToVisible(r);
}
...
}
This snippet scrolls the picture
whenever the user drags from the picture to a location
outside the picture and pauses.
The setAutoscrolls method
is defined by JComponent
for the purpose of assisting —
but not implementing —
scrolling by dragging.
Setting the autoscrolls property to true
makes the component fire synthetic mouse-dragged events
even when the mouse isn't moving
(because it stopped, mid-drag, outside the component).
It's up to the component's mouse motion listener
to listen for these events and react accordingly.
Sizing a Scroll Pane
Unless you explicitly set a scroll pane's preferred size,
the scroll pane computes it
based on the preferred size of its nine components
(the viewport, and, if present, the two scroll bars,
the row and column headers, and the four corners).
The largest factor,
and the one most programmers care about,
is the size of the viewport used to display the client.
If the client is not scrolling-savvy,
then the scroll pane sizes itself so that
the client displays at its preferred size.
For typical unsavvy clients,
this makes the scroll pane redundant.
That is, the scroll pane has no scroll bars
because the client's preferred size
is big enough to display the entire client.
In this case,
if the client doesn't change size dynamically,
you should probably limit the size of the
scroll pane by setting its preferred size
or the preferred size of its container.
If the client is scrolling-savvy,
then the scroll pane uses the value returned by the client's
getPreferredScrollableViewportSize
method to compute the size of its viewport.
Implementations of this method
generally report a preferred size for scrolling
that's smaller than the component's standard preferred size.
For example, by default, the value returned by
JList's implementation of
getPreferredScrollableViewportSize
is just big enough to display eight rows.
Scrolling-savvy classes, like
lists,
tables,
text components, and
trees,
often provide one or more methods
that let programmers affect the size returned from
getPreferredScrollableViewportSize.
For example,
you can set the number of visible rows in a list
or a tree by calling the
setVisibleRowCount method.
The list or tree takes care of figuring out the
size needed to display that number of rows.
Refer to
Methods in Other Classes Related to Scrolling
for information about scrolling-related methods
provided by classes other than JScrollPane.
And remember —
if you don't like the value that
getPreferredScrollableViewportSize returns,
you can always set the preferred size of the scroll pane
or its container.
Dynamically Changing the Client's Size
Changing the size of a scroll pane's client
is a two-step process.
First, set the client's preferred size. Then,
call revalidate on the client to
let the scroll pane know that it should update itself
and its scroll bars.
Let's look at an example.
Here's a picture of an application
that changes the client's size whenever the user places
a circle whose bounds fall outside of the client's current bounds.
The program also changes the client's size when the user clears
the drawing area:

You can find the full source code for this example in
ScrollDemo2.java,
which is based on an example provided by tutorial reader John Vella.
You can run ScrollDemo2 (
download JDK 6).
Here's the code that changes the drawing area's
size when necessary:
if (changed) {
//Update client's preferred size because
//the area taken up by the graphics has
//gotten larger or smaller (if cleared).
drawingArea.setPreferredSize(/* the new size */);
//Let the scroll pane know to update itself
//and its scroll bars.
drawingArea.revalidate();
}
Note that when the client changes size,
the scroll bars adjust.
The scroll pane doesn't resize, nor does the viewport.
Refer to
SplitPaneDemo for another example in which
the client object changes size.
The following tables list the commonly used
scroll-related constructors and methods.
Other methods you are most likely to invoke on
a JScrollPane object are those
such as setPreferredSize
that its superclasses provide.
See
The JComponent API
for tables of commonly used inherited methods.
The API for using scroll panes falls into these categories:
Setting Up the Scroll Pane
(JScrollPane constructors and methods)
| Method or Constructor
|
Purpose
|
JScrollPane()
JScrollPane(Component)
JScrollPane(int, int)
JScrollPane(Component, int, int) |
Create a scroll pane.
The Component parameter, when present, sets
the scroll pane's client.
The two int parameters, when present, set the
vertical and horizontal scroll bar policies (respectively).
|
void setViewportView(Component) |
Set the scroll pane's client.
|
void setVerticalScrollBarPolicy(int)
int getVerticalScrollBarPolicy() |
Set or get the vertical scroll policy.
ScrollPaneConstants defines three values
for specifying this policy:
VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_AS_NEEDED (the default),
VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_ALWAYS, and
VERTICAL_SCROLLBAR_NEVER.
|
void setHorizontalScrollBarPolicy(int)
int getHorizontalScrollBarPolicy() |
Set or get the horizontal scroll policy.
ScrollPaneConstants defines three values
for specifying this policy:
HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_AS_NEEDED (the default),
HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_ALWAYS, and
HORIZONTAL_SCROLLBAR_NEVER.
|
void setViewportBorder(Border)
Border getViewportBorder() |
Set or get the border around the viewport.This is preferred over setting the border on the component.
|
|
boolean isWheelScrollingEnabled() |
Set or get whether scrolling occurs in response to the mouse wheel.
Mouse-wheel scrolling is enabled by default.
|
Implementing a Scrolling-Savvy Client
| Method
|
Purpose
|
int getScrollableUnitIncrement(Rectangle, int, int)
int getScrollableBlockIncrement(Rectangle, int, int)
(required by the Scrollable interface)
|
Get the unit or block increment in pixels.
The Rectangle parameter is the bounds of the
currently visible rectangle.
The first int parameter is either
SwingConstants.HORIZONTAL or
SwingConstants.VERTICAL depending on what scroll bar
the user clicked on.
The second int parameter indicates which direction
to scroll. A value less than 0 indicates up or left. A value
greater than 0 indicates down or right.
|
Dimension getPreferredScrollableViewportSize()
(required by the Scrollable interface)
|
Get the preferred size of the viewport.
This allows the client to influence
the size of the viewport in which it is displayed.
If the viewport size is unimportant,
implement this method to return getPreferredSize.
|
boolean getScrollableTracksViewportWidth()
boolean getScrollableTracksViewportHeight()
(required by the Scrollable interface)
|
Get whether the scroll pane should force the client to be the same
width or height as the viewport.
A return value of true
from either of these methods effectively disallows
horizontal or vertical scrolling (respectively).
|
void setAutoscrolls(boolean)
(in JComponent)
|
Set whether synthetic mouse dragged events
should be generated
when the user drags the mouse outside of the component
and stops;
these events are necessary for scrolling by dragging.
By default, the value is false,
but many scrollable components such as JTable
and custom components
set the value to true.
|
This table shows the examples that use JScrollPane
and where those examples are described.
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