If I have a JToolBar like this one here imgur.com/dWDfSYe what could be an approach to figure out how to have the text on top and not on the left side?
"change something" is rather vague. Changing a layout manager after the components have been added is tricky at least, and I don't know if it's officially safe at all (involves calling the layout manager's methods manually - that's usually done by the container). Anyway, ToolBarLayout is a non-standard one so I don't know how that behaves.
(ie. what does the parameter 1 do? If it's a property of the layout then the layout manager may, or may not have a method for setting that property)
Umm, that's a completely different change than the one mentioned before. That's about the constraints passed to BorderLayout, not about changing the layout manager
When I use toolsPane.setLayout(new ToolBarLayout(1)); it changes the bottom toolbar to vertical and when I add this.add(toolsPane, java.awt.BorderLayout.LINE_START); it makes the components inside the toolbar also align veritcally
If you want to change the position in BorderLayout, you can do it by removing the component from it's container, and then adding it to the desired position (and then calling revalidate(); repaint() on the container). If you additionally need to modify the layout of the moved component, it's a different problem, and depends entirely on the layout in question (in this case, ToolBarLayout, which I already mentioned is not standard, therefore I don't know how to it behaves)
I just read the code snippet a bit more thoroughly; it actually does the kind of layout changing you're interested in. The method used is basically: get the contents and sort them. remove the contents. change the layout manager. add the sorted contents (not in that order, but that's the idea)
That may or may not be necessary for the layout manager in use, but should work with any layout manager. The only thing that may catch the unwary is that adding or removing components at run time requires revalidation and painting the container (the code snippet does not do that, and can get away with it because it's a construction time change, not a dynamic one, but for a button that changes the orientation you'll need revalidation)
I am, however, completely baffled why the code resorts to that trickery, instead of setting the correct layout manager in the first place. That looks suspiciously like someone who did not know what they were doing (like starting with a gui builder generated code, running in to wall what builders are capable of, and then trying to patch over the limitations instead of rewriting the code properly)
Anyway, a similar approach works for run time changes too. And the position change in border layout works the way I mentioned earlier.
Hey I am back@kiheru yes sadly it is an open source code and I would really like to avoid too much refactoring. Are you able to give me a code example or a source I can check?
oh no no, it was not stolen I was assigned to add a feature to it, which is being able to flip the toolbar to a vertical position
the code is part of my course but I am having issues making it work the usual ways so hence why I am here.
Problem with the refactoring is, this code is part of a project that consists of 60k lines of code and it is rather extensive if I start refactoring it.
The part about dealing with filling the toolbar is likely not very long. I'd think the project maintainers would be happy if someone rewrote it properly for them (though I'd ask them, before doing that)
anyway, if you want to move the toolbar position, it's a two part process: 1. change the position in the container. 2. change the orientation of the toolbar. These separate wery well, so start with one of them. Part 1 is really simple
Part 1 is: a) remove the toolbar from the container. b) add it to the new position c) revalidate and repaint the container
the other possibility is the brute force way the SVGDrawingPanel() currently uses (and I summed up in an earlier comment)
Part 2 depends on what the layout manager can do. If it's capable of changing orientation at run time, then great - simply use that feature. If it can't then you have two possibilities: my favourite approach would be modifying the layout manager to add that capability
I am not so sure. Have been spending weeks on this and still haven't managed to find a proper way to deal with it. A lot of the function is scattered a lot
If it's the correct impression, then refactorings are especially important to the project. New code almost necessarily starts a bit messy, when all issues are not yet well understood, but that just means the code must be cleaned continuously as it stabilizes
So your approach is removing the toolbar, and then adding a new one, instead of adding the old to a new position? That's a workable approach, but only as long as the toolbar does not have state that should persist during the move
Moving it should be basically (calling the parent container c for simplicity): c.remove(toolsPane); c.add(toolsPane, BorderLayout.WEST); c.revalidate(); c.repaint()
hmm when I add this toolsPanel.remove(toolsPane); toolsPanel.add(toolsPane, BorderLayout.LINE_START); to a method and just run it to see what exceptions I get, I get cannot add to layout: constraints must be a GridBagConstraint
and @kiheru is it possible to get you over to skype? Feel like this conversation has become just between the two of us, so to avoid further filling the chat with our convo?
Hi, im sending a request via HttpURLRequest() from my tomcat. The request gets blocked by the server's firewall because of the User Agent "Java" even though i manually set connection.setRequsetProperty() to User Agent "firefox". Anybody can give me a hint why the hell the user agent gets sent as Java from my Tomcat?
maybe a little context.. I'm using it to pass data over REST and SOAP. I have an object that has a Date field in it. In SOAP, it's no problem, but once I use REST it fails parsing.
The REST needs to be printed in JSON, and I use Jackson as the JSON provider. To do so, I use a custom DateSerializer and DateDeserializer
so there I need to parse the Date object into a JSON field and vice versa
@fge that was more helpful. Migrating Hibernate to JooQ is not as trivial as migrating SVN to Git, especially not with the whole bunch of validation annotations that people rely on...
@ShotgunNinja Hibernate has a fundamental flaw from the start; it's an ORM which focuses more on the O than the R, and that should be exactly the reverse