JFrame removing JPanels and adding a new JPanel

25,807

Solution 1

for example

import java.awt.*;
import java.awt.event.*;
import javax.swing.*;

public class MyFrame extends JFrame {

    private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;

    public MyFrame() {
        final JPanel parentPanel = new JPanel();
        parentPanel.setLayout(new BorderLayout(10, 10));

        final JPanel childPanel1 = new JPanel();
        childPanel1.setBackground(Color.red);
        childPanel1.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(300, 40));

        final JPanel childPanel2 = new JPanel();
        childPanel2.setBackground(Color.blue);
        childPanel2.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(800, 600));

        JButton myButton = new JButton("Add Component ");
        myButton.addActionListener(new ActionListener() {

            public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
                parentPanel.remove(childPanel1);
                parentPanel.add(childPanel2, BorderLayout.CENTER);
                parentPanel.revalidate();
                parentPanel.repaint();
                pack();
            }
        });
        setTitle("My Empty Frame");
        setLocation(10, 200);
        setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
        parentPanel.add(childPanel1, BorderLayout.CENTER);
        parentPanel.add(myButton, BorderLayout.SOUTH);
        add(parentPanel);
        pack();
        setVisible(true);
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {

            @Override
            public void run() {
                MyFrame myFrame = new MyFrame();
            }
        });
    }
}

Solution 2

You may try using Frame.pack() again it worked for me. Or try one od those following methods:

Frame.setOpaque(false);
Frame.setEnabled(false);
Frame.setVisible(false);
Frame.removeAll();

Solution 3

You are trying to repaint()/validate() the ContentPane. Did you try doing same on the JFrame? You can also try JFrame#pack().

Solution 4

modification of your code

f.setContentPane(new MainDisplay(f)); 
f.getContentPane().invalidate();
f.getContentPane().validate();
f.getContentPane().repaint();
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25,807
unleashed
Author by

unleashed

Updated on September 27, 2020

Comments

  • unleashed
    unleashed over 3 years

    I currrently have a SwingWorker that sends a HTTP Request and I override the SwingWorker's done() method to change contents in a JFrame. I want to basically remove everything and add a new members panel on the JFrame depending on the values returned from the Server.

    Now, the problem I am facing is that when I invoke the following methods below on the JFrame, it doesn't remove anything from the JFrame nor does it change it's contents contained within the Frame.

    //TODO: Investigate why JFrame content pane won't repaint.
    f.removeAll();
    //Pass the frame f reference only into MainDisplay, it doesn't actually do anything apart from allowing a class to add a JMenuBar on the JFrame.
    f.add(new MainDisplay(f)); 
    f.getContentPane().invalidate();
    f.getContentPane().validate();
    f.getContentPane().repaint();
    

    The current fix I have is this below but I would rather change the contents of the JFrame rather then loading a new one up.

    f.dispose();
    f=new ApplicationFrame();
    

    I've looked through previous answers on here and on Google and some state use validate() or invalidate() whilst calling repaint() to repaint the JFrame.

    Any suggestions/help would be much appreciated.

    Edit: I think I am going to debug more since there must be something else going wrong.