I have a page where I want to have a header always in view at the top and buttons always in view at the bottom. the content in the middle is scrollable.
I thought that this would be easy by doing the following:
StackLayout outer = new StackLayout();
StackLayout inner = new StackLayout();//with all of the content added
ScrollView scroll = new ScrollView();
outer.Children.Add(headerLabel);//non-scrolling
scroll.Content = inner;
outer.Children.Add(scroll); //scrolling
outer.Children.Add(button); //non-scrolling
The headerLabel and the button stay on the corrrect position but the content scrolls right up to the top of the page, over the top of the headerLabel (but beneath/under the button at the bottom).
I am positive it was working correctly but I can't remember changing anything.
Has anyone got any ideas on why this would be happening?
so this fixed it
outer.VerticalOptions = LayoutOptions.End;
and
scroll.IsClippedToBounds=true;
Related
I would like to have a customized Dialog styling, having another background color and a rounded border, as it looks nicer than the gray rectangle that comes by default.
This is partially possible, by styling the Contentpane of the Dialog. The problem is, that the underlying Dialog Style is still there, in which the contentpane is shown. And it seems the Dialog UDID itself cannot be changed, nor can the "Dialog" style be overwritten in the designer nor by code.
Form hi = new Form();
hi.getUnselectedStyle().setBgColor(0xffffff);
Button but = new Button("open dialog");
but.addActionListener(e -> {
Dialog d = new Dialog(BoxLayout.y());
d.setUIID("Container"); // this line has no effect, the outside dialog component is still visible
Style s = d.getContentPane().getUnselectedStyle();
s.setBorder(RoundRectBorder.create());
s.setBgColor(0x00ff00);
s.setBgTransparency(255);
s.setMargin(5, 5, 5, 5); // adding some margin between contentpane and Dailog container, to be more obvious
d.setDisposeWhenPointerOutOfBounds(true);
// title
Label title = new Label();
title.setText("Confirmation");
d.add(title);
// body field with spanlabel info text
SpanLabel bodyLabel = new SpanLabel("Body Text");
d.add(bodyLabel);
// delete button
Button okButton = new Button("Ok");
okButton.addActionListener(e2 -> {
d.dispose();
});
// exit button
Button exitButton = new Button("Cancel");
exitButton.addActionListener(e3 -> {
d.dispose();
});
d.add(GridLayout.encloseIn(2, okButton, exitButton));
d.show();
});
hi.add(but);
hi.show();
In above image, the outermost dark gray is the tinted area outside the dialog. The green is the content pane with the intended rounded border. the light grey in between comes from the Dialog style that I would like to get rid off.
Can this be done?
Short answer: setDialogUIID("Container");
However dialogs are a bit problematic to customize via code, I would strongly recommend styling them via the designer/css as we just didn't design them for hand styling and so you're relying on internal implementation details that might break.
When you invoke getContentPane() on the Dialog you're styling the content pane of the Dialog. Not the Dialog itself so the dialog styling still has the non-transparent background. You can use getDialogStyle() to style the Dialog itself. I'm not sure how well that will work.
Using Vaadin Flow Java API I would like to emulate a Vaadin 8 Window feature: particularly I need to emulate Caption behaviour.
I mean a fixed top "Title" not scrollable as the real content of the Dialog. Anyone can tell me some Example I could learn from ?
Thanks in advance
This is the workaround I found.
public MainView() {
Button button = new Button("Click me",
event -> {
Dialog dialog = new Dialog();
HorizontalLayout horizontalLayout = new HorizontalLayout();
VerticalLayout verticalLayout = new VerticalLayout();
Div headerDiv = new Div();
Div bodyDiv = new Div();
bodyDiv.getElement().getStyle().set("overflow", "auto");
bodyDiv.getElement().getStyle().set("max-height", "420px"); // !!!
dialog.add(headerDiv, bodyDiv);
headerDiv.add(horizontalLayout);
bodyDiv.add(verticalLayout);
horizontalLayout.add(new Label("Hi there !"));
for (int i = 1; i <= 20; i++) {
verticalLayout.add(new TextField("TextField_" + i));
}
dialog.open();
});
add(button);
}
The trouble is that I have to fix max-height size to avoid scrolling of all the contained components. So I cannot take advantage from the auto-size behaviour of the Dialog Container. Also tried using setFlexGrow, but I did not reach the solution.
Any Hint ?
In Vaadin 10+ there is no component called Window, but there is component called Dialog. It does not have Title like Window, but otherwise it has similar baseline. I.e. it is popup. Based on your question you have found already that.
Dialog itself is component container, which means you can add components there. I would just create e.g two Divs (the simplest of the layout components in Vaadin 10). I would style the first one to have fixed height and place the Title there. And then I would apply component.getElement().getStyle().set("overflow", "auto") to the other one, which is the actual content body. The mentioned style will enable the scrollable feature. You could potentially use VerticalLayout / HorizontalLayout instead of Div as well depending what you need.
See also: https://vaadin.com/docs/v10/flow/migration/5-components.html
How can I implement following design functionality with android standard component bottom sheet:
Image when Bottom sheet dialog fragment will appear:
Image when user scrolled to up to view bottom of content:
I will use ViewPager to scrolling header images and RecyclerView to showing descriptions and other informations. And parallax effect to ImageView(which are placed in ViewPager) when scrolling content vertically. Have a minimum height of the ImageView(and ViewPager), user can't collapse fully it (Look to second screenshot, which is user scrolled until the end of content).
I want stop scrolling ImageView when it will reach to minimum height(look to second one Screenshot), but the content of below ImageView should be continue scrolling
This can be done with an if statement in an on scroll view such as shown below:
ScrollView scrollView = findViewById(R.id.scrollView); //Adjust for your code
ImageView imageView = findViewById(R.id.imageView); //Adjust for your code
boolean imageIsHidden = false;
int threshold = 250;
scrollView.getViewTreeObserver().addOnScrollChangedListener(new OnScrollChangedListener() {
#Override
public void onScrollChanged() {
int scrollY = rootScrollView.getScrollY();
if(scrollY >= threshold){
imageIsHidden = true;
//Move image outside of scroll view so it doesn't scroll
}
else if(scrollY < threshold && imageIsHidden){
imageIsHidden = false;
//Move image inside of scroll view so it does scroll
}
}
});
What this does is has a boolean called imageIsHidden and an integer called threshold. Threshold is where you want it to make it disappear. You will need to play around with this value to find a sweet spot.
You will also need to implement moving the image inside and outside of the scroll view as well in the if and if else statement.
First of all, I'm a long time Java/Swing developer. I recently installed JavaFX 2.2 to play around with.
I'm creating a fairly simple app, whose main window has a toolbar on top and content in the rest of the window. The obvious way to accomplish this is to use a BorderPane, and stick a ToolBar into the top section. So far, so good. However, I would like some of the controls in the toolbar to be at the left edge of the window, and some at the right edge. I can find no way to do this. I can put an invisible spacer object into the toolbar, but I only know how to give it a fixed width; it doesn't resize when the window is resized.
So I thought that instead of using a ToolBar object, I'll just use an HBox; it should be equivalent to a horizontally-oriented Swing Box object, right? And the Swing Box class has a createHorizontalGlue() method that inserts an auto-sizing spacer. Well, I can't find an equivalent in the JavaFX HBox class. Is there no simple way to do this?
I figured out how to do it using an HBox instead of a ToolBar to hold the controls; the key is the HBox.setHgrow() method, which allows you to set a spacer object to grow to fill the available space. I still don't know if it's possible to do this with an actual ToolBar instance.
/**
* Creates and populates the Node that serves as the window toolbar.
*
* #return a newly constructed and populated toolbar component
*/
private Node makeToolbar() {
// Auto-sizing spacer
Region spacer = new Region();
HBox.setHgrow(spacer, Priority.ALWAYS);
// Horizontal box containing toolbar controls
HBox box = new HBox();
box.setPadding(new Insets(8));
box.setAlignment(Pos.CENTER);
box.getChildren().addAll(openButton, spacer, resizeSlider);
// Colored background panel with drop shadow
Pane bgRect = new Pane();
bgRect.setStyle("-fx-background-color: #e0e0e0;");
bgRect.setEffect(DropShadowBuilder.create().width(1).build());
// StackPane to hold box and rectangle
StackPane stack = new StackPane();
stack.getChildren().addAll(bgRect, box);
return stack;
}
i do it this way:
private Node makeFooter(Node left, Node right) {
ToolBar footer = new ToolBar();
Region spacer = new Region();
HBox.setHgrow(spacer, Priority.ALWAYS);
spacer.setMinWidth(Region.USE_PREF_SIZE);
footer.getItems().addAll(left, spacer, right);
return footer;
}
hope i could help someone
A few small questions on this web page I am putting together.
http://dansiop.com/guyc/our-team/
I am looking to get the content that appears when you click on an image to slide with the mouse as you scroll down. Not sure if this is possible, if so can anyone help.
I have tried looking but as I am such a n00b to jquery I'm not sure what I am looking for. I found some code that used the tag slide and it was not what i wanted at all so not sure what the command would be.
You need to wrap your prof_1, prof_2, etc, in a wrapper I'm going to call this wrapper prof_wrapper
<div id="prof_wrapper"></div>
jQuery(document).ready( function(){
var orig_t = jQuery("#prof_wrapper").offset().top;
var mt = jQuery("#main").offset().top;
var mh = jQuery("#main").outerHeight();
jQuery(document).bind("scroll", function(event){
var ph = jQuery("#prof_wrapper").outerHeight();
var mo = (mt+mh) - jQuery(document).scrollTop();
var t = jQuery(document).scrollTop();
if(mo <= ph){ //Find out if the #main element's offset top plus it's height minus the scroll position is less than the prof_wrapper's height; if it is, leave the prof_wrapper at the bottom of the #main element
jQuery("#prof_wrapper").css({'position':'absolute', 'bottom':'0px', 'top':'auto'});
}else if(t >= orig_t){ //Otherwise, if we have scrolled past the prof_wrapper, make the prof_wrapper follow us down
jQuery("#prof_wrapper").css({'position':'fixed', 'top':'0px', 'bottom':'auto'});
}else{ //We are probably at the top of the page, so reset the original positioning
jQuery("#prof_wrapper").css({'position':'relative', 'top':'0px', 'bottom':'auto'});
}
});
});
You need to add - position:relative to your #main element, then I think this should be pretty close. Take a look at my comment about the padding and margin on the prof_wrapper.
The positioning of absolute, assumes that #main is the first parent element to have a position assigned to it; if so, then it will use this as the positioning for the bottom.
Something like that?