Designing layouts with layout managers For more information,
Designing layouts with layout managers For more information, see Designing a user interface in Building Applications with JBuilder. Using the Inspector, you can: Set the initial property values for components in a container and for the container and its layout manager (initialization code). Create, name, and delete event listeners in a container that will receive events from the component in the container (event handling code). Save text property String values to a ResourceBundle, or revert a resourced String back to a String constant. Change the level of properties exposed in the Inspector. Expose a property as a class level variable so you can change it in the Inspector. Any changes you make in the Inspector are reflected immediately in the source code and in the UI designer. For more information, see Handling events in Building Applications with JBuilder. Opening the Inspector To display the Inspector, 1 Select a Java file in the project pane and press Enter to open the file in the content pane. 2 Select the Design tab at the bottom of the AppBrowser to access the designer. The Inspector is displayed at the right of the content pane. 3 Adjust the width of the Inspector by dragging its left border. For more information, see Using the Inspector in Building Applications with JBuilder. Designing layouts with layout managers A program written in Java might be deployed on more than one platform. If you were to use classic UI design techniques that specify absolute positions and sizes for your UI components, the UI might not look as you intended on all platforms. What looks fine on your development system might be unusable on another platform. To solve this problem, Java provides a system of portable layout managers. Building a user interface 6-5
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