I have a composite which extends ResizeComposite
and has a DockLayoutPanel
as its root. I can stick it directly into RootLayoutPanel
and it works because DockLayoutPanel
ProvidesResize
.
However, I'm wanting to use the MVP facilities in GWT 2.2, and RootLayoutPanel
can't be passed to ActivityManager#setDiplay(AcceptsOneWidget)
(since it's a multi-widget container).
At first glance, ScrollPanel
appears to meet the dual requirement of implementing AcceptsOneWidget
and both ProvidesResize
and RequiresResize
.
But I am finding that when I put my widget into a Scrol开发者_开发知识库lPanel
, that it has a 'zero size', and I have to size it manually in order to see it, and I'm having trouble knowing what size to give it. I'd rather a Panel that didn't necessarily scroll.
There will be a SimpleLayoutPanel in GWT 2.3, described as:
A simple panel that {@link ProvidesResize} to its one child.
You can add ProvidesResize
to any widget by implementing it yourself, which is relatively simple - you just pass along all of the resize notifications you get to every sub-child that RequiresResize
.
Alternatively, if you just want your panel to take up all of the available space, you might try setting the width and height on the ScrollPanel
to "100%"
.
Finally, here's my implementation of a LayoutPanel that AcceptsOneWidget
:
public class PanelForView extends LayoutPanel implements AcceptsOneWidget
{
IsWidget myWidget = null;
@Override
public void setWidget(IsWidget w)
{
if (myWidget != w)
{
if (myWidget != null)
{
remove(myWidget);
}
if (w != null)
{
add(w);
}
myWidget = w;
}
}
}
I've been using this in my commercial app for months without any problems, and it's easy to swap views in and out of it. Feel free to use this code yourself.
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