I'm trying to create a program that lists movies in a Netflix style to learn Front-End coding.
How I want it to look in the end:
My guess is that every movie is a button component with an image a name label and a release year label.
I'm struggling to recreate this look. This is how it looks when I try it:
The navigationbar in my image is at the page start of a border layout. Below the navigationbar the movie container is in the center of the border layout.
My idea was creating a GridLayout and then create a button for each movie and adding it to the GridLayout.
You can recreate this with this code:
public class Main {
private static JFrame frame;
public static void main(String[] args) throws HeadlessException {
frame = new JFrame();
frame.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
frame.setBackground(new Color(32, 32, 32));
JPanel navigationPanel = createNavigationBar();
frame.add(navigationPanel, BorderLayout.PAGE_START);
JPanel moviePanel = createMoviePanel();
frame.add(moviePanel, BorderLayout.CENTER);
frame.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(1920, 1080));
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
frame.setTitle("Example App");
frame.pack();
frame.setExtendedState(JFrame.MAXIMIZED_BOTH);
frame.setVisible(true);
}
public static JPanel createMoviePanel() {
JPanel moviePanel = new JPanel();
GridLayout layout = new GridLayout(0, 10);
layout.setHgap(3);
layout.setVgap(3);
moviePanel.setLayout(layout);
moviePanel.setBackground(new Color(32, 32, 32));
ArrayList<String> exampleList = new ArrayList<>();
// Add stuff to the example list
for(int i = 0; i < 120; i++) {
exampleList.add(Integer.toString(i));
}
final File root = new File("");
for(final String movie : exampleList) {
JLabel picLabel = new JLabel();
try {
File imageFile = new File(root.getAbsolutePath() + "\\src\\images\\" + "imageName.jpg"); // Try to find the cover image
if(imageFile.exists()) {
BufferedImage movieCover = ImageIO.read(imageFile);
picLabel = new JLabel(new ImageIcon(movieCover));
} else {
BufferedImage movieCover = ImageIO.read(new File(root.getAbsolutePath() + "\\src\\images\\temp.jpg")); // Get a temp image
picLabel = new JLabel(new ImageIcon(movieCover));
}
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
JLabel movieName = new JLabel("New Movie");
movieName.setForeground(Color.WHITE);;
JButton movieButton = new JButton();
movieButton.setLayout(new GridLayout(0, 1));
//movieButton.setContentAreaFilled(false);
//movieButton.setBorderPainted(false);
//movieButton.setFocusPainted(false);
movieButton.add(picLabel);
movieButton.add(movieName);
moviePanel.add(movieButton);
}
return moviePanel;
}
public static JPanel createNavigationBar() {
JPanel navBar = new JPanel();
navBar.setLayout(new FlowLayout(FlowLayout.LEFT, 30, 20));
navBar.setBackground(new Color(25, 25, 25));
JButton homeButton = new JButton("Home");
homeButton.setContentAreaFilled(false);
homeButton.setBorderPainted(false);
homeButton.setFocusPainted(false);
JButton movieButton = new JButton("Movies");
movieButton.setContentAreaFilled(false);
movieButton.setBorderPainted(false);
movieButton.setFocusPainted(false);
// Add all the buttons to the navbar
navBar.add(homeButton);
navBar.add(movieButton);
return navBar;
}
}
I noticed that the GridLayout
always tries to fit everything onto the window.