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---
title: Panel
order: 6
layout: page
---

[[layout.panel]]
= Panel

ifdef::web[]
[.sampler]
image:{live-demo-image}[alt="Live Demo", link="http://demo.vaadin.com/sampler/#ui/structure/panel"]
endif::web[]

[classname]#Panel# is a single-component container with a frame around the
content. It has an optional caption and an icon which are handled by the panel
itself, not its containing layout. The panel itself does not manage the caption
of its contained component. You need to set the content with
[methodname]#setContent()#.

[classname]#Panel# has 100% width and undefined height by default. This
corresponds with the default sizing of [classname]#VerticalLayout#, which is
perhaps most commonly used as the content of a [classname]#Panel#. If the width
or height of a panel is undefined, the content must have a corresponding
undefined or fixed size in the same direction to avoid a sizing paradox.


[source, java]
----
Panel panel = new Panel("Astronomer Panel");
panel.addStyleName("mypanelexample");
panel.setSizeUndefined(); // Shrink to fit content
layout.addComponent(panel);

// Create the content
FormLayout content = new FormLayout();
content.addStyleName("mypanelcontent");
content.addComponent(new TextField("Participant"));
content.addComponent(new TextField("Organization"));
content.setSizeUndefined(); // Shrink to fit
content.setMargin(true);
panel.setContent(content);
----

The resulting layout is shown in <<figure.layout.panel>>.

[[figure.layout.panel]]
.A [classname]#Panel#
image::img/panel.png[width=50%, scaledwidth=70%]

[[layout.panel.scrolling]]
== Scrolling the Panel Content

((("scroll bars", id="term.layout.panel.scrolling.scrollbars", range="startofrange")))


Normally, if a panel has undefined size in a direction, as it has by default
vertically, it will fit the size of the content and grow as the content grows.
However, if it has a fixed or percentual size and its content becomes too big to
fit in the content area, a scroll bar will appear for the particular direction.
Scroll bars in a [classname]#Panel# are handled natively by the browser with the
[literal]#++overflow: auto++# property in CSS. (((overflow CSS
property)))

In the following example, we have a 300 pixels wide and very high
[classname]#Image# component as the panel content.


[source, java]
----
// Display an image stored in theme
Image image = new Image(null,
    new ThemeResource("img/Ripley_Scroll-300px.jpg"));

// To enable scrollbars, the size of the panel content
// must not be relative to the panel size
image.setSizeUndefined(); // Actually the default

// The panel will give it scrollbars.
Panel panel = new Panel("Scroll");
panel.setWidth("300px");
panel.setHeight("300px");
panel.setContent(image);

layout.addComponent(panel);
----

The result is shown in <<figure.layout.panel.scrolling>>. Notice that also the
horizontal scrollbar has appeared even though the panel has the same width as
the content (300 pixels) - the 300px width for the panel includes the panel
border and vertical scrollbar.

[[figure.layout.panel.scrolling]]
.Panel with Scroll Bars
image::img/panel-scrolling.png[width=50%, scaledwidth=70%]

((("[interfacename]#Scrollable#", id="term.layout.panel.scrolling.scrollable", range="startofrange")))


[[layout.panel.scrolling.programmatic]]
=== Programmatic Scrolling

[classname]#Panel# implements the [interfacename]#Scrollable# interface to allow
programmatic scrolling. You can set the scroll position in pixels with
[methodname]#setScrollTop()# and [methodname]#setScrollLeft()#. You can also get
the scroll position set previously, but scrolling the panel in the browser does
not update the scroll position to the server-side.

(((range="endofrange", startref="term.layout.panel.scrolling.scrollable")))
(((range="endofrange", startref="term.layout.panel.scrolling.scrollbars")))


[[layout.panel.css]]
== CSS Style Rules


[source, css]
----
.v-panel {}
.v-panel-caption {}
.v-panel-nocaption {}
.v-panel-content {}
.v-panel-deco {}
----

The entire panel has [literal]#++v-panel++# style. A panel consists of three
parts: the caption, content, and bottom decorations (shadow). These can be
styled with [literal]#++v-panel-caption++#, [literal]#++v-panel-content++#, and
[literal]#++v-panel-deco++#, respectively. If the panel has no caption, the
caption element will have the style [literal]#++v-panel-nocaption++#.

The built-in [literal]#++borderless++# style in the Valo theme has no
borders or border decorations for the [classname]#Panel#. You can use the
[parameter]#ValoTheme.PANEL_BORDERLESS# constant to
add the style to a panel.