Tag | Description |
BorderPanel | A border panel allows you to specify a central display and place up to four other displays to the north, south, east or west. Border panels are implemented as javax.swing.JPanels with a BorderLayout Add a JPanel with a border layout to the main window. See Using border panels. |
CardPanel | A card panel allows you to stack displays so that they are all active, but only one is showing. This is useful when you have a trend graph that needs to maintain data when it is not being displayed. Card panels are implemented as javax.swing.JPanels with a CardLayout. Display Server deployments do not support card panels. Add a JPanel with a card layout to the main window. See Using card panels. |
GridPanel | A grid panel allows you to arrange your panels in tabs. Add a JPanel with a grid layout to the main window. See Using grid panels. |
TabbedPanel | A tabbed panel allows you to arrange your panels in tabs. Add a JTabbedPane to the main window. See Using tabs panels. |
RTViewNavTreePanel | A tree panel can be used inside a border panel to display a tree that is used to navigate displays in one of the border panel regions. Add a JPanel containing a JTree into a BorderPanel. This requires use of the CardPanel. See Using the RTViewNavTreePanel tag. |
RTViewPanel | Add a panel containing the specified display into a BorderPanel, CardPanel, TabbedPanel, or GridPanel. See Using the RTViewPanel tag. |