| Platform | Since |
|---|---|
| iPhone | 0.8 |
| iPad | 0.8 |
Specifies how the view positions its children. One of: 'absolute', 'vertical', or 'horizontal'.
absolute layout
There are three layout options:
absolute. Default layout. A child view's top, bottom, left, and right
properties are interpreted as absolute values in the parent's coordinate space.
If the child includes a top value and not a bottom value, the child is
positioned top units from the top of the parent's bounding box, and its height
is set based on its height property.
If the child includes a bottom value and not a top value, the child is
positioned bottom units from the bottom of the parent's bounding box. Its height
is set based on its height property.
If the child includes both top and bottom values, the behavior is
platform-specific.
Similar calculations are used for left and right.
You can also position a child by setting its center property to a Point.
If no position is set explicitly, children are centered. For example, if a
child specifies a top of 20 and does not specify any other position properties,
the child is positioned 20 units from the parent's top, and centered horizontally.
vertical. Children are laid out vertically from top to bottom. The first child
is laid out top units from its parent's bounding box. Each subsequent child is
laid out below the previous child. The space between children is equal to the
upper child's bottom value plus the lower child's top value.
Each child is positioned horizontally as for the absolute layout mode.
horizontal. Like vertical layout, except children are laid out horizontally
from left to right, using the left and right values to determine spacing.
Each child is positioned vertically as in the absolute layout mode.