Elements are squashed into the lower left corner

Layoutable elements require a bounding box that they align themselves to. If you place such an element in a layout, the bounding box is controlled by that layout. If you forget to put an element in a layout, it will have its default bounding box of BBox(0, 100, 0, 100) which ends up being in the lower left corner. You can also choose to specify a bounding box manually if you need more control.

using AbstractPlotting
using MakieLayout

scene, layout = layoutscene(resolution = (1200, 1200))

ax1 = LAxis(scene, title = "Squashed")
ax2 = layout[1, 1] = LAxis(scene, title = "Placed in Layout")
ax3 = LAxis(scene, bbox = BBox(400, 800, 400, 800),
  title = "Placed at BBox(400, 800, 400, 800)")
[ Info: Makie/AbstractPlotting is caching fonts, this may take a while. Needed only on first run!

squashed elements

Columns or rows are shrunk to the size of Text or another element

Columns or rows that have size Auto(true) try to determine the width or height of all single-spanned elements that are placed in them, and if any elements report their size the row or column will shrink to the maximum reported size. This is so smaller elements with a known size take as little space as needed. But if there is other content in the row that should take more space, you can give the offending element the attribute tellheight = false or tellwidth = false. This way, its own size can be determined automatically, but it doesn't report it to the row or column of the layout. Alternatively, you can set the size of that row or column to Auto(false) (or any other value than Auto(true)).

using AbstractPlotting
using MakieLayout

scene, layout = layoutscene(resolution = (1200, 1200))

layout[1, 1] = LAxis(scene, title = "Shrunk")
layout[2, 1] = LAxis(scene, title = "Expanded")
layout[1, 2] = LText(scene, "tellheight = true", tellheight = true)
layout[2, 2] = LText(scene, "tellheight = false", tellheight = false)

shrunk row