have this layout -
<Stepsview
android:background="#color/white"
android:elevation="#dimen/margin_16"/>
this cast shadow at the bottom as well as top :
and what i need is :
Steps view and ActionBar are 2 different views, one way I see is to combine these 2 views inside a view group and set elevation on the view group only.
Is there any other way only controlling steps view.
Achieved it by dynamically adding the steps to the top abbbar ( container for toolbar ) and setting the elevation to the app bar itself.
Related
As you may know, android draws views with higher elevation on front. Is there any way to override this behaviour ? I have two sibling views in a layout, A and B. view A has 0 elevation and view B has 2dp elevation. If these two views overlap, view A should appear in front.
A easy work around which I commonly use is, setting the elevation the view on top of the other increased by 1dp.
Example:
<view
android:id = "#+id/A"
elevation = "3dp"/>
<view
android:id = "#+id/B"
elevation = "2dp"/>
It works great and doesn't leave any shadow too.
I'm trying to make toolbar like in this app:
play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pickup.pickrup
But I can't set custom layout into toolbar.
After adding custom layout appears some margins below and above.
Help me please!
The Toolbar is just a ViewGroup, so if you have your layout or custom view you can just add it to the Toolbar using the ViewGroup#addView(View view) method. For example, if you instantiated your view and called it myView, you can do: myToolbar.addView(myView)
I have solved this problem specifying instead layout height android:layout_height="wrap_content"
this - landroid:layout_height="?actionBarSize", which is 56dp.
So margins from top and bottom have dissapeared.
I am working on an android app and I have a scrollview, and in that, I have a linear layout in the main activity. I want to have the top and bottom borders of the linear layout to be "faded
" so as the user scrolls down the child views in the layout will "fade out" as the go down.
Here is an example of what I am trying to achieve in my linearlayout or scrollview (the "fading bottom border".
Thanks for you help!
Subby
You can do that by using the following attributes in the ScrollView.
android:requiresFadingEdge="vertical"
android:fadingEdgeLength="20dp"
If you want it on devices before API14, you need to use the following:
android:requiresFadingEdge="vertical"
android:fadingEdgeLength="20dp"
NOTE: This is actually discouraged as it is seen to have a negative performance impact on devices.
At the bottom of your layout, you can have a view above the listView, and set Gradient Color for the view, and also make it semitransparent, then you can have the effect you want.
I am developing an app with an activity with member reactions on a hike event. The reactions are the yellow "balloons" which are made using a LinearLayout. Each item is constructed from a XML file (listitem_deelnemerreactie.xml) which defines the layout for a reaction item. The top level of this layout file is a LinearLayout my itself.
I want some spacing between the separate elements, as well as some right margin. The most straightforward way to so this should be: setting a bottom and right margin on the top-level LinearLAyout element of the listitem_deelnemerreactie.xml layout file.
But setting the bottom margin on the LinearLayout has no effect on the vertical spacing, though the right margin does have an effect.
The only way to be able to set a vertical margin appears to be: setting is in the Java code, after attaching the inflated view to the container.
See the two images for the effect and the code.
Though setting the margins in the code is a working workaround, I still think it is strange this cannot be achieved in the XML. Why is the bottom margin attribute ignored while the right margin is not?
Any ideas?
Have you tried to set an android:padding="10dp" for example on your elements to spaced them ?
How do I go about implementing a button bar with buttons of different shapes and heights? As an example (please excuse my poor drawing skills for this quick mockup):
The example bar has 3 buttons, with the middle button (3) a different shape and height than the other 2 buttons (1,2). The button bar will be a view that is included and merged into other views so as to seem to float on top of the parent view.
I was thinking of implementing buttons 1 and 2 into a layout, and then button 3 as another layout that I then merge with the first two button's layout.
like my previous comrades said, you need some kind of layout or container that can have a background (if you wish for button #3 to hoover above it) then use relative layout for mixing the two the disadvantage of this other than complexity is that youcannot relate to the other two buttons since they reside in a different layout.
More elegant solution may be to have a special background drawable that can:
have a method setCurrentHeight() that will specify the height the actual viewable section should have the rest will be filled with transparent color.
override it's own draw so just before it's drawing it will have a callback called, call back you can register yourself to.
then you can register the callback in your activity to take the current position of the #3 button and set the height accordingly, this way you are still with one layout with special drawable as background.
A customized LevelDrawable might do the trick.
I would layout this bar as follows:
A RelativeLayout as a container for the rest, with height set to wrap_content and alignparentbottom = true
An ImageView for the bar
2 Buttons with a transparent background (Button 1 and 2)
Button 3 is a custom Button with a custom Image of a trapezoid as background
So you will have a Layout similar to this:
<RelativeLayout
...>
<ImageView
.../>
<Button
... Button 1 />
<Button
... Button 2 />
<Button
... Button 3 />
</RelativeLayout>
I don't exactly know that this will work, and I can't test it, but you might give something like this a try; I believe it can all be done elegantly through XML.
Have a RelativeLayout (id:mainLayout) that will contain all of your views, wrap_content for both dimensions.
Have a blank View as your first child that will serve as your background bar
Set the View's background color/image to what you want; layout_width to fill_parent; layout_height to wrap_content; layout_alignTop="#id/leftButton"; layout_alignBottom="#id/leftButton".
Add an ImageButton for your center button (id:bigButton), wrap_content for both dimensions; layout_centerInParent="true".
Add an ImageButton for your left button (id:leftButton), wrap_content for both dimensions; layout_toLeftOf="#id/bigButton"; layout_centerInParent="true".
Add an ImageButton for your right button (id:rightButton), wrap_content for both dimensions; layout_toRightOf="#id/bigButton"; layout_centerInParent="true".
In my head, I believe this works, but I could be off. Regardless, something to think about, and I hope it helps you find a solution. :)
Better you can tablelayout with different button styles or relative layout for button "3"