Android App - Aligning EditTexts doesn't work - android

I'm writing my first Android-App. The App should solve Sudokus for the user.
So the interface should look like the typical Sudoku-Layout with some Buttons down below. For the number-fields i just used EditTexts.
At first i used a ContrainsLayout. That worked fine so far but the problem is that the editTexts on the right are not visible anymore if the screen of the user is too small.
I use a fixed height and width of 40dp for the editTexts and a constraint of 1dp between the editTexts.
But i cant get it to work that way on different screen sizes.
So i used the GridLayout. There problem here is that i cant get the whole thing to be in the center. And besides that i dont know if its possible to stretch a TEXTview over multiple rows?! I would need this to show the errorText in case the sudoku isnt solvable.
I hope someone can help me out or at least give me some ideas :)
Thanks in advance

If you want the same result for different screen sizes the recommendation is constraint layout but the reason you don't have the same result is that you used hard coded width and height and on different sizes you need to change the size that you hard coded.
The best thing to do is to make separate xml files for screen sizes
for more info you can see here: how to have different sizes supported

Related

Android: Selecting Layout/ How to format Design for Calculator

I am wondering how I would design a calculator with graphics similar to the following: Design help for Calculator App or https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=jp.Appsys.PanecalST.
The key requirements:
The buttons must be squared (it can pop out etc. but squares are more aesthetically pleasing than rectangles).
It must be device compatible and retain square buttons upon orientation change
My problem is that Relative formatting (as I attempted) disorients the layout in different devices and is not as nice as I hoped. (i.e. trying to design the button to harbor no empty space in one device using relative instructions. One idea I fancy is putting a center button and orienting the others above left etc. so at the very least, no empty space is in the center.
Below is the designs I made:
I prefer the first image but I neglected 0 (only buttons for 1-9). How would attempt at transforming these designs to code?
*I think I may use ImageButtons. I will include images based on density but how would I account for different screen sizes?
First of all, for your calculator, use LinearLayout.
Link: Documentation will be found here
Secondly, To Support multiple screen,
This documentation will help, documentation1, documentation2
What would I do in this situation?
First of all, I would use the LinearLayout as my primary layout and give it an orientation > Vertical instead of RelativeLayout. This LinearLayout is for the whole screen (The output, the numbers and other functions). Then for each line, say for the output screen, I would put it in another LinearLayout (Orientation Horizontal) inside the previous LinearLayout (NestedLayout). For numbers in each row, I would use a new LinearLayout.
For the second problem of yours, I would use buttons instead of images as images take large space in perspective of buttons which will unnecessary increase the app size. To support my button for multiple screen, I would use Weight option in android for buttons. This stackoverflow answer has a nice description.
I hope it helps.
Cheers mate!

How to make proportional layouts in android?

I have a design that I need to follow in my app. In it there are several buttons, images and textviews placed all over the screen (some are aligned to the left, some to the right, some are centered etc). What I need to do is make all those elements appear EXACTLY as they are in the design image. The problem is, if I try to do this using dp, it can be wider or narrower than the design image specifies, and it depends on the properties of the screen. (I've had an app where I did it all in dp, and on my high-res phone it works perfectly, but on my friend's older phone it cuts away the edges of the activity)
My question is, what elements do I use for this? I've heard of using weight in Linear Layouts, but how to make items different width and height and position them all across the screen how I see fit? How to make sure it looks exactly the same on all screen sizes?
Thanks in advance! :)
Edit:
The point is, I need the buttons to be just as they are on the screen (this will be a listview element, I'm trying to make an xml for it). The distance, proportion, everything, it needs to scale to the width of the screen and be this size and distribution. And, I'm not just looking for a solution to THIS particular problem, I want to learn how to do it in general...
You don't. For very large and very small screens, you use separate layouts that scale the sizes, completely drop parts of the UI, or lays it out in a different manner. It's absolutely silly to think you can fit all the stuff on a 10 inch tablet and a 3.5 inch phone. If your designer expects that, tell him he's an idiot and he needs to get back to work.
For a more general answer on the best way of laying things out- it depends on the effect you're trying to get. You should never use pixel counts, and dp should only be used for small things- a bit of padding between 2 fields. Most things should be done via layout, either by using a linear layout and getting things in rows/columns, or a RelativeLayout and describing how to layout views relative to their siblings. But even with these tools you will not be able to fit on all screens and look good.

Layout of a android application

I'm working on the layout of an android application. But I have a question about the layout. Once i have created a layout and then go to another screen (for instance 4 inches to 5 inches) all my buttons and text boxes are messed up..
Is there a method to make everything static, so that my layout works on every mobile phone..
What kind of layout are you using, could it be RelativeLayout? that might be your problem in this particular instance.
Anyway, in android there are many screen sizes, each of them you should handle with different layouts depending on orientation, size and density. There is no magic formula as far as I know, but 9-patch images can help a lot. Another thing you should do is make sure that you understand how match_parent and wrap_content values work for height and width.
Check this out: Suppoting different screens
You have to create folders for different types of screens take a look at android developers training
This document contains everything you need.
Instead of having everything fixed, it shows how to design a layer that adapts to the various screens you may encounter.

Android Layout On Top of an Image

I am struggling with a Layout Problem on Android. This is very simple to do on the iPhone, but with the various screen sizes and the Layout classes available. I am having a hard time doing this.
One thing that I have noticed is that setting backgrounds on objects in the xml really messes up the layout on the device. I generally have to put in a FrameLayout and an ImageView to get a background.
So Am trying to get to this. http://www.calidadsystems.com/images/AndroidListItem.png (Sorry I don't have enough pts to post the image)
his is a status view and is an item in a List View. There are 8 TextViews that need to be set. Each of the 222 fields will change. The current background has the colors in there at specific locations and I am trying to line up the Labels and TextViews to get the picture below. I built this one with AbsoluteLayout which is deprecated, but it also does not work very well on the device.
I have constantly struggled with the layouts on Android. Does someone have some good sample code that could do this?
You're probably going to want to use a RelativeLayout. You can use the android:layout_alignTop="id" attribute to make the rows be in line correctly. And android:layout_alignLeft="id" for the columns. Other than that its just a matter of playing with the android:layout_marginLeft="XXdip" attribute to get the space between them how you want it. Check out this page for an overview and examples of all of the Layout types. Here is some more sample RelativeLayout code. And one more page with another example. RelativeLayout is a bit tricky to get used to but once you've used it a few times its pretty easy to understand and get the Layout that you want. The benefit of it is that your UIs look nice on several different screen sizes when you define them this way.
Why not just composed the layout in a table layout and set the table layout's background to a custom made graphic you make? This should work well with you. Specifically the design of your design would be like 4 columns with x rows. Then using the strechcolumn property, you should be able to accomplish what you are trying to do!
If you scale the graphic properly, then you shouldn't have this problem overall.

Android View Design Issues

I've been playing about with the layout of a view with Android (lets say within the MainActivity) and I'm looking to create this sort of layout using 3 ImageView's (where each block represents an image):
This is rather easy to pull of using LinearLayout's but only if you specify the exact size and position of each ImageView. This then obviously causes problems when looking at different screen sizes.
Using AbsoluteLayout looked like it was going to work at first, but I've read that it's deprecated and it still causes problems with different screen sizes.
Then there is RelativeLayout, which I've tried using with DroidDraw, but it doesn't seem to get me very far when I implement it :(
So, does anyone have an ideas of how to achieve this?
EDIT: I've got close to doing this using dp instead of px but this still gets screwed up when using larger resolution devices! :(
Thanks
Romain Guy does something very similar using RelativeLayout. Android Layout Tricks #1
One solution is that you could use a TableLayout with 2 columns, and then in the second column embed a second TableLayout.
DroidDraw doesn't always show exactly how it will work when it runs 100% of the time I've noticed.
You can do this with a horizontal LinearLayout: add the green first, then add a vertical liner layout for the blue and orange and give each an appropriate weight (like 50 and 50).
You can still use LinearLayout but make the width/height in dip units. Thatvway it should look the same on any supported screen size. Alternativly, you could use the weight attribute instead which is probably a better idea for this case.

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