I was trying to expand my shape but only from one side.
What I have:
https://imgur.com/NboRnFw
What I want to have:
https://imgur.com/eTQpA75
<vector xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:width="368dp"
android:height="257dp"
android:viewportWidth="368"
android:viewportHeight="257">
<path
android:pathData="M0,6H348C359.046,6 368,14.954 368,26V243H0V6Z"
android:fillColor="#E7C9FF"/>
</vector>
How can I do this in Android Studio? Is there some kind of image scaling to achieve that? I don't want to change the resource code of this shape.
For something like this, its better yo use 9 patch images. You wouldn't achieve this result any other way since changing width height ratio will make the image distorted.
You can specify the area which expands by giving it 1 pixel order, very easy to set up and there is a built in editor in Android Studio.
Make a PNG from your SVG first, then in Android Studio, right-click the PNG image you'd like to create a NinePatch image from, then click Create 9-patch file.
https://developer.android.com/studio/write/draw9patch
It takes literally a few seconds to create a 9 patch. You can also use this online editor to build a nine patch without Android Studio.
(I was trying to make your drawable into a 9 patch but it had a white background which was causing issue.)
Related
I'm trying to adjust the all_inclusive svg image to my rectangular button. The shape itself is rectangular as well but the vector asset is square (24x24) with white spaces above and under the shape. These spaces force the shape itself to be very small. How to make the all inclusive svg rectangular by deleting that padding on top and on bottom?
In this picture the image is set to fit the guidelines on the left, top and right side:
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/imgInfinity"
app:srcCompat="#drawable/ic_infinity"
android:layout_width="0dp"
android:layout_height="0dp"
app:layout_constraintDimensionRatio="1:1"
app:layout_constraintTop_toTopOf="0.75"
app:layout_constraintBottom_toBottomOf="parent"
app:layout_constraintStart_toEndOf="0.75"
app:layout_constraintEnd_toEndOf="0.25" />
Things that did not work:
pivot vector asset with a group -> I just cant figure out the dimensions without messing up the original shape. Same storty with scaleX/Y or translateX/Y. I got it to work on my other buttons with simpler shapes though.
adjusting android:viewportheight or android:height -> it deshapes the picture to a weird form
crop svg online --> as Googles original SVG pathData is already 580 characters long, cropping tools only make it to large for android to deal with (above 1000 charactes)
crop svg picture with word and extract from zip file-> it doesnt compress svg images so it stays rectangular with the white spaces above and under.
Set a seperate horizontal guideline for the top of the picture. It does the trick but one or multiple guidelines for each image gets very messy. There must be a better way, right?..
ACCEPTED SOLUTION (edit with InkShape):
Install InkShape
Open SVG
Click on picture once to select it
Go to File-> Document Properties and click 'Resize pager to drawing or selection' (this button is hidden on the first tab, click +Resize page to content to show the option);
Save
extract pathData and (viewport)width/heights from saved file.
The viewportHeight attribute defines the size of the "canvas" that the path is drawn on (i.e., it defines what the coordinates in the path data actually "mean").
The height attribute defines the intrinsic size of the drawable.
The original vector has 6.5 units (in the viewport) of white space at the top and the bottom. That means that you can look for any pathData command that uses a capital letter, and subtract 6.5 from the y coordinate. That leaves you with this:
<vector xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:width="24dp"
android:height="13dp"
android:viewportWidth="24.0"
android:viewportHeight="13.0">
<path
android:fillColor="#FF000000"
android:pathData="M18.6,0.12c-1.44,0 -2.8,0.56 -3.77,1.53L12,4.16 10.48,5.5h0.01L7.8,7.89c-0.64,0.64 -1.49,0.99 -2.4,0.99 -1.87,0 -3.39,-1.51 -3.39,-3.38S3.53,2.12 5.4,2.12c0.91,0 1.76,0.35 2.44,1.03l1.13,1 1.51,-1.34L9.22,1.7C8.2,0.68 6.84,0.12 5.4,0.12 2.42,0.12 0,2.54 0,5.5s2.42,5.38 5.4,5.38c1.44,0 2.8,-0.56 3.77,-1.53l2.83,-2.5 0.01,0.01L13.52,5.5h-0.01l2.69,-2.39c0.64,-0.64 1.49,-0.99 2.4,-0.99 1.87,0 3.39,1.51 3.39,3.38s-1.52,3.38 -3.39,3.38c-0.9,0 -1.76,-0.35 -2.44,-1.03l-1.14,-1.01 -1.51,1.34 1.27,1.12c1.02,1.01 2.37,1.57 3.82,1.57 2.98,0 5.4,-2.41 5.4,-5.38s-2.42,-5.37 -5.4,-5.37z"/>
</vector>
Then, once the whole shape has been moved "up" by 6.5 units, you can subtract 11 (6.5 * 2) from both the viewport and the intrinsic height.
The end result is a 24x13dp shape, which should scale much better in wide views.
Update using Inkscape version 1.1:
Unfortunately, the latest version of Inkscape (1.1) no longer will import a vector drawable file directly, so the original answer is not 100% correct. That answer will probably work with other editors that can handle vector drawable files.
Here is an update to that answer that works with later versions of Inkscape to remove all padding from a vector drawable.
Convert vector drawable to scaled vector graphic (SVG):
Open Alex Lockwood's Shape Shifter site
Drag the vector drawable file from Android Studio to Shape Shifter.
Export the image as an SVG to a local file
Now that we have an SVG file, we can edit it with Inkscape:
Install Inkscape if not already installed.
Open SVG file in Inkscape.
Click on the image to select it.
Resize the image to the selection (Shift+Ctrl+R or Edit->Resize Page to Selection). You can also specify an alternate size if you desire some padding.
Save the image as an SVG file.
The image is now cropped in an SVG file. We need to convert it back to a vector drawable.
In Android Studio import the SVG file as a vector drawable. (File->New->Vector Asset) Asset Type = "Local file (SVG, PSD).
Once imported, the vector drawable no longer has any padding.
Use an image editor that can handle SVG files to crop the image. I used InkScape but there are others. Once the image is cropped, you can import it into Android Studio as an XML file.
Here's the new update on this topic:
https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=202019
It looks like using android:scaleType="fitXY" will make it scale correctly on Lollipop.
From a Google engineer:
Hi, Let me know if scaleType='fitXY' can be a workaround for you , in
order to get the image look sharp.
The marshmallow Vs Lollipop is due to a special scaling treatment
added into marshmallow.
Also, for your comments: " Correct behavior: The vector drawable
should scale without quality loss. So if we want to use the same asset
in 3 different sizes in our application, we don't have to duplicate
vector_drawable.xml 3 times with different hardcoded sizes. "
Even though I totally agree this should be the case, in reality, the
Android platform has performance concern such that we have not reach
the ideal world yet. So it is actually recommended to use 3 different
vector_drawable.xml for better performance if you are sure you want to
draw 3 different size on the screen at the same time.
The technical detail is basically we are using a bitmap under the hook
to cache the complex path rendering, such that we can get the best
redrawing performance, on a par with redrawing a bitmap drawable.
I have a .png logo for my app which doesn't have a background, when I add it to android studio as an Image Asset I am forced to have a background. The hex field doesn't accept 8 digit color codes, 6 digits only. Is there anyway to keep the background invisible?
To make background transparent, set shape as None.
See the image below:
EDIT:
For Android Studio 3.0,
you can set it from Legacy Tab
I'm using Android Studio 3.0.1 and if the above answer doesn't work for you, try to change the icon type into Legacy and select Shape to None, the default one is Adaptive and Legacy.
Note: Some device has installed a launcher with automatically adding white background in icon, that's normal.
You have two ways:
1) In Background Layer > Scaling, reduce the Resize to 1
and then in Legacy > Legacy Icon set Shape as None
2) in Background Layer > Scaling > Source Asset, you can set an image as a 1x1 pixel (or any size) transparent.png image (you've already created).
and then in Legacy > Legacy Icon set Shape as None
the above approach didn't work for me on Android Studio 3.0. It still shows the background. I just made an empty background file
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<vector
android:height="108dp"
android:width="108dp"
android:viewportHeight="108"
android:viewportWidth="108"
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
</vector>
This worked except the full bleed layers
This is just another workaround.
For the 'Foreground Layer', select 'Asset type' as text and delete the default text in the text field.
For the 'Background Layer', select 'Asset type' as image and now choose the path of the image you want as an icon.
And you are good to go.
Android Studio 3.5.3
It works with this configuration.
I Just put my view background (color code) as ClipArt or Image background, and it looks like transparent or no background where both have the same color as background.
These are the steps I took to make an image transparent:
1- I used an online website which makes the image transparent, there are a lot of them. For me, I use this https://www241.lunapic.com/editor/?action=transparent and sometimes this http://www.online-image-editor.com/help/transparency
2- In Android Studio (I'm using version 3.1.3), open Image Asset from app > res (right click) > New > Image Asset
3- In the Path, choose the location of the transparent image which you downloaded from the online website, and make the other options as shown, then Next, then Finish. The five different sizes of image mdpi(48×48), hdpi(72×72), xhdpi(96×96), xxhdpi(144×144), and xxxhdpi(192×192) will be created in the res/mipmap-density folders.
4- If you need sizes (dimensions) different from above, you can use this website http://nsimage.brosteins.com/ to upload your PNG image of biggest size that will be used in xxxhdpi. After uploading, you can download a zip file containing the five different sizes of image in the res/drawable-density folders.
First, create a launcher icon (Adaptive and Legacy) from Image Asset:
Select an image for background layer and resize it to 0% or 1% and
In legacy tab set shape to none.
Then, delete folder res/mipmap/ic_laucher_round in the project window and Open AndroidManifest.xml and remove attribute android:roundIcon="#mipmap/ic_launcher_round" from the application element.
In the end, delete ic_launcher.xml from mipmap-anydpi-v26.
Notice that: Some devices like Nexus 5X (Android 8.1) adding a white background automatically and can't do anything.
With "Asset Type" set to "Image", try setting the same image for the foreground and background layers, keeping the same "Resize" percentage.
I just added the icon as a normal icon: New -> Vector Asset
and then change the app icon in the Manifest file.
For Foreground Layer choose "Text" and then delete the content text
Finaly choose the path of the image you want as an icon.
enter image description here
Using android 3.0.1
I noticed this weird behavior(solution),
First: in background layer in the source_asset change the asset_type from image to color and than change it back to image.
second: enable trim in scaling and then resize it to a small percentage and it will work perfectly.
PS: If u didn't do the first step the scaling wont take affect.
and if anyone have an explanation for this please provide.
steps
I have just imported a project from eclipse to Android studio. Almost for every second image , android studio is giving the following error.
Error:Must have one-pixel frame that is either transparent or white.
I am trying to edit my images for last few hours, but couldn't do it. Can anyone guide me whats the best solution for it.
Why its in only Android Studio why not in Eclipse.
This is shown because you're trying to edit 9-Patch images that don't have the appropriate 1-pixel border.
Android uses an image format called 9-Patch which allows you to define stretchable areas in an image (you can read more about it here). To fix your problem, either add an outer 1-pixel thick transparent frame to your png images or simply rename them from .9.png files to .png files
I have an app, that to chatting. I need to create bubbles. I did it with nine-Patch image but it was not useful because I need little triangle on right (left) of the bubble and when nine-Patch stretches the image the triangle also gets stretched. This is the problem.
Can I Draw background of Layout with canvas or etc. ?
Try this ones
download it and do not forget to rename it with image1.9.png
This may not working give me your mail id i will mail you
Also, check this one and rename it as .9.png
It was created using the draw9patch tool located in sdk\tools folder.
I am creating 9 patch images using draw9patch tool and saving images with extension .9.png but when I am using created 9 patch images in app it is giving error.
But when I downloaded an 9 patch image from net & used in my same app it is working properly.
I am not getting what I am doing wrong .
Please Help
You must be creating the 9-patch wrongly. I had also the same issue . You must be drawing the black patch on one side of image. Try to draw the black patch by dragging your mouse two side of image. I hope you can understand my words...........
Nine-patch images on Android must have transparent 1-pixel edge, and have opaque pixels in left-top border (1 pixel wide) specifying which part of image is stretched, and which do not.
More here: http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/graphics/2d-graphics.html#nine-patch