I have the following problem:
The code below successfully adds my TextView to my custom RelativeLayout:
RectF rectRecord = getItemRect(trCurrent);
TextView tv = new TextView(this.getContext());
tv.setLeft((int)rectRecord.left);
tv.setRight((int)rectRecord.right);
tv.setTop((int)rectRecord.top);
tv.setBottom((int)rect.bottom);
addView(tv);
Unfortunately the methods ("setLeft,setRight,setTop,setBottom") aren't available on Android older than 3.0.
So I tried to add my TextView the alternative way:
RelativeLayout.LayoutParams params = new RelativeLayout.LayoutParams(ViewGroup.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT, RelativeLayout.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
params.setMargins((int)rectRecord.left, (int)rectRecord.top, (int)rectRecord.right, (int)rectRecord.bottom);
//tv.setLayoutParams(tv);
addView(tv, params);
Doing it that way does not show a child control ...
I already tried to change the class my host control derives from ViewGroup to LinearLayout, RelativeLayout and the deprecated AbsoluteLayout but always the same.
Also removed my custom onDraw and onMeasure and "setWillNotDraw(false);" but that didn't solved my problem.
Snippet 1 is displaying my child views.
Snippet 2 does not show a child.
Can anyone point to the solution for this problem?
Your margins are set to 1234 - that's 1234 dip (density independent PIXELS) and that is huge. Your control doesn't show up on the screen because margins are too big, and your control has no place to show on the screen.
Related
I have a vetical seekBar in a RelativeLayout which is also inside other LinearLayout and all the layouts consist of a cell or view in a recyclerView. Anyway when I try to change the height of the seekbar using LayoutParams
RelativeLayout.LayoutParams layoutParams = new RelativeLayout.LayoutParams(100, 100);
seekBar.setLayoutParams(layoutParams);
I got a cast error stating that I cannot cast RelativeLayout to FrameLayout even if there is no FrameLayout present... I don't want to use Framelayout so I won't replace relativeLayout with frameLayout...
I have tried also lots of things like with no effect :
seekBar.getLayoutParams().height = 20;
seekBar.requestLayout()
I really appreciate it if someone can help me!
I have an Open GL ES 2.0 app and am displaying an Android TextView over the top of my GLSurfaceView.
I have the actual textviews displaying OK but now I need to try to centre them.
This is what I have so far:
text1 = new TextView(this);
text1.setText("This is some sample text");
text1.setTextColor(Color.WHITE);
text1.setTextSize(textSize);
text2= new TextView(this);
text2.setText("And this is some more sample text");
text2.setTextColor(Color.WHITE);
text2.setTextSize(textSize);
RelativeLayout.LayoutParams textParams = new RelativeLayout.LayoutParams(LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT,LayoutParams.MATCH_PARENT);
lp.addRule(RelativeLayout.CENTER_HORIZONTAL);
textLayout = new RelativeLayout(this);
textLayout.setLayoutParams(textParams);
textLayout.addView(text1);
textLayout.addView(text2);
mainLayout.addView(textLayout);
However, when I run this, only text1 is centered. Text 2 isn't, and starts at the left side of the first (correctly centered) textView. Try as I might, I can't seem to get both of them centered. The following graphic describes what I mean:
(Please note re vertical placement - in my actual results, both TextViews are at the same vertical/'y' position and therefore overlapping - obviously this is expected as I haven't changed the vertical position of the 2nd TextView, but to make things clearer to illustrate, I've moved the 2nd one down manually.......)
The idea I was going with was creating a 'textLayout' to which I could add all of my textViews, then just add that textLayout to my main layout. Thus facilitating the addition and removal of all of the textViews with a single line of code.
Please note that I am not using, and do not wish to use, XML for this - I would like to know how to do this programmatically.
What am I missing?
Edit Here is how I am creating my Main Layout to which I am adding the textView.....
layout = new RelativeLayout(this);
layout.setLayoutParams(new LayoutParams(LayoutParams.MATCH_PARENT, LayoutParams.MATCH_PARENT));
When you are adding "RelativeLayout.CENTER_HORIZONTAL" as a rule to your layout params, what you are actually doing is telling textLayout that it should be centered horizontally in your mainLayout (see http://developer.android.com/reference/android/widget/RelativeLayout.LayoutParams.html#attr_android:layout_centerHorizontal). In code you should actually do text1.setGravity(Gravity.CENTER) and text2.setGravity(Gravity.CENTER).
How can I retain attributes of the children in a RelativeLayout when dynamically adding ImageViews?
I have a custom ImageView I want to add at runtime to an empty RelativeLayout (nothing inside in XML), I can add the first, then move, scale and rotate them, it works fine.
When I add another ImageView all previously added instances loose their position and their size, but when I touch them they get back just their size, not the position.
In my ImageView I'm overriding onDraw and onTouch, do I need to override something else?
Maybe I have to write my own RelativeLayout implementation? I wouldn't!
This is the pseudocode for adding new ImageView:
create new instance of ImageView
set bitmap
set scaletype
add imageview to the RelativeLayout container
I even tried to set a standard layout parameter for the brand new added ImageView with the same result.
I tried to get the margins for every children, based on its position, and the re set the layout with ImgeView.setLayout(l, t, r, b);
no success...
Here's the XML RelativeLayout container, pretty simple, maybe too much?
<RelativeLayout
android:id="#+id/face_container"
android:layout_width="fill_parent"
android:layout_height="fill_parent" >
</RelativeLayout>
Do you need more details to help me? Please ask, I can post the code too, but I have to clean it up a bit before, I can do it tomorrow, in the meantime please give me some advice.
In a RelativeLayout all view positions are related to the others views. So, as you do in xml, you should provide for each view the relative parameters.
Before add imageView to the RelativeLayout call setLayoutParams(layoutParams):
// Create a new RelativeLayout.LayoutParams instance
RelativeLayout.LayoutParams layoutParams =
new RelativeLayout.LayoutParams(
RelativeLayout.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT,
RelativeLayout.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
// add roules
layoutParams.addRule(RelativeLayout.CENTER_IN_PARENT);
layoutParams.addRule(.........
layoutParams.addRule(.........
//add params to view
imageView.setLayoutParams(layoutParams);
//add imageview to the RelativeLayout container
yourRelativeLayout.addView(imageView);
Look here for all rules.
I have a custom view which will be jar'ed up and added into another project. In the view I want to give an option of a button.
Here is what I have in the CustomView class.
final CustomView currentView = (CustomView) findViewById(this.getId());
RelativeLayout.LayoutParams params = (new RelativeLayout.LayoutParams(RelativeLayout.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT,RelativeLayout.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT ));
params.addRule(RelativeLayout.ALIGN_PARENT_RIGHT);
closeButton.setLayoutParams(params);
currentView.addView(closeButton);
This is all wrapped in a RelativeLayout Tag as well as the other objects of the application
Everything compiles however in the CustomView the Button is aligning left instead of right.Any Ideas???
I would guess the problem is your CustomView. It probably doesn't take the entire width of the window, and is just wide enough to fill its children (which, in your case, is the close button). Make sure your CustomView has a fill_parent horizontal layout.
Since your CustomView extends WebView, which, in turn, extends AbsoluteLayout, you can't expect it to handle RelativeLayout's parameters. Instead, it's best you put your customview and your close button inside a RelativeLayout and position them properly.
When adding your closeButton to your currentView you need to supply the LayoutParams as an argument as well in order for them to take effect.
Basically, switch
currentView.addView(closeButton);
with
currentView.addView(closeButton, params);
Since the width of your button is set to wrap_content, you could also try setting its layout_gravity to right.
params.gravity = Gravity.RIGHT;
I have a custom view (an extension of a TextView) that I want to dynamically add to my Layout (don't want to include it in the main.xml file).
The book says to fetch the RelativeLayout using findViewById() in my java code then create a new instance of my custom view, then use addView on the RelativeLayout to add the new view.
I'm not getting any errors, but when I click my button to add the new view, nothing is happening (view isn't being added). Do I need to set additional properties on my custom view (layout width, layout height for example) in order for it to be shown?
EDIT: adding code
// changed to an imageview as I thought it might be easier to see an image
RelativeLayout rel = (RelativeLayout) findViewById(R.id.rellay);
MyCustomImageView mciv = new MyCustomImageView(null);
mciv.setId(5);
LayoutParams p = new LayoutParams(LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
mciv.setLayoutParams(p);
mciv.setImageResource(R.drawable.someImage);
rel.Addview(mciv);
Please post your code where you add the view.
But yes, you might be missing the params for width and height. Try something like
LayoutParams p = new LayoutParams(LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT,LayoutParams.FILL_PARENT);
txtView.setLayoutParams(p);
or what you would like the width and height to be. Also in xml layout, layout_width and layout_height are required attributes.