I've got a GridView which is displaying a calendar. I need to draw some fat lines (about 1/4 of the height of a grid cell) across multiple 'days', and possibly across multiple weeks. I may need to do two or three of these for any given week.
Each line across the cells of a week will need to have some text in it as well.
Since the lines need to cross grid cells I though perhaps I could get a Canvas for the GridView and paint on that. But I can't find a way to do that. Since the lines cross multiple grid cells it doesn't seem useful to draw the line in a particular cell and try to line it up with the previous cell. And I have to do this dynamically, I can't set it in the layout.
I'm open to ideas about how to make this work. Anyone?
If you want to do any additional drawing on top of the GridView content:
Override dispatchDraw(), which hands you a Canvas to draw on.
Call super.dispatchDraw() to draw the normal content first.
Use the Canvas to add anything additional you feel necessary.
HTH
Related
I am looking for a sound algorithm that would randomly place a given number of rectangles of the same size into a bigger rectangle (canvas).
I see two ways to do it:
create an empty array that will contain the rectangles already placed on canvas. start with the empty canvas. in a loop, pick a position at random for a new rectangle to be placed. check if the array has a rectangle that overlaps with the new rectangle. if it does not, put the new rectangle in to the array and repeat the loop. otherwise, pick a new position, and rerun the check again. and so on. This might never terminate (theoretically) I think. I do not like it.
use a grid and place rectangles into the cells randomly. This might still look like a grid placement. I do not like it either.
any better ways to do it? "better" meaning more efficient, or more visually "random" than the grid approach. better in any respect.
Here is a simple heuristic. It will be non-overlapping and random.
Place a rectangle randomly. Then, calculate the intersections of extensions of the the two parallel edges of the first rectangle with the edges of the canvas. You will obtain four convex empty regions. Place other rectangles in these empty regions one-by-one independently and calculate the similar divisions for placements. And try to put the remaining rectangles in empty regions.
You can try different strategies. You can try to place the rectangles close to the corners. Or, you can place them around the center of the regions. We cannot discuss optimality because you introduced randomness.
You might find Quadtrees or R-trees useful for your purpose.
I create internal room-like dungeons using the following method.
1) Scatter N points at random, but not within a few pixels of each other.
2) For each point in turn, expand if possible in all four directions. Cease
expanding if you hit another rectangle.
3) Cease the algorithm when no rooms can expand.
The result is N rectancles with just a few rectangular small spaces.
Code is in the binary image library
https://github.com/MalcolmMcLean/binaryimagelibrary/blob/master/dungeongenerator3.c
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I've been working on this for a while but can't find anything that exactly addresses my question (at least not something easy to understand).
I have a main layout XML file where I define various layout objects like a Button or a TextView (and I know I can add SurfaceView, View, and view and other things too). I want to draw a shape (in my case it's an arc) in just one of these objects so it doesn't take up the whole screen and so I can position it relative to other things.
(In my case it will ultimately re-draw the arc kind of like a circle with a gap in a different position every time I call a method depending on a value I pass to the method, but that's separate from my basic question.)
I know the answer will have something to do with a canvas, an onDraw method, maybe Paint, probably a view. I have been able to draw a circle from a custom View object by setting the main java file's layout as that View (as opposed to R.layouts.main), but that takes up the whole screen, and I'm unsure how I might be able to have that dynamically draw with modifications.
A really clear explanation or better yet an actual example would just be awesome.
As i see it u need to draw a specific shape on widget and not on complete screen. Try using layer List.
you can refer this link for sample Link
I'am programming a calendar application which shows the appointments in a week-oriented view.
I implemented the graphics by custom drawing in onDraw() of a View.
The graphics contains fixed parts (time bar) and calendar relative parts (days, appointments).
What is the best way to implement a horizontal scroll through the calendar?
I can't use the ScrollView because I have no fixed maximum width since the user should be able to scroll in the past and in the future "unlimited".
I thought to draw the relative parts in an image which contains 2 days more as the week view requires (one left one right) and draw the bitmap with the calculated offset at the Views Canvas.
As soon the offset exceeds one day I had than to redraw the bitmap.
Does anybody know a more elegant solution?
Regards Andreas
I am always confused about this and I need a pointer on how you would do it. If create a an xml layout with multiple imagesview and text view. And Lets say I want to draw line between two images and move an image along this line. How do I draw this line? I know I can get location of both images view so I have x1,y1 and x2,y2. My problem is with drawing.
Do I need surface view to have the drawing capabilities and loading bitmaps on the screen along the line?
If yes, then I guess I should always surface view to fill the screen and views on top just incase I need to draw which seems kinda wrong?
IF no (I hope thats the answer), then how do I draw lines, or load bitmaps on screen using only X,Y values?
I hope I was able to explain my confusion
Thanks
EDIT: Actually I thougth of a way of explaining my confusion better.
When you create an activity with xml layout you have something like
onCreate (){
setContentView(R.id.layout)
}
but when you have activity with drawing view you have something like
onCreate (){
SurfaceView v = new Surfaceview(this);
setContentView(v)
}
My problem is that we have to set the content layout to EITHER xml layout or to be drawing area . What if I want to set it to my xml layout and at the same time I can draw anywhere on the screen (over images view, empty areas, TextViews ..etc)
See my question?
That depends on what your desired result is and how much flexibility you need. You can have a look at this android Animations tutorial (the site is down at the time of posting but google has it cached).
If you don't need flexibility, then for your line, you might be able to create a View in your xml with an android:background fill color and a size that makes it look as you wish. You could then use an Animation on your bitmap's ImageView to translate it along the line, and use a listener on said Animation to show/hide the various Views as necessary at the beginning or end of your Animation.
If you need flexibility, the SurfaceView is probably your best bet.
I am looking to create a custom EditText, where each character entered should lie within its own cell (see image).
My best guess is that I need to create my own .png's for the various states of the EditText, which provide the rectangular outline, then extend EditText's onDraw method to draw the vertical lines that separate adjacent characters.
I've never made a custom view before, and I know little about manual drawing in Android, so some guidance is needed.
Am I on the right path here?
How can I determine how tall and at what location to draw the vertical lines?
What is the best way to eat an oreo?
This is gonna be a very difficult task. Just look at TextView.onDraw() (which you are thinking of override). If I were you, I'd immediately change my mind :)
Instead, I'd use a LinearLayout to hold an array of customized EditText, but I don't know what kind of interaction you are looking for
Finally, to measure text you use Paint.getTextBounds(). Where to draw vertical separators depends on your design. If you have a fixed number of fixed length cells, you know where, otherwise you need to measure text