When I try to make a layout while working with the graphical layout interface in Eclipse (and not the xml) I came across with this problem:
Let's say that my main layout is only a simple button on the bottom of the screen,
when clicked the button opens up a text box that covers most of the screen.
note : I do this be setting the visibility of the text box from GONE to VISIBLE (and the other way around when I want to hide the text box).
Now (the text box is hidden) I want to use the extra space I have and add a button to the main layout.
normally this isn't much of a problem but since I have the text box covering almost the entire screen in the graphical layout I'm having a lot of trouble doing so (and this is just an example, I want to add more complicated things to my new gained space).
What can I do ? in the graphical layout I can't hide an object (like text box or button) and I drag another button to that space I can see/work with it.
set the android:visibility attribute to "gone" while designing the layout
You are going about this all wrong.
You should be using either a new activity or a diloag box to create a textbox that covers the entire screen or a ViewFlipper to create multiple views on your activity.
It appears that you want to do it from one layout so ViewFlipper would be the simplest choice here.
The documentation is available in the usual place:
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/widget/ViewFlipper.html
Some examples can be found at:
http://www.androidpeople.com/android-viewflipper-example
http://android-pro.blogspot.com/2010/09/using-view-flipper-in-android.html
EDIT
Your question isn't very clear so I have tried to give you my best guess from the information provided. Perhaps a diagram of what you are trying to do here might be more easily understood. Though as I stated a new activity or a dialog box might be better. So you could also look at using a dialog method:
http://www.androidsnippets.com/prompt-user-input-with-an-alertdialog
Related
I am working on a simple Android application that should contain a webview and two control-panels.
One small control panel should be always visible and the other one should inflate when a special button on the smaller control-panel is clicked.
Implementing the webview is not a problem. But I am not sure which layouts and containers I should use to implement the control-panels on the right side of screen.
Is there a common way to get these control-panels? And which Layouts and Containers should I use?
Here is a picture of how I want to arrange the screen.
I hope someone can help me. Thank you!
See MotionLayout, you can do this with very basic motion layout ,you are going to have contraintset for invisible panel and visible panel.
think of first contraint set ConstraintSetas constraints that you would use when side panel is not there another ConstraintSet when it is there , then you are going to have a Transition with OnClick attributes , and you reference a button in the visible side panel , when that button is pressed motion layout will interpolate between first and second constraint sets. Here is similar example
I just wanted to ask if this is possible in android studio
As you can see I pointed out the blue area that I needed to change after I pressed the Send Profile button . Change I mean is that I can hide or something like that the fullname,address,phonenumber,emailaddress etc because I wanted to add some more forms to fill up.
Thank you if someone can direct me to a reference.
You can have a fragment place holder for the outlined blue area, and do fragment transitions as you want to go.
Each form can be represented by a separate xml layout file that you can place in this place holder.
Well... if you are using something like a Constraintlayout you can just reference the views and set their visibility to View.GONE
So you would put that into the onClickListener of the Button (after validating perhaps) and then you could hide those views.
You can also use fragments but those might be hard for a beginner (which I assume you are) so instead for replacing those views you might be able to just use a mix of setting titles/hints of textfields to something different and hiding views (or showing new ones).
LinearLayout would also make this easy because views are just ontop of one another like in your case (only the blue area) so hiding/showing is straight forward.
Simplest way would be putting another LinearLayout there, and all those other elements into this new LinearLayout. Then you can just use
findViewById(R.id.yourNewLinearLayout).setVisibility(View.GONE);
to hide all those things.
I'm still kind of new to android. I'm writing a Tic Tac Toe game as a bit of practice. I'm trying to figure out how to replace views when I click a button. I have 9 buttons in a GridView. When a user clicks one, I want that to change to a non-clickable TextView and back to Button when a user click's the reset Button at the bottom of the screen.. I use a flag to keep track of player's turn so it'll know whether or not place an x or o. Is this even possible or am I stretching here?
You'll soon find that there are really not that many things that are stretching it for Android.
This is certainly possible. For each grid in your GridView, put in two elements - the Button, and the TextView. Change the visibility of each. In other words, you don't actually replace one with the other - you just hide one, and show the other.
So you'd have two items like this:
<Button ... android:visibility="invisible"/>
<TextView ... android:visibility="visibile"/>
And have both of these match_parent, so that they fill each grid and are basically both on top of each other.
To change the visibility in the code:
button1.setVisibility(View.INVISIBLE);
textView1.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
I'm trying to give you as little actual code as possible so you play with this and write it yourself, but this should definitely put you in the right direction. Let me know if you need more guidance though.
You can do it two different ways
You can put both a button and a textview in each grid and interchange their visibility when you click on the button. For this, you can set the button and textview properties from the xml layout and you dont have to do much programatically
You can use a button alone and just change the look by changing the background drawable at runtime. Then you can make it unclickable by disabling it or changing its focusable property to false
You can even use an imageview and just change the drawable src and disable it on user click. Android is quite flexible and this is not even a stretch. If you give a little more detail of the specifics you want to achieve, I could advise which solution will be best fit
My question is, is there a way to get a certain view element to ignore the windowSoftInput setting, or to set a specific setting for one view element? (Any other solutions to my problem are also welcome)
Below are more details about my problem.
I have an Android activity with a background image set to the main FrameLayout. This layout contains a few other layouts, among others a brand logo on one side, and a scrollview with edittext boxes on the other side.
Using the windowSoftInput="adjustResize" works pretty well, but it distorts the background image. Using windowSoftInput="adjustPan" however pans the brand logo out of the screen and messes with the scrollview, and the keyboard blocks the edittext boxes.
So far, looking around the web and the docs I can't find a solution, or if this is even possible. Android layouts always seem to confuse me though..
Is it possible to create a layout based on (background) images? For example, there is well know app called Appie that uses this picture as a homescreen:
I might be able to recreate the layout with a TableLayout, but this will be difficult to get it perfectly aligned with the buttons in the image. The default layout options make it very difficult, or maybe impossible, to allow for selection of the buttons on the image (especially when the buttons are in an arc-path).
Can anyone tell me how this is done?
I had some issues positioning a badge on the corner of a view. You can check my solved question:
Positioning a badge bubble on the left upper side of a button
About how it can be done. I would do it with a RelativeLayout and TableLayout as you mentioned, but to be completely sure, you can use apktool to see how the xml are done but it might be ilegal to do it.