Android-RoundCorner for a imageView [duplicate] - android

In Android, an ImageView is a rectangle by default. How can I make it a rounded rectangle (clip off all 4 corners of my Bitmap to be rounded rectangles) in the ImageView?
Note that from 2021 onwards, simply use ShapeableImageView

This is pretty late in response, but for anyone else that is looking for this, you can do the following code to manually round the corners of your images.
http://www.ruibm.com/?p=184
This isn't my code, but I've used it and it's works wonderfully. I used it as a helper within an ImageHelper class and extended it just a bit to pass in the amount of feathering I need for a given image.
Final code looks like this:
package com.company.app.utils;
import android.graphics.Bitmap;
import android.graphics.Canvas;
import android.graphics.Paint;
import android.graphics.PorterDuffXfermode;
import android.graphics.Rect;
import android.graphics.RectF;
import android.graphics.Bitmap.Config;
import android.graphics.PorterDuff.Mode;
public class ImageHelper {
public static Bitmap getRoundedCornerBitmap(Bitmap bitmap, int pixels) {
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap
.getHeight(), Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final int color = 0xff424242;
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight());
final RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
final float roundPx = pixels;
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
paint.setColor(color);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, roundPx, roundPx, paint);
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(bitmap, rect, rect, paint);
return output;
}
}

Another easy way is to use a CardView with the corner radius and an ImageView inside:
<androidx.cardview.widget.CardView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
app:cardCornerRadius="8dp"
android:layout_margin="5dp"
android:elevation="10dp">
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/roundedImageView"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:src="#drawable/image"
android:background="#color/white"
android:scaleType="centerCrop"
/>
</androidx.cardview.widget.CardView>

Clipping to rounded shapes was added to the View class in API 21.
Just do this:
Create a rounded shape drawable, something like this:
res/drawable/round_outline.xml
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:shape="rectangle">
<corners android:radius="10dp" />
...
</shape>
Set the drawable as your ImageView's background:
android:background="#drawable/round_outline"
According to this documentation, then all you need to do is add android:clipToOutline="true"
Unfortunately, there's a bug and that XML attribute is not recognized. Luckily, we can still set up clipping in Java:
In your activity or fragment: ImageView.setClipToOutline(true)
Here's what it will look like:
Note:
This method works for any drawable shape (not just rounded). It will clip the ImageView to whatever shape outline you've defined in your Drawable xml.
Special note about ImageViews
setClipToOutline() only works when the View's background is set to a shape drawable. If this background shape exists, View treats the shape's outline as the borders for clipping and shadowing purposes.
This means, if you want to use setClipToOutline() to round the corners on an ImageView, your image must be set using android:src instead of android:background (since background must be set to your rounded shape). If you MUST use background to set your image instead of src, you can use this workaround:
Create a layout and set its background to your shape drawable
Wrap that layout around your ImageView (with no padding)
The ImageView (including anything else in the layout) will now display with rounded layout shape.

While the above answer works, Romain Guy (a core Android developer) shows a better method in his blog which uses less memory by using a shader not creating a copy of the bitmap. The general gist of the functionality is here:
BitmapShader shader;
shader = new BitmapShader(bitmap, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setShader(shader);
RectF rect = new RectF(0.0f, 0.0f, width, height);
// rect contains the bounds of the shape
// radius is the radius in pixels of the rounded corners
// paint contains the shader that will texture the shape
canvas.drawRoundRect(rect, radius, radius, paint);
The advantages of this over other methods is that it:
does not create a separate copy of the bitmap, which uses a lot of memory with large images [vs most of the other answers here]
supports antialisasing [vs clipPath method]
supports alpha [vs xfermode+porterduff method]
supports hardware acceleration [vs clipPath method]
only draws once to the canvas [vs xfermode and clippath methods]
I've created a RoundedImageView based off this code that wraps this logic into an ImageView and adds proper ScaleType support and an optional rounded border.

Starting with the version 1.2.0-alpha03 of the Material Components Library there is the new ShapeableImageView.
You can use something like:
<com.google.android.material.imageview.ShapeableImageView
...
app:shapeAppearanceOverlay="#style/roundedImageView"
app:srcCompat="#drawable/ic_image" />
with in your themes.xml:
<style name="roundedImageView" parent="">
<item name="cornerFamily">rounded</item>
<item name="cornerSize">8dp</item>
</style>
Or programmatically:
float radius = getResources().getDimension(R.dimen.default_corner_radius);
imageView.setShapeAppearanceModel(imageView.getShapeAppearanceModel()
.toBuilder()
.setAllCorners(CornerFamily.ROUNDED,radius)
.build());
With jetpack compose you can apply a clip Modifier using a RoundedCornerShape:
Image(
painter = painterResource(R.drawable.xxxx),
contentDescription = "xxxx",
contentScale = ContentScale.Crop,
modifier = Modifier
.size(64.dp)
.clip(RoundedCornerShape(8.dp))
)

In the v21 of the Support library there is now a solution to this: it's called RoundedBitmapDrawable.
It's basically just like a normal Drawable except you give it a corner radius for the clipping with:
setCornerRadius(float cornerRadius)
So, starting with Bitmap src and a target ImageView, it would look something like this:
RoundedBitmapDrawable dr = RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(res, src);
dr.setCornerRadius(cornerRadius);
imageView.setImageDrawable(dr);

A quick xml solution -
<android.support.v7.widget.CardView
android:layout_width="40dp"
android:layout_height="40dp"
app:cardElevation="0dp"
app:cardCornerRadius="4dp">
<ImageView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:id="#+id/rounded_user_image"
android:scaleType="fitXY"/>
</android.support.v7.widget.CardView>
You can set your desired width, height and radius on CardView and scaleType on ImageView.
With AndroidX, use <androidx.cardview.widget.CardView>

I have done by Custom ImageView:
public class RoundRectCornerImageView extends ImageView {
private float radius = 18.0f;
private Path path;
private RectF rect;
public RoundRectCornerImageView(Context context) {
super(context);
init();
}
public RoundRectCornerImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
init();
}
public RoundRectCornerImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyle) {
super(context, attrs, defStyle);
init();
}
private void init() {
path = new Path();
}
#Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
rect = new RectF(0, 0, this.getWidth(), this.getHeight());
path.addRoundRect(rect, radius, radius, Path.Direction.CW);
canvas.clipPath(path);
super.onDraw(canvas);
}
}
How to use:
<com.mypackage.RoundRectCornerImageView
android:id="#+id/imageView"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:background="#drawable/image"
android:scaleType="fitXY" />
Output:
Hope this would help you.

I found that both methods were very helpful in coming up with a working solution. Here is my composite version, that is pixel independent and allows you to have some square corners with the rest of the corners having the same radius (which is the usual use case).
With thanks to both of the solutions above:
public static Bitmap getRoundedCornerBitmap(Context context, Bitmap input, int pixels , int w , int h , boolean squareTL, boolean squareTR, boolean squareBL, boolean squareBR ) {
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(w, h, Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final float densityMultiplier = context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density;
final int color = 0xff424242;
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, w, h);
final RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
//make sure that our rounded corner is scaled appropriately
final float roundPx = pixels*densityMultiplier;
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
paint.setColor(color);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, roundPx, roundPx, paint);
//draw rectangles over the corners we want to be square
if (squareTL ){
canvas.drawRect(0, h/2, w/2, h, paint);
}
if (squareTR ){
canvas.drawRect(w/2, h/2, w, h, paint);
}
if (squareBL ){
canvas.drawRect(0, 0, w/2, h/2, paint);
}
if (squareBR ){
canvas.drawRect(w/2, 0, w, h/2, paint);
}
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(PorterDuff.Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(input, 0,0, paint);
return output;
}
Also, I overrode ImageView to put this in so I could define it in xml.
You may want to add in some of the logic that the super call makes here, but I've commented it as it's not helpful in my case.
#Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
//super.onDraw(canvas);
Drawable drawable = getDrawable();
Bitmap b = ((BitmapDrawable)drawable).getBitmap() ;
Bitmap bitmap = b.copy(Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888, true);
int w = getWidth(), h = getHeight();
Bitmap roundBitmap = CropImageView.getRoundedCornerBitmap( getContext(), bitmap,10 , w, h , true, false,true, false);
canvas.drawBitmap(roundBitmap, 0,0 , null);
}
Hope this helps!

Rounded image Using ImageLoader here
Create DisplayImageOptions:
DisplayImageOptions options = new DisplayImageOptions.Builder()
// this will make circle, pass the width of image
.displayer(new RoundedBitmapDisplayer(getResources().getDimensionPixelSize(R.dimen.image_dimen_menu)))
.cacheOnDisc(true)
.build();
imageLoader.displayImage(url_for_image,ImageView,options);
Or you can user Picasso Library from Square.
Picasso.with(mContext)
.load(com.app.utility.Constants.BASE_URL+b.image)
.placeholder(R.drawable.profile)
.error(R.drawable.profile)
.transform(new RoundedTransformation(50, 4))
.resizeDimen(R.dimen.list_detail_image_size, R.dimen.list_detail_image_size)
.centerCrop()
.into(v.im_user);
you can download RoundedTransformation file here
here

As all the answers seemed too complicated for me just for round corners I thought and came to another solution which I think is worth to share, just with XML in case you have some space around the image:
Create a bordered shape with transparent content like this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:shape="rectangle">
<corners
android:radius="30dp" />
<stroke
android:color="#ffffffff"
android:width="10dp" />
</shape>
Then in a RelativeLayout you can first place your image and then in the same location above the shape with another ImageView. The cover-shape should be larger in size by the amount of the border width. Be careful to take a larger corner radius as the outer radius is defined but the inner radius is what covers your image.
Hope it helps somebody, too.
Edit as per CQM request the relative layout example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<RelativeLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent" >
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/imageToShow"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:layout_alignBottom="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_alignLeft="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_alignRight="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_alignTop="#+id/imgCorners"
android:background="#ffffff"
android:contentDescription="#string/desc"
android:padding="5dp"
android:scaleType="centerCrop" />
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:adjustViewBounds="true"
android:contentDescription="#string/desc"
android:src="#drawable/corners_white" />
</RelativeLayout>

It can be done with a ShapeableImageView using a ShapeAppearanceOverlay:
<com.google.android.material.imageview.ShapeableImageView
android:id="#+id/avatar"
android:layout_width="64dp"
android:layout_height="64dp"
android:padding="4dp"
app:shapeAppearance="#style/ShapeAppearanceOverlay.Avatar"/>
Where style ShapeAppearanceOverlay.Avatar resides in res/values/styles.xml:
<style name="ShapeAppearanceOverlay.Avatar" parent="ShapeAppearance.MaterialComponents.SmallComponent">
<item name="cornerFamily">rounded</item>
<item name="cornerSize">50%</item>
</style>
This just need equal layout_height and layout_width set, else with will be a pill an no circle.

My implementation of ImageView with rounded corners widget, that (down||up)sizes image to required dimensions. It utilizes code form CaspNZ.
public class ImageViewRounded extends ImageView {
public ImageViewRounded(Context context) {
super(context);
}
public ImageViewRounded(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
}
public ImageViewRounded(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyle) {
super(context, attrs, defStyle);
}
#Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
BitmapDrawable drawable = (BitmapDrawable) getDrawable();
if (drawable == null) {
return;
}
if (getWidth() == 0 || getHeight() == 0) {
return;
}
Bitmap fullSizeBitmap = drawable.getBitmap();
int scaledWidth = getMeasuredWidth();
int scaledHeight = getMeasuredHeight();
Bitmap mScaledBitmap;
if (scaledWidth == fullSizeBitmap.getWidth() && scaledHeight == fullSizeBitmap.getHeight()) {
mScaledBitmap = fullSizeBitmap;
} else {
mScaledBitmap = Bitmap.createScaledBitmap(fullSizeBitmap, scaledWidth, scaledHeight, true /* filter */);
}
Bitmap roundBitmap = ImageUtilities.getRoundedCornerBitmap(getContext(), mScaledBitmap, 5, scaledWidth, scaledHeight,
false, false, false, false);
canvas.drawBitmap(roundBitmap, 0, 0, null);
}
}

As of recently, there is another way - using Glide's Generated API. It takes some initial work but then gives you all the power of Glide with the flexibility to do anything because you writhe the actual code so I think it's a good solution for the long run. Plus, the usage is very simple and neat.
First, setup Glide version 4+:
implementation 'com.github.bumptech.glide:glide:4.6.1'
annotationProcessor 'com.github.bumptech.glide:compiler:4.6.1'
Then create Glid's app module class to trigger the annotation processing:
#GlideModule
public final class MyAppGlideModule extends AppGlideModule {}
Then create the Glide extension which actually does the work. You can customize it to do whatever you want:
#GlideExtension
public class MyGlideExtension {
private MyGlideExtension() {}
#NonNull
#GlideOption
public static RequestOptions roundedCorners(RequestOptions options, #NonNull Context context, int cornerRadius) {
int px = Math.round(cornerRadius * (context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().xdpi / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));
return options.transforms(new RoundedCorners(px));
}
}
After adding these files, build your project.
Then use it in your code like this:
GlideApp.with(this)
.load(imageUrl)
.roundedCorners(getApplicationContext(), 5)
.into(imageView);

There is a cool library that allows you to shape imageviews.
Here is an example:
<com.github.siyamed.shapeimageview.mask.PorterShapeImageView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
app:siShape="#drawable/shape_rounded_rectangle"
android:src="#drawable/neo"
app:siSquare="true"/>
Shape definition:
<shape android:shape="rectangle" xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
<corners
android:topLeftRadius="18dp"
android:topRightRadius="18dp"
android:bottomLeftRadius="18dp"
android:bottomRightRadius="18dp" />
<solid android:color="#color/black" />
</shape>
Result:

Try the Material Components Library and use the ShapeableImageView.
Somethig like this :
Java :
imageView=new ShapeableImageView(context);
imageView.setShapeAppearanceModel(
imageView.getShapeAppearanceModel()
.toBuilder()
.setAllCornerSizes(20)
.build());
Kotlin :
val imageView = ShapeableImageView(context)
imageView.setShapeAppearanceModel(
imageView.getShapeAppearanceModel()
.toBuilder()
.setAllCornerSizes(20f)
.build())

Here is a simple example overriding imageView, you can then also use it in layout designer to preview.
public class RoundedImageView extends ImageView {
public RoundedImageView(Context context) {
super(context);
}
public RoundedImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
}
public RoundedImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyleAttr) {
super(context, attrs, defStyleAttr);
}
#TargetApi(Build.VERSION_CODES.LOLLIPOP)
public RoundedImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyleAttr, int defStyleRes) {
super(context, attrs, defStyleAttr, defStyleRes);
}
#Override
public void setImageDrawable(Drawable drawable) {
float radius = 0.1f;
Bitmap bitmap = ((BitmapDrawable) drawable).getBitmap();
RoundedBitmapDrawable rid = RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(getResources(), bitmap);
rid.setCornerRadius(bitmap.getWidth() * radius);
super.setImageDrawable(rid);
}
}
This is for fast solution. Radius is used on all corners and is based of percentage of bitmap width.
I just overrided setImageDrawable and used support v4 method for rounded bitmap drawable.
Usage:
<com.example.widgets.RoundedImageView
android:layout_width="39dp"
android:layout_height="39dp"
android:src="#drawable/your_drawable" />
Preview with imageView and custom imageView:

Kotlin
import android.graphics.BitmapFactory
import android.os.Bundle
import android.support.v4.graphics.drawable.RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory
import kotlinx.android.synthetic.main.activity_main.*
val bitmap = BitmapFactory.decodeResource(resources, R.drawable.myImage)
val rounded = RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(resources, bitmap)
rounded.cornerRadius = 20f
profileImageView.setImageDrawable(rounded)
To make ImageView Circular we can change cornerRadius with:
rounded.isCircular = true

Apply a shape to your imageView as below:
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:shape="rectangle" >
<solid android:color="#faf5e6" />
<stroke
android:width="1dp"
android:color="#808080" />
<corners android:radius="15dp" />
<padding
android:bottom="5dp"
android:left="5dp"
android:right="5dp"
android:top="5dp" />
</shape>
it may be helpful to you friend.

You should extend ImageView and draw your own rounded rectangle.
If you want a frame around the image you could also superimpose the rounded frame on top of the image view in the layout.
[edit]Superimpose the frame on to op the original image, by using a FrameLayout for example. The first element of the FrameLayout will be the image you want to diplay rounded. Then add another ImageView with the frame. The second ImageView will be displayed on top of the original ImageView and thus Android will draw it's contents above the orignal ImageView.

Props to George Walters II above, I just took his answer and extended it a bit to support rounding individual corners differently. This could be optimized a bit further (some of the target rects overlap), but not a whole lot.
I know this thread is a bit old, but its one of the top results for queries on Google for how to round corners of ImageViews on Android.
/**
* Use this method to scale a bitmap and give it specific rounded corners.
* #param context Context object used to ascertain display density.
* #param bitmap The original bitmap that will be scaled and have rounded corners applied to it.
* #param upperLeft Corner radius for upper left.
* #param upperRight Corner radius for upper right.
* #param lowerRight Corner radius for lower right.
* #param lowerLeft Corner radius for lower left.
* #param endWidth Width to which to scale original bitmap.
* #param endHeight Height to which to scale original bitmap.
* #return Scaled bitmap with rounded corners.
*/
public static Bitmap getRoundedCornerBitmap(Context context, Bitmap bitmap, float upperLeft,
float upperRight, float lowerRight, float lowerLeft, int endWidth,
int endHeight) {
float densityMultiplier = context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density;
// scale incoming bitmap to appropriate px size given arguments and display dpi
bitmap = Bitmap.createScaledBitmap(bitmap,
Math.round(endWidth * densityMultiplier),
Math.round(endHeight * densityMultiplier), true);
// create empty bitmap for drawing
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(
Math.round(endWidth * densityMultiplier),
Math.round(endHeight * densityMultiplier), Config.ARGB_8888);
// get canvas for empty bitmap
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
int width = canvas.getWidth();
int height = canvas.getHeight();
// scale the rounded corners appropriately given dpi
upperLeft *= densityMultiplier;
upperRight *= densityMultiplier;
lowerRight *= densityMultiplier;
lowerLeft *= densityMultiplier;
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setColor(Color.WHITE);
// fill the canvas with transparency
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
// draw the rounded corners around the image rect. clockwise, starting in upper left.
canvas.drawCircle(upperLeft, upperLeft, upperLeft, paint);
canvas.drawCircle(width - upperRight, upperRight, upperRight, paint);
canvas.drawCircle(width - lowerRight, height - lowerRight, lowerRight, paint);
canvas.drawCircle(lowerLeft, height - lowerLeft, lowerLeft, paint);
// fill in all the gaps between circles. clockwise, starting at top.
RectF rectT = new RectF(upperLeft, 0, width - upperRight, height / 2);
RectF rectR = new RectF(width / 2, upperRight, width, height - lowerRight);
RectF rectB = new RectF(lowerLeft, height / 2, width - lowerRight, height);
RectF rectL = new RectF(0, upperLeft, width / 2, height - lowerLeft);
canvas.drawRect(rectT, paint);
canvas.drawRect(rectR, paint);
canvas.drawRect(rectB, paint);
canvas.drawRect(rectL, paint);
// set up the rect for the image
Rect imageRect = new Rect(0, 0, width, height);
// set up paint object such that it only paints on Color.WHITE
paint.setXfermode(new AvoidXfermode(Color.WHITE, 255, AvoidXfermode.Mode.TARGET));
// draw resized bitmap onto imageRect in canvas, using paint as configured above
canvas.drawBitmap(bitmap, imageRect, imageRect, paint);
return output;
}

Romain Guy is where it's at.
Minified version as follows.
Bitmap bitmap = ((BitmapDrawable) getResources().getDrawable(R.drawable.image)).getBitmap();
Bitmap bitmapRounded = Bitmap.createBitmap(bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight(), bitmap.getConfig());
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bitmapRounded);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setShader(new BitmapShader(bitmap, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP));
canvas.drawRoundRect((new RectF(0.0f, 0.0f, bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight())), 10, 10, paint);
imageView.setImageBitmap(bitmapRounded);

Why not do clipping in draw()?
Here is my solution:
Extend RelativeLayout with clipping
Put ImageView (or other views) into the layout:
Code:
public class RoundRelativeLayout extends RelativeLayout {
private final float radius;
public RoundRelativeLayout(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
TypedArray attrArray = context.obtainStyledAttributes(attrs,
R.styleable.RoundRelativeLayout);
radius = attrArray.getDimension(
R.styleable.RoundRelativeLayout_radius, 0);
}
private boolean isPathValid;
private final Path path = new Path();
private Path getRoundRectPath() {
if (isPathValid) {
return path;
}
path.reset();
int width = getWidth();
int height = getHeight();
RectF bounds = new RectF(0, 0, width, height);
path.addRoundRect(bounds, radius, radius, Direction.CCW);
isPathValid = true;
return path;
}
#Override
protected void dispatchDraw(Canvas canvas) {
canvas.clipPath(getRoundRectPath());
super.dispatchDraw(canvas);
}
#Override
public void draw(Canvas canvas) {
canvas.clipPath(getRoundRectPath());
super.draw(canvas);
}
#Override
protected void onMeasure(int widthMeasureSpec, int heightMeasureSpec) {
int oldWidth = getMeasuredWidth();
int oldHeight = getMeasuredHeight();
super.onMeasure(widthMeasureSpec, heightMeasureSpec);
int newWidth = getMeasuredWidth();
int newHeight = getMeasuredHeight();
if (newWidth != oldWidth || newHeight != oldHeight) {
isPathValid = false;
}
}
}

This pure xml solution was good enough in my case. http://www.techrepublic.com/article/pro-tip-round-corners-on-an-android-imageview-with-this-hack/
EDIT
Here's the answer in a nutshell:
In the /res/drawable folder, create a frame.xml file. In it, we define a simple rectangle with rounded corners and a transparent center.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" android:shape="rectangle">
<solid android:color="#00ffffff" />
<padding android:left="6dp"
android:top="6dp"
android:right="6dp"
android:bottom="6dp" />
<corners android:radius="12dp" />
<stroke android:width="6dp" android:color="#ffffffff" />
</shape>
In your layout file you add a LinearLayout that contains a standard ImageView, as well as a nested FrameLayout. The FrameLayout uses padding and the custom drawable to give the illusion of rounded corners.
<LinearLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:orientation="vertical"
android:layout_gravity="center"
android:gravity="center"
android:background="#ffffffff">
<ImageView
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:padding="6dp"
android:src="#drawable/tr"/>
<FrameLayout
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content">
<ImageView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:padding="6dp"
android:src="#drawable/tr"/>
<ImageView
android:src="#drawable/frame"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent" />
</FrameLayout>
</LinearLayout>

None of the methods provided in the answers worked for me. I found the following way works if your android version is 5.0 or above:
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.LOLLIPOP) {
ViewOutlineProvider provider = new ViewOutlineProvider() {
#Override
public void getOutline(View view, Outline outline) {
int curveRadius = 24;
outline.setRoundRect(0, 0, view.getWidth(), (view.getHeight()+curveRadius), curveRadius);
}
};
imageview.setOutlineProvider(provider);
imageview.setClipToOutline(true);
}
No xml shapes to be defined, and the code above create corners only for top, which normal methods won't work. If you need 4 corners to be rounded, remove:
"+ curveRadius"
From the parameter for bottom in setRoundRect. You can further expand the shape to any others by specifying outlines that suit your needs. Check out the following link:
Android Developer Documentation.
Note, as with any measure in Android, you have to "convert" the size typically from DP. In the example above, say you want the radius to be 24
int curveRadius = 24;
For example you may be later adding a border in a drawable with the radius set as "24" and you wish it to match. Hence,
float desiredRadius = 24;
float radiusConverted = TypedValue.applyDimension(
TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_DIP,
desiredRadius,
itemView.getContext().getResources().getDisplayMetrics());
and then
int curveRadius = radiusConverted;

The following creates a rounded rectangle layout object that draws a rounded rectangle around any child objects that are placed in it. It also demonstrates how to create views and layouts programmatically without using the layout xml files.
package android.example;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.graphics.Color;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.util.DisplayMetrics;
import android.util.TypedValue;
import android.view.ViewGroup.LayoutParams;
import android.widget.LinearLayout;
import android.widget.TextView;
public class MessageScreen extends Activity {
/** Called when the activity is first created. */
#Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
int mainBackgroundColor = Color.parseColor("#2E8B57");
int labelTextColor = Color.parseColor("#FF4500");
int messageBackgroundColor = Color.parseColor("#3300FF");
int messageTextColor = Color.parseColor("#FFFF00");
DisplayMetrics metrics = new DisplayMetrics();
getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay().getMetrics(metrics);
float density = metrics.density;
int minMarginSize = Math.round(density * 8);
int paddingSize = minMarginSize * 2;
int maxMarginSize = minMarginSize * 4;
TextView label = new TextView(this);
/*
* The LayoutParams are instructions to the Layout that will contain the
* View for laying out the View, so you need to use the LayoutParams of
* the Layout that will contain the View.
*/
LinearLayout.LayoutParams labelLayoutParams = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
label.setLayoutParams(labelLayoutParams);
label.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_SP, 18);
label.setPadding(paddingSize, paddingSize, paddingSize, paddingSize);
label.setText(R.string.title);
label.setTextColor(labelTextColor);
TextView message = new TextView(this);
RoundedRectangle.LayoutParams messageLayoutParams = new RoundedRectangle.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.FILL_PARENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
/*
* This is one of the calls must made to force a ViewGroup to call its
* draw method instead of just calling the draw method of its children.
* This tells the RoundedRectangle to put some extra space around the
* View.
*/
messageLayoutParams.setMargins(minMarginSize, paddingSize,
minMarginSize, maxMarginSize);
message.setLayoutParams(messageLayoutParams);
message.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_SP, paddingSize);
message.setText(R.string.message);
message.setTextColor(messageTextColor);
message.setBackgroundColor(messageBackgroundColor);
RoundedRectangle messageContainer = new RoundedRectangle(this);
LinearLayout.LayoutParams messageContainerLayoutParams = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.FILL_PARENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
messageContainerLayoutParams.setMargins(paddingSize, 0, paddingSize, 0);
messageContainer.setLayoutParams(messageContainerLayoutParams);
messageContainer.setOrientation(LinearLayout.VERTICAL);
/*
* This is one of the calls must made to force a ViewGroup to call its
* draw method instead of just calling the draw method of its children.
* This tells the RoundedRectangle to color the the exta space that was
* put around the View as well as the View. This is exterior color of
* the RoundedRectangle.
*/
messageContainer.setBackgroundColor(mainBackgroundColor);
/*
* This is one of the calls must made to force a ViewGroup to call its
* draw method instead of just calling the draw method of its children.
* This is the interior color of the RoundedRectangle. It must be
* different than the exterior color of the RoundedRectangle or the
* RoundedRectangle will not call its draw method.
*/
messageContainer.setInteriorColor(messageBackgroundColor);
// Add the message to the RoundedRectangle.
messageContainer.addView(message);
//
LinearLayout main = new LinearLayout(this);
LinearLayout.LayoutParams mainLayoutParams = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.FILL_PARENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
main.setLayoutParams(mainLayoutParams);
main.setOrientation(LinearLayout.VERTICAL);
main.setBackgroundColor(mainBackgroundColor);
main.addView(label);
main.addView(messageContainer);
setContentView(main);
}
}
The class for RoundedRectangle layout object is as defined here:
/**
* A LinearLayout that draws a rounded rectangle around the child View that was added to it.
*/
package android.example;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.content.Context;
import android.graphics.Canvas;
import android.graphics.Paint;
import android.graphics.Rect;
import android.graphics.RectF;
import android.util.AttributeSet;
import android.util.DisplayMetrics;
import android.widget.LinearLayout;
/**
* A LinearLayout that has rounded corners instead of square corners.
*
* #author Danny Remington
*
* #see LinearLayout
*
*/
public class RoundedRectangle extends LinearLayout {
private int mInteriorColor;
public RoundedRectangle(Context p_context) {
super(p_context);
}
public RoundedRectangle(Context p_context, AttributeSet attributeSet) {
super(p_context, attributeSet);
}
// Listener for the onDraw event that occurs when the Layout is drawn.
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, getWidth(), getHeight());
RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
DisplayMetrics metrics = new DisplayMetrics();
Activity activity = (Activity) getContext();
activity.getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay().getMetrics(metrics);
float density = metrics.density;
int arcSize = Math.round(density * 10);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setColor(mInteriorColor);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, arcSize, arcSize, paint);
}
/**
* Set the background color to use inside the RoundedRectangle.
*
* #param Primitive int - The color inside the rounded rectangle.
*/
public void setInteriorColor(int interiorColor) {
mInteriorColor = interiorColor;
}
/**
* Get the background color used inside the RoundedRectangle.
*
* #return Primitive int - The color inside the rounded rectangle.
*/
public int getInteriorColor() {
return mInteriorColor;
}
}

If you are using Glide Library this would be helpful:
Glide.with(getApplicationContext())
.load(image_url)
.asBitmap()
.centerCrop()
.into(new BitmapImageViewTarget(imageView) {
#Override
protected void setResource(Bitmap resource) {
RoundedBitmapDrawable circularBitmapDrawable =
RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(getApplicationContext().getResources(), resource);
circularBitmapDrawable.setCornerRadius(dpToPx(10));
circularBitmapDrawable.setAntiAlias(true);
imageView.setImageDrawable(circularBitmapDrawable);
}
});
public int dpToPx(int dp) {
DisplayMetrics displayMetrics = getApplicationContext().getResources().getDisplayMetrics();
return Math.round(dp * (displayMetrics.xdpi / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));
}

Thanks a lot to first answer. Here is modified version to convert a rectangular image into a square one (and rounded) and fill color is being passed as parameter.
public static Bitmap getRoundedBitmap(Bitmap bitmap, int pixels, int color) {
Bitmap inpBitmap = bitmap;
int width = 0;
int height = 0;
width = inpBitmap.getWidth();
height = inpBitmap.getHeight();
if (width <= height) {
height = width;
} else {
width = height;
}
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(width, height, Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, width, height);
final RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
final float roundPx = pixels;
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
paint.setColor(color);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, roundPx, roundPx, paint);
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(inpBitmap, rect, rect, paint);
return output;
}

if your image is on internet the best way is using glide and RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory (from API 21 - but available in support library) like so:
Glide.with(ctx).load(url).asBitmap().centerCrop().into(new BitmapImageViewTarget(imageView) {
#Override
protected void setResource(Bitmap res) {
RoundedBitmapDrawable bitmapDrawable =
RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(ctx.getResources(), res);
bitmapDrawable.setCircular(true);//comment this line and uncomment the next line if you dont want it fully cricular
//circularBitmapDrawable.setCornerRadius(cornerRadius);
imageView.setImageDrawable(bitmapDrawable);
}
});

Answer for the question that is redirected here:
"How to create a circular ImageView in Android?"
public static Bitmap getRoundBitmap(Bitmap bitmap) {
int min = Math.min(bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight());
Bitmap bitmapRounded = Bitmap.createBitmap(min, min, bitmap.getConfig());
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bitmapRounded);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setShader(new BitmapShader(bitmap, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP));
canvas.drawRoundRect((new RectF(0.0f, 0.0f, min, min)), min/2, min/2, paint);
return bitmapRounded;
}

Related

How to create a partially-rounded-corners-rectangular drawable with center-crop and without creating new bitmap?

Background
I've already seen how to create a drawable that's circular out of a bitmap, and also how to add an outline (AKA stroke) around it, here.
The problem
I can't find out how to do a similar task for rounding only some of the corners of the bitmap, inside the drawable, without creating a new bitmap, and still do it for a center-crop ImageView.
What I've found
This is what I've found, but it does create a new bitmap, and when using it in an imageView with center-crop (source here):
/**
* Create rounded corner bitmap from original bitmap.
*
* #param input Original bitmap.
* #param cornerRadius Corner radius in pixel.
* #param squareTL,squareTR,squareBL,squareBR where to use square corners instead of rounded ones.
*/
public static Bitmap getRoundedCornerBitmap(final Bitmap input, final float cornerRadius, final int w, final int h,
final boolean squareTL, final boolean squareTR, final boolean squareBL, final boolean squareBR) {
final Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(w, h, Config.ARGB_8888);
final Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final int color = 0xff424242;
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, w, h);
final RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
// make sure that our rounded corner is scaled appropriately
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setXfermode(null);
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
paint.setColor(color);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, cornerRadius, cornerRadius, paint);
// draw rectangles over the corners we want to be square
if (squareTL)
canvas.drawRect(0, 0, w / 2, h / 2, paint);
if (squareTR)
canvas.drawRect(w / 2, 0, w, h / 2, paint);
if (squareBL)
canvas.drawRect(0, h / 2, w / 2, h, paint);
if (squareBR)
canvas.drawRect(w / 2, h / 2, w, h, paint);
paint.setXfermode(PORTER_DUFF_XFERMODE_SRC_IN);
canvas.drawBitmap(input, 0, 0, paint);
return output;
}
And, this is what I've found for creating a rounded corners drawable that acts on all corners:
public static class RoundedCornersDrawable extends Drawable {
private final float mCornerRadius;
private final RectF mRect = new RectF();
private final BitmapShader mBitmapShader;
private final Paint mPaint;
public RoundedCornersDrawable(final Bitmap bitmap, final float cornerRadius) {
mCornerRadius = cornerRadius;
mBitmapShader = new BitmapShader(bitmap, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP,
Shader.TileMode.CLAMP);
mPaint = new Paint();
mPaint.setAntiAlias(false);
mPaint.setShader(mBitmapShader);
mRect.set(0, 0, bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight());
}
#Override
protected void onBoundsChange(final Rect bounds) {
super.onBoundsChange(bounds);
mRect.set(0, 0, bounds.width(), bounds.height());
}
#Override
public void draw(final Canvas canvas) {
canvas.drawRoundRect(mRect, mCornerRadius, mCornerRadius, mPaint);
}
#Override
public int getOpacity() {
return PixelFormat.TRANSLUCENT;
}
#Override
public void setAlpha(final int alpha) {
mPaint.setAlpha(alpha);
}
#Override
public void setColorFilter(final ColorFilter cf) {
mPaint.setColorFilter(cf);
}
}
But this solution only works well if the imageView shows the content while maintaining the same aspect ratio as the bitmap, and also has its size pre-determined.
The question
How to create a center-cropped drawable, that shows a bitmap, has rounded corners for specific corners, and also be able to show an outline/stroke around it?
I want to do it without creating a new bitmap or extending ImageView. Only use a drawable that has the bitmap as the input.
The SMART way is to use the PorterDuff blending mode. It's really simple and slick to create any fancy shading, blending, "crop" effect. you can find a lot of good tutorial about PorterDuff. here a good one.
I always use this library to achieve what you are looking for. you can round any corner you want and also add stroke.
https://github.com/vinc3m1/RoundedImageView
You can use it or see it's source codes just for inspiration.
EDIT
there is no need to use Image View and make bitmap or drawable yourself and show it in Image View.
Just replace Image View with Rounded Image View and it will handle everything for you without any extra work in code !
here is sample :
<com.makeramen.roundedimageview.RoundedImageView
xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
android:id="#+id/imageView1"
android:scaleType="centerCrop"
app:riv_corner_radius="8dp"
app:riv_border_width="2dp"
app:riv_border_color="#333333"
app:riv_oval="false" />
In code, just pass any image resource to it or use any Image Loader with it.
RoundedImageView myRoundedImage=(RoundedImageView)findViewById(R.id.imageView1);
myRoundedImage.setImageResource(R.drawable.MY_DRAWABLE);
// OR
ImageLoader.getInstance().displayImage(YOUR_IMAGE_URL, myRoundedImage);
if you want to just make specific corners rounded try this:
<com.makeramen.roundedimageview.RoundedImageView
xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
android:id="#+id/imageView1"
android:scaleType="centerCrop"
app:riv_corner_radius_top_right="8dp"
app:riv_corner_radius_bottom_right="8dp"
app:riv_border_width="2dp"
app:riv_border_color="#333333"
app:riv_oval="false" />
Well, you can create a new .xml drawable named my_background and paste this code below:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:shape="rectangle"
>
<solid android:color="#00000000"/>
<corners
android:bottomLeftRadius="12dp"
android:bottomRightRadius="12dp"
android:topLeftRadius="12dp"
android:topRightRadius="12dp" />
<stroke
android:width="1dp"
android:color="#000000"
/>
</shape>
Then, you set your ImageButton's, ImageView's background to your new drawable, like this:
android:background="#drawable/my_background"
android:scaleType="centerCrop"
or programatically:
myView.setBackground(R.drawable.my_background);
Hope it helps!
EDIT:
To programmatically create a similar drawable, you can use it:
GradientDrawable shape = new GradientDrawable();
shape.setShape(GradientDrawable.RECTANGLE);
shape.setCornerRadii(new float[] { 8, 8, 8, 8, 0, 0, 0, 0 });
shape.setColor(Color.TRANSPARENT);
shape.setStroke(3, Color.BLACK);
v.setBackgroundDrawable(shape);
Ok, here's my try. The only gotcha is that "int corners" is meant to be a set of flags. Such as 0b1111 where each 1 represents a corner to be rounded, and 0 is the opposite. The order is TOP_LEFT, TOP_RIGHT, BOTTOM_LEFT, BOTTOM_RIGHT.
example usage first, formatted for readability:
((ImageView) findViewById(R.id.imageView)).setImageDrawable(
new RoundedRectDrawable(
getResources(),
bitmap,
(float) .15,
0b1101,
8,
Color.YELLOW
)
);
code:
import android.content.res.Resources;
import android.graphics.Bitmap;
import android.graphics.BitmapShader;
import android.graphics.Canvas;
import android.graphics.Color;
import android.graphics.Paint;
import android.graphics.RectF;
import android.graphics.drawable.BitmapDrawable;
import android.os.SystemClock;
/**
* Created by mliu on 4/15/16.
*/
public class RoundedRectDrawable extends BitmapDrawable {
private final BitmapShader bitmapShader;
private final Paint p;
private final RectF rect;
private final float borderRadius;
private final float outlineBorderRadius;
private final int w;
private final int h;
private final int corners;
private final int border;
private final int bordercolor;
public RoundedRectDrawable(final Resources resources, final Bitmap bitmap, float borderRadiusSeed, int corners, int borderPX, int borderColor) {
super(resources, bitmap);
bitmapShader = new BitmapShader(getBitmap(),
BitmapShader.TileMode.CLAMP, BitmapShader.TileMode.CLAMP);
final Bitmap b = getBitmap();
p = getPaint();
p.setAntiAlias(true);
p.setShader(bitmapShader);
w = b.getWidth();
h = b.getHeight();
rect = new RectF(0,0,w,h);
borderRadius = borderRadiusSeed * Math.min(w, h);
border = borderPX;
this.corners = corners;
this.bordercolor = borderColor;
outlineBorderRadius = borderRadiusSeed * Math.min(w+border,h+border);
}
#Override
public void draw(final Canvas canvas) {
if ((corners&0b1111)==0){
if (border>0) {
Paint border = new Paint();
border.setColor(bordercolor);
canvas.drawRect(rect, border);
}
canvas.drawRect(rect.left + border, rect.top + border, rect.width() - border, rect.height() - border, p);
} else {
if (border >0) {
Paint border = new Paint();
border.setColor(bordercolor);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rect, outlineBorderRadius, outlineBorderRadius, border);
if ((corners & 0b1000) == 0) {
//top left
canvas.drawRect(rect.left, rect.top, rect.width() / 2, rect.height() / 2, border);
}
if ((corners & 0b0100) == 0) {
//top right
canvas.drawRect(rect.width() / 2, rect.top, rect.width(), rect.height() / 2, border);
}
if ((corners & 0b0010) == 0) {
//bottom left
canvas.drawRect(rect.left, rect.height() / 2, rect.width() / 2, rect.height(), border);
}
if ((corners & 0b0001) == 0) {
//bottom right
canvas.drawRect(rect.width() / 2, rect.height() / 2, rect.width(), rect.height(), border);
}
}
canvas.drawRoundRect(new RectF(rect.left + border, rect.top + border, rect.width() - border, rect.height() - border), borderRadius, borderRadius, p);
if ((corners & 0b1000) == 0) {
//top left
canvas.drawRect(rect.left + border, rect.top + border, rect.width() / 2, rect.height() / 2, p);
}
if ((corners & 0b0100) == 0) {
//top right
canvas.drawRect(rect.width() / 2, rect.top + border, rect.width() - border, rect.height() / 2, p);
}
if ((corners & 0b0010) == 0) {
//bottom left
canvas.drawRect(rect.left + border, rect.height() / 2, rect.width() / 2, rect.height() - border, p);
}
if ((corners & 0b0001) == 0) {
//bottom right
canvas.drawRect(rect.width() / 2, rect.height() / 2, rect.width() - border, rect.height() - border, p);
}
}
}
}
So, this handles the outline first, if needed, then the bitmap. It marks the canvas up with a rounded rect first, then "squares out" each corner you don't want to round. Seems highly inefficient, and probably is, but average case run time before minimal optimizations (corners = 0b0000, 10 canvas.draw calls) takes ~ 200us on a S7. And, that time is SUPER inconsistent based on phone usage. I've gotten as low as 80us and as high as 1.5ms.
NOTES/WARNING: I am BAD at this. This is not optimal. There's probably better answers already here on SO. The subject matter is just a bit uncommon and difficult to search up. I was originally not going to post this, but at time of writing this is still not marked answered, and the library OP did not wish to use due to problems with their Drawable actually use a very similar approach as my terrible solution. So, now I'm less embarrassed to share this. Additionally, though what I posted today was 95% written yesterday, I know I got some of this code from a tutorial or a SO post, but I can't remember who to attribute cause I didn't end up using it in my project. Apologies whoever you are.

Android inverse shape using xml [duplicate]

In Android, an ImageView is a rectangle by default. How can I make it a rounded rectangle (clip off all 4 corners of my Bitmap to be rounded rectangles) in the ImageView?
Note that from 2021 onwards, simply use ShapeableImageView
This is pretty late in response, but for anyone else that is looking for this, you can do the following code to manually round the corners of your images.
http://www.ruibm.com/?p=184
This isn't my code, but I've used it and it's works wonderfully. I used it as a helper within an ImageHelper class and extended it just a bit to pass in the amount of feathering I need for a given image.
Final code looks like this:
package com.company.app.utils;
import android.graphics.Bitmap;
import android.graphics.Canvas;
import android.graphics.Paint;
import android.graphics.PorterDuffXfermode;
import android.graphics.Rect;
import android.graphics.RectF;
import android.graphics.Bitmap.Config;
import android.graphics.PorterDuff.Mode;
public class ImageHelper {
public static Bitmap getRoundedCornerBitmap(Bitmap bitmap, int pixels) {
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap
.getHeight(), Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final int color = 0xff424242;
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight());
final RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
final float roundPx = pixels;
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
paint.setColor(color);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, roundPx, roundPx, paint);
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(bitmap, rect, rect, paint);
return output;
}
}
Another easy way is to use a CardView with the corner radius and an ImageView inside:
<androidx.cardview.widget.CardView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
app:cardCornerRadius="8dp"
android:layout_margin="5dp"
android:elevation="10dp">
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/roundedImageView"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:src="#drawable/image"
android:background="#color/white"
android:scaleType="centerCrop"
/>
</androidx.cardview.widget.CardView>
Clipping to rounded shapes was added to the View class in API 21.
Just do this:
Create a rounded shape drawable, something like this:
res/drawable/round_outline.xml
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:shape="rectangle">
<corners android:radius="10dp" />
...
</shape>
Set the drawable as your ImageView's background:
android:background="#drawable/round_outline"
According to this documentation, then all you need to do is add android:clipToOutline="true"
Unfortunately, there's a bug and that XML attribute is not recognized. Luckily, we can still set up clipping in Java:
In your activity or fragment: ImageView.setClipToOutline(true)
Here's what it will look like:
Note:
This method works for any drawable shape (not just rounded). It will clip the ImageView to whatever shape outline you've defined in your Drawable xml.
Special note about ImageViews
setClipToOutline() only works when the View's background is set to a shape drawable. If this background shape exists, View treats the shape's outline as the borders for clipping and shadowing purposes.
This means, if you want to use setClipToOutline() to round the corners on an ImageView, your image must be set using android:src instead of android:background (since background must be set to your rounded shape). If you MUST use background to set your image instead of src, you can use this workaround:
Create a layout and set its background to your shape drawable
Wrap that layout around your ImageView (with no padding)
The ImageView (including anything else in the layout) will now display with rounded layout shape.
While the above answer works, Romain Guy (a core Android developer) shows a better method in his blog which uses less memory by using a shader not creating a copy of the bitmap. The general gist of the functionality is here:
BitmapShader shader;
shader = new BitmapShader(bitmap, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setShader(shader);
RectF rect = new RectF(0.0f, 0.0f, width, height);
// rect contains the bounds of the shape
// radius is the radius in pixels of the rounded corners
// paint contains the shader that will texture the shape
canvas.drawRoundRect(rect, radius, radius, paint);
The advantages of this over other methods is that it:
does not create a separate copy of the bitmap, which uses a lot of memory with large images [vs most of the other answers here]
supports antialisasing [vs clipPath method]
supports alpha [vs xfermode+porterduff method]
supports hardware acceleration [vs clipPath method]
only draws once to the canvas [vs xfermode and clippath methods]
I've created a RoundedImageView based off this code that wraps this logic into an ImageView and adds proper ScaleType support and an optional rounded border.
Starting with the version 1.2.0-alpha03 of the Material Components Library there is the new ShapeableImageView.
You can use something like:
<com.google.android.material.imageview.ShapeableImageView
...
app:shapeAppearanceOverlay="#style/roundedImageView"
app:srcCompat="#drawable/ic_image" />
with in your themes.xml:
<style name="roundedImageView" parent="">
<item name="cornerFamily">rounded</item>
<item name="cornerSize">8dp</item>
</style>
Or programmatically:
float radius = getResources().getDimension(R.dimen.default_corner_radius);
imageView.setShapeAppearanceModel(imageView.getShapeAppearanceModel()
.toBuilder()
.setAllCorners(CornerFamily.ROUNDED,radius)
.build());
With jetpack compose you can apply a clip Modifier using a RoundedCornerShape:
Image(
painter = painterResource(R.drawable.xxxx),
contentDescription = "xxxx",
contentScale = ContentScale.Crop,
modifier = Modifier
.size(64.dp)
.clip(RoundedCornerShape(8.dp))
)
In the v21 of the Support library there is now a solution to this: it's called RoundedBitmapDrawable.
It's basically just like a normal Drawable except you give it a corner radius for the clipping with:
setCornerRadius(float cornerRadius)
So, starting with Bitmap src and a target ImageView, it would look something like this:
RoundedBitmapDrawable dr = RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(res, src);
dr.setCornerRadius(cornerRadius);
imageView.setImageDrawable(dr);
A quick xml solution -
<android.support.v7.widget.CardView
android:layout_width="40dp"
android:layout_height="40dp"
app:cardElevation="0dp"
app:cardCornerRadius="4dp">
<ImageView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:id="#+id/rounded_user_image"
android:scaleType="fitXY"/>
</android.support.v7.widget.CardView>
You can set your desired width, height and radius on CardView and scaleType on ImageView.
With AndroidX, use <androidx.cardview.widget.CardView>
I have done by Custom ImageView:
public class RoundRectCornerImageView extends ImageView {
private float radius = 18.0f;
private Path path;
private RectF rect;
public RoundRectCornerImageView(Context context) {
super(context);
init();
}
public RoundRectCornerImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
init();
}
public RoundRectCornerImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyle) {
super(context, attrs, defStyle);
init();
}
private void init() {
path = new Path();
}
#Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
rect = new RectF(0, 0, this.getWidth(), this.getHeight());
path.addRoundRect(rect, radius, radius, Path.Direction.CW);
canvas.clipPath(path);
super.onDraw(canvas);
}
}
How to use:
<com.mypackage.RoundRectCornerImageView
android:id="#+id/imageView"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:background="#drawable/image"
android:scaleType="fitXY" />
Output:
Hope this would help you.
I found that both methods were very helpful in coming up with a working solution. Here is my composite version, that is pixel independent and allows you to have some square corners with the rest of the corners having the same radius (which is the usual use case).
With thanks to both of the solutions above:
public static Bitmap getRoundedCornerBitmap(Context context, Bitmap input, int pixels , int w , int h , boolean squareTL, boolean squareTR, boolean squareBL, boolean squareBR ) {
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(w, h, Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final float densityMultiplier = context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density;
final int color = 0xff424242;
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, w, h);
final RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
//make sure that our rounded corner is scaled appropriately
final float roundPx = pixels*densityMultiplier;
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
paint.setColor(color);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, roundPx, roundPx, paint);
//draw rectangles over the corners we want to be square
if (squareTL ){
canvas.drawRect(0, h/2, w/2, h, paint);
}
if (squareTR ){
canvas.drawRect(w/2, h/2, w, h, paint);
}
if (squareBL ){
canvas.drawRect(0, 0, w/2, h/2, paint);
}
if (squareBR ){
canvas.drawRect(w/2, 0, w, h/2, paint);
}
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(PorterDuff.Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(input, 0,0, paint);
return output;
}
Also, I overrode ImageView to put this in so I could define it in xml.
You may want to add in some of the logic that the super call makes here, but I've commented it as it's not helpful in my case.
#Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
//super.onDraw(canvas);
Drawable drawable = getDrawable();
Bitmap b = ((BitmapDrawable)drawable).getBitmap() ;
Bitmap bitmap = b.copy(Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888, true);
int w = getWidth(), h = getHeight();
Bitmap roundBitmap = CropImageView.getRoundedCornerBitmap( getContext(), bitmap,10 , w, h , true, false,true, false);
canvas.drawBitmap(roundBitmap, 0,0 , null);
}
Hope this helps!
Rounded image Using ImageLoader here
Create DisplayImageOptions:
DisplayImageOptions options = new DisplayImageOptions.Builder()
// this will make circle, pass the width of image
.displayer(new RoundedBitmapDisplayer(getResources().getDimensionPixelSize(R.dimen.image_dimen_menu)))
.cacheOnDisc(true)
.build();
imageLoader.displayImage(url_for_image,ImageView,options);
Or you can user Picasso Library from Square.
Picasso.with(mContext)
.load(com.app.utility.Constants.BASE_URL+b.image)
.placeholder(R.drawable.profile)
.error(R.drawable.profile)
.transform(new RoundedTransformation(50, 4))
.resizeDimen(R.dimen.list_detail_image_size, R.dimen.list_detail_image_size)
.centerCrop()
.into(v.im_user);
you can download RoundedTransformation file here
here
As all the answers seemed too complicated for me just for round corners I thought and came to another solution which I think is worth to share, just with XML in case you have some space around the image:
Create a bordered shape with transparent content like this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:shape="rectangle">
<corners
android:radius="30dp" />
<stroke
android:color="#ffffffff"
android:width="10dp" />
</shape>
Then in a RelativeLayout you can first place your image and then in the same location above the shape with another ImageView. The cover-shape should be larger in size by the amount of the border width. Be careful to take a larger corner radius as the outer radius is defined but the inner radius is what covers your image.
Hope it helps somebody, too.
Edit as per CQM request the relative layout example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<RelativeLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent" >
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/imageToShow"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:layout_alignBottom="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_alignLeft="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_alignRight="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_alignTop="#+id/imgCorners"
android:background="#ffffff"
android:contentDescription="#string/desc"
android:padding="5dp"
android:scaleType="centerCrop" />
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:adjustViewBounds="true"
android:contentDescription="#string/desc"
android:src="#drawable/corners_white" />
</RelativeLayout>
It can be done with a ShapeableImageView using a ShapeAppearanceOverlay:
<com.google.android.material.imageview.ShapeableImageView
android:id="#+id/avatar"
android:layout_width="64dp"
android:layout_height="64dp"
android:padding="4dp"
app:shapeAppearance="#style/ShapeAppearanceOverlay.Avatar"/>
Where style ShapeAppearanceOverlay.Avatar resides in res/values/styles.xml:
<style name="ShapeAppearanceOverlay.Avatar" parent="ShapeAppearance.MaterialComponents.SmallComponent">
<item name="cornerFamily">rounded</item>
<item name="cornerSize">50%</item>
</style>
This just need equal layout_height and layout_width set, else with will be a pill an no circle.
My implementation of ImageView with rounded corners widget, that (down||up)sizes image to required dimensions. It utilizes code form CaspNZ.
public class ImageViewRounded extends ImageView {
public ImageViewRounded(Context context) {
super(context);
}
public ImageViewRounded(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
}
public ImageViewRounded(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyle) {
super(context, attrs, defStyle);
}
#Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
BitmapDrawable drawable = (BitmapDrawable) getDrawable();
if (drawable == null) {
return;
}
if (getWidth() == 0 || getHeight() == 0) {
return;
}
Bitmap fullSizeBitmap = drawable.getBitmap();
int scaledWidth = getMeasuredWidth();
int scaledHeight = getMeasuredHeight();
Bitmap mScaledBitmap;
if (scaledWidth == fullSizeBitmap.getWidth() && scaledHeight == fullSizeBitmap.getHeight()) {
mScaledBitmap = fullSizeBitmap;
} else {
mScaledBitmap = Bitmap.createScaledBitmap(fullSizeBitmap, scaledWidth, scaledHeight, true /* filter */);
}
Bitmap roundBitmap = ImageUtilities.getRoundedCornerBitmap(getContext(), mScaledBitmap, 5, scaledWidth, scaledHeight,
false, false, false, false);
canvas.drawBitmap(roundBitmap, 0, 0, null);
}
}
As of recently, there is another way - using Glide's Generated API. It takes some initial work but then gives you all the power of Glide with the flexibility to do anything because you writhe the actual code so I think it's a good solution for the long run. Plus, the usage is very simple and neat.
First, setup Glide version 4+:
implementation 'com.github.bumptech.glide:glide:4.6.1'
annotationProcessor 'com.github.bumptech.glide:compiler:4.6.1'
Then create Glid's app module class to trigger the annotation processing:
#GlideModule
public final class MyAppGlideModule extends AppGlideModule {}
Then create the Glide extension which actually does the work. You can customize it to do whatever you want:
#GlideExtension
public class MyGlideExtension {
private MyGlideExtension() {}
#NonNull
#GlideOption
public static RequestOptions roundedCorners(RequestOptions options, #NonNull Context context, int cornerRadius) {
int px = Math.round(cornerRadius * (context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().xdpi / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));
return options.transforms(new RoundedCorners(px));
}
}
After adding these files, build your project.
Then use it in your code like this:
GlideApp.with(this)
.load(imageUrl)
.roundedCorners(getApplicationContext(), 5)
.into(imageView);
There is a cool library that allows you to shape imageviews.
Here is an example:
<com.github.siyamed.shapeimageview.mask.PorterShapeImageView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
app:siShape="#drawable/shape_rounded_rectangle"
android:src="#drawable/neo"
app:siSquare="true"/>
Shape definition:
<shape android:shape="rectangle" xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
<corners
android:topLeftRadius="18dp"
android:topRightRadius="18dp"
android:bottomLeftRadius="18dp"
android:bottomRightRadius="18dp" />
<solid android:color="#color/black" />
</shape>
Result:
Try the Material Components Library and use the ShapeableImageView.
Somethig like this :
Java :
imageView=new ShapeableImageView(context);
imageView.setShapeAppearanceModel(
imageView.getShapeAppearanceModel()
.toBuilder()
.setAllCornerSizes(20)
.build());
Kotlin :
val imageView = ShapeableImageView(context)
imageView.setShapeAppearanceModel(
imageView.getShapeAppearanceModel()
.toBuilder()
.setAllCornerSizes(20f)
.build())
Here is a simple example overriding imageView, you can then also use it in layout designer to preview.
public class RoundedImageView extends ImageView {
public RoundedImageView(Context context) {
super(context);
}
public RoundedImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
}
public RoundedImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyleAttr) {
super(context, attrs, defStyleAttr);
}
#TargetApi(Build.VERSION_CODES.LOLLIPOP)
public RoundedImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyleAttr, int defStyleRes) {
super(context, attrs, defStyleAttr, defStyleRes);
}
#Override
public void setImageDrawable(Drawable drawable) {
float radius = 0.1f;
Bitmap bitmap = ((BitmapDrawable) drawable).getBitmap();
RoundedBitmapDrawable rid = RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(getResources(), bitmap);
rid.setCornerRadius(bitmap.getWidth() * radius);
super.setImageDrawable(rid);
}
}
This is for fast solution. Radius is used on all corners and is based of percentage of bitmap width.
I just overrided setImageDrawable and used support v4 method for rounded bitmap drawable.
Usage:
<com.example.widgets.RoundedImageView
android:layout_width="39dp"
android:layout_height="39dp"
android:src="#drawable/your_drawable" />
Preview with imageView and custom imageView:
Kotlin
import android.graphics.BitmapFactory
import android.os.Bundle
import android.support.v4.graphics.drawable.RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory
import kotlinx.android.synthetic.main.activity_main.*
val bitmap = BitmapFactory.decodeResource(resources, R.drawable.myImage)
val rounded = RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(resources, bitmap)
rounded.cornerRadius = 20f
profileImageView.setImageDrawable(rounded)
To make ImageView Circular we can change cornerRadius with:
rounded.isCircular = true
Apply a shape to your imageView as below:
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:shape="rectangle" >
<solid android:color="#faf5e6" />
<stroke
android:width="1dp"
android:color="#808080" />
<corners android:radius="15dp" />
<padding
android:bottom="5dp"
android:left="5dp"
android:right="5dp"
android:top="5dp" />
</shape>
it may be helpful to you friend.
You should extend ImageView and draw your own rounded rectangle.
If you want a frame around the image you could also superimpose the rounded frame on top of the image view in the layout.
[edit]Superimpose the frame on to op the original image, by using a FrameLayout for example. The first element of the FrameLayout will be the image you want to diplay rounded. Then add another ImageView with the frame. The second ImageView will be displayed on top of the original ImageView and thus Android will draw it's contents above the orignal ImageView.
Props to George Walters II above, I just took his answer and extended it a bit to support rounding individual corners differently. This could be optimized a bit further (some of the target rects overlap), but not a whole lot.
I know this thread is a bit old, but its one of the top results for queries on Google for how to round corners of ImageViews on Android.
/**
* Use this method to scale a bitmap and give it specific rounded corners.
* #param context Context object used to ascertain display density.
* #param bitmap The original bitmap that will be scaled and have rounded corners applied to it.
* #param upperLeft Corner radius for upper left.
* #param upperRight Corner radius for upper right.
* #param lowerRight Corner radius for lower right.
* #param lowerLeft Corner radius for lower left.
* #param endWidth Width to which to scale original bitmap.
* #param endHeight Height to which to scale original bitmap.
* #return Scaled bitmap with rounded corners.
*/
public static Bitmap getRoundedCornerBitmap(Context context, Bitmap bitmap, float upperLeft,
float upperRight, float lowerRight, float lowerLeft, int endWidth,
int endHeight) {
float densityMultiplier = context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density;
// scale incoming bitmap to appropriate px size given arguments and display dpi
bitmap = Bitmap.createScaledBitmap(bitmap,
Math.round(endWidth * densityMultiplier),
Math.round(endHeight * densityMultiplier), true);
// create empty bitmap for drawing
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(
Math.round(endWidth * densityMultiplier),
Math.round(endHeight * densityMultiplier), Config.ARGB_8888);
// get canvas for empty bitmap
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
int width = canvas.getWidth();
int height = canvas.getHeight();
// scale the rounded corners appropriately given dpi
upperLeft *= densityMultiplier;
upperRight *= densityMultiplier;
lowerRight *= densityMultiplier;
lowerLeft *= densityMultiplier;
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setColor(Color.WHITE);
// fill the canvas with transparency
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
// draw the rounded corners around the image rect. clockwise, starting in upper left.
canvas.drawCircle(upperLeft, upperLeft, upperLeft, paint);
canvas.drawCircle(width - upperRight, upperRight, upperRight, paint);
canvas.drawCircle(width - lowerRight, height - lowerRight, lowerRight, paint);
canvas.drawCircle(lowerLeft, height - lowerLeft, lowerLeft, paint);
// fill in all the gaps between circles. clockwise, starting at top.
RectF rectT = new RectF(upperLeft, 0, width - upperRight, height / 2);
RectF rectR = new RectF(width / 2, upperRight, width, height - lowerRight);
RectF rectB = new RectF(lowerLeft, height / 2, width - lowerRight, height);
RectF rectL = new RectF(0, upperLeft, width / 2, height - lowerLeft);
canvas.drawRect(rectT, paint);
canvas.drawRect(rectR, paint);
canvas.drawRect(rectB, paint);
canvas.drawRect(rectL, paint);
// set up the rect for the image
Rect imageRect = new Rect(0, 0, width, height);
// set up paint object such that it only paints on Color.WHITE
paint.setXfermode(new AvoidXfermode(Color.WHITE, 255, AvoidXfermode.Mode.TARGET));
// draw resized bitmap onto imageRect in canvas, using paint as configured above
canvas.drawBitmap(bitmap, imageRect, imageRect, paint);
return output;
}
Romain Guy is where it's at.
Minified version as follows.
Bitmap bitmap = ((BitmapDrawable) getResources().getDrawable(R.drawable.image)).getBitmap();
Bitmap bitmapRounded = Bitmap.createBitmap(bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight(), bitmap.getConfig());
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bitmapRounded);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setShader(new BitmapShader(bitmap, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP));
canvas.drawRoundRect((new RectF(0.0f, 0.0f, bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight())), 10, 10, paint);
imageView.setImageBitmap(bitmapRounded);
Why not do clipping in draw()?
Here is my solution:
Extend RelativeLayout with clipping
Put ImageView (or other views) into the layout:
Code:
public class RoundRelativeLayout extends RelativeLayout {
private final float radius;
public RoundRelativeLayout(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
TypedArray attrArray = context.obtainStyledAttributes(attrs,
R.styleable.RoundRelativeLayout);
radius = attrArray.getDimension(
R.styleable.RoundRelativeLayout_radius, 0);
}
private boolean isPathValid;
private final Path path = new Path();
private Path getRoundRectPath() {
if (isPathValid) {
return path;
}
path.reset();
int width = getWidth();
int height = getHeight();
RectF bounds = new RectF(0, 0, width, height);
path.addRoundRect(bounds, radius, radius, Direction.CCW);
isPathValid = true;
return path;
}
#Override
protected void dispatchDraw(Canvas canvas) {
canvas.clipPath(getRoundRectPath());
super.dispatchDraw(canvas);
}
#Override
public void draw(Canvas canvas) {
canvas.clipPath(getRoundRectPath());
super.draw(canvas);
}
#Override
protected void onMeasure(int widthMeasureSpec, int heightMeasureSpec) {
int oldWidth = getMeasuredWidth();
int oldHeight = getMeasuredHeight();
super.onMeasure(widthMeasureSpec, heightMeasureSpec);
int newWidth = getMeasuredWidth();
int newHeight = getMeasuredHeight();
if (newWidth != oldWidth || newHeight != oldHeight) {
isPathValid = false;
}
}
}
This pure xml solution was good enough in my case. http://www.techrepublic.com/article/pro-tip-round-corners-on-an-android-imageview-with-this-hack/
EDIT
Here's the answer in a nutshell:
In the /res/drawable folder, create a frame.xml file. In it, we define a simple rectangle with rounded corners and a transparent center.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" android:shape="rectangle">
<solid android:color="#00ffffff" />
<padding android:left="6dp"
android:top="6dp"
android:right="6dp"
android:bottom="6dp" />
<corners android:radius="12dp" />
<stroke android:width="6dp" android:color="#ffffffff" />
</shape>
In your layout file you add a LinearLayout that contains a standard ImageView, as well as a nested FrameLayout. The FrameLayout uses padding and the custom drawable to give the illusion of rounded corners.
<LinearLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:orientation="vertical"
android:layout_gravity="center"
android:gravity="center"
android:background="#ffffffff">
<ImageView
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:padding="6dp"
android:src="#drawable/tr"/>
<FrameLayout
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content">
<ImageView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:padding="6dp"
android:src="#drawable/tr"/>
<ImageView
android:src="#drawable/frame"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent" />
</FrameLayout>
</LinearLayout>
None of the methods provided in the answers worked for me. I found the following way works if your android version is 5.0 or above:
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.LOLLIPOP) {
ViewOutlineProvider provider = new ViewOutlineProvider() {
#Override
public void getOutline(View view, Outline outline) {
int curveRadius = 24;
outline.setRoundRect(0, 0, view.getWidth(), (view.getHeight()+curveRadius), curveRadius);
}
};
imageview.setOutlineProvider(provider);
imageview.setClipToOutline(true);
}
No xml shapes to be defined, and the code above create corners only for top, which normal methods won't work. If you need 4 corners to be rounded, remove:
"+ curveRadius"
From the parameter for bottom in setRoundRect. You can further expand the shape to any others by specifying outlines that suit your needs. Check out the following link:
Android Developer Documentation.
Note, as with any measure in Android, you have to "convert" the size typically from DP. In the example above, say you want the radius to be 24
int curveRadius = 24;
For example you may be later adding a border in a drawable with the radius set as "24" and you wish it to match. Hence,
float desiredRadius = 24;
float radiusConverted = TypedValue.applyDimension(
TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_DIP,
desiredRadius,
itemView.getContext().getResources().getDisplayMetrics());
and then
int curveRadius = radiusConverted;
The following creates a rounded rectangle layout object that draws a rounded rectangle around any child objects that are placed in it. It also demonstrates how to create views and layouts programmatically without using the layout xml files.
package android.example;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.graphics.Color;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.util.DisplayMetrics;
import android.util.TypedValue;
import android.view.ViewGroup.LayoutParams;
import android.widget.LinearLayout;
import android.widget.TextView;
public class MessageScreen extends Activity {
/** Called when the activity is first created. */
#Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
int mainBackgroundColor = Color.parseColor("#2E8B57");
int labelTextColor = Color.parseColor("#FF4500");
int messageBackgroundColor = Color.parseColor("#3300FF");
int messageTextColor = Color.parseColor("#FFFF00");
DisplayMetrics metrics = new DisplayMetrics();
getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay().getMetrics(metrics);
float density = metrics.density;
int minMarginSize = Math.round(density * 8);
int paddingSize = minMarginSize * 2;
int maxMarginSize = minMarginSize * 4;
TextView label = new TextView(this);
/*
* The LayoutParams are instructions to the Layout that will contain the
* View for laying out the View, so you need to use the LayoutParams of
* the Layout that will contain the View.
*/
LinearLayout.LayoutParams labelLayoutParams = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
label.setLayoutParams(labelLayoutParams);
label.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_SP, 18);
label.setPadding(paddingSize, paddingSize, paddingSize, paddingSize);
label.setText(R.string.title);
label.setTextColor(labelTextColor);
TextView message = new TextView(this);
RoundedRectangle.LayoutParams messageLayoutParams = new RoundedRectangle.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.FILL_PARENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
/*
* This is one of the calls must made to force a ViewGroup to call its
* draw method instead of just calling the draw method of its children.
* This tells the RoundedRectangle to put some extra space around the
* View.
*/
messageLayoutParams.setMargins(minMarginSize, paddingSize,
minMarginSize, maxMarginSize);
message.setLayoutParams(messageLayoutParams);
message.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_SP, paddingSize);
message.setText(R.string.message);
message.setTextColor(messageTextColor);
message.setBackgroundColor(messageBackgroundColor);
RoundedRectangle messageContainer = new RoundedRectangle(this);
LinearLayout.LayoutParams messageContainerLayoutParams = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.FILL_PARENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
messageContainerLayoutParams.setMargins(paddingSize, 0, paddingSize, 0);
messageContainer.setLayoutParams(messageContainerLayoutParams);
messageContainer.setOrientation(LinearLayout.VERTICAL);
/*
* This is one of the calls must made to force a ViewGroup to call its
* draw method instead of just calling the draw method of its children.
* This tells the RoundedRectangle to color the the exta space that was
* put around the View as well as the View. This is exterior color of
* the RoundedRectangle.
*/
messageContainer.setBackgroundColor(mainBackgroundColor);
/*
* This is one of the calls must made to force a ViewGroup to call its
* draw method instead of just calling the draw method of its children.
* This is the interior color of the RoundedRectangle. It must be
* different than the exterior color of the RoundedRectangle or the
* RoundedRectangle will not call its draw method.
*/
messageContainer.setInteriorColor(messageBackgroundColor);
// Add the message to the RoundedRectangle.
messageContainer.addView(message);
//
LinearLayout main = new LinearLayout(this);
LinearLayout.LayoutParams mainLayoutParams = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.FILL_PARENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
main.setLayoutParams(mainLayoutParams);
main.setOrientation(LinearLayout.VERTICAL);
main.setBackgroundColor(mainBackgroundColor);
main.addView(label);
main.addView(messageContainer);
setContentView(main);
}
}
The class for RoundedRectangle layout object is as defined here:
/**
* A LinearLayout that draws a rounded rectangle around the child View that was added to it.
*/
package android.example;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.content.Context;
import android.graphics.Canvas;
import android.graphics.Paint;
import android.graphics.Rect;
import android.graphics.RectF;
import android.util.AttributeSet;
import android.util.DisplayMetrics;
import android.widget.LinearLayout;
/**
* A LinearLayout that has rounded corners instead of square corners.
*
* #author Danny Remington
*
* #see LinearLayout
*
*/
public class RoundedRectangle extends LinearLayout {
private int mInteriorColor;
public RoundedRectangle(Context p_context) {
super(p_context);
}
public RoundedRectangle(Context p_context, AttributeSet attributeSet) {
super(p_context, attributeSet);
}
// Listener for the onDraw event that occurs when the Layout is drawn.
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, getWidth(), getHeight());
RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
DisplayMetrics metrics = new DisplayMetrics();
Activity activity = (Activity) getContext();
activity.getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay().getMetrics(metrics);
float density = metrics.density;
int arcSize = Math.round(density * 10);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setColor(mInteriorColor);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, arcSize, arcSize, paint);
}
/**
* Set the background color to use inside the RoundedRectangle.
*
* #param Primitive int - The color inside the rounded rectangle.
*/
public void setInteriorColor(int interiorColor) {
mInteriorColor = interiorColor;
}
/**
* Get the background color used inside the RoundedRectangle.
*
* #return Primitive int - The color inside the rounded rectangle.
*/
public int getInteriorColor() {
return mInteriorColor;
}
}
If you are using Glide Library this would be helpful:
Glide.with(getApplicationContext())
.load(image_url)
.asBitmap()
.centerCrop()
.into(new BitmapImageViewTarget(imageView) {
#Override
protected void setResource(Bitmap resource) {
RoundedBitmapDrawable circularBitmapDrawable =
RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(getApplicationContext().getResources(), resource);
circularBitmapDrawable.setCornerRadius(dpToPx(10));
circularBitmapDrawable.setAntiAlias(true);
imageView.setImageDrawable(circularBitmapDrawable);
}
});
public int dpToPx(int dp) {
DisplayMetrics displayMetrics = getApplicationContext().getResources().getDisplayMetrics();
return Math.round(dp * (displayMetrics.xdpi / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));
}
Thanks a lot to first answer. Here is modified version to convert a rectangular image into a square one (and rounded) and fill color is being passed as parameter.
public static Bitmap getRoundedBitmap(Bitmap bitmap, int pixels, int color) {
Bitmap inpBitmap = bitmap;
int width = 0;
int height = 0;
width = inpBitmap.getWidth();
height = inpBitmap.getHeight();
if (width <= height) {
height = width;
} else {
width = height;
}
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(width, height, Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, width, height);
final RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
final float roundPx = pixels;
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
paint.setColor(color);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, roundPx, roundPx, paint);
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(inpBitmap, rect, rect, paint);
return output;
}
if your image is on internet the best way is using glide and RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory (from API 21 - but available in support library) like so:
Glide.with(ctx).load(url).asBitmap().centerCrop().into(new BitmapImageViewTarget(imageView) {
#Override
protected void setResource(Bitmap res) {
RoundedBitmapDrawable bitmapDrawable =
RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(ctx.getResources(), res);
bitmapDrawable.setCircular(true);//comment this line and uncomment the next line if you dont want it fully cricular
//circularBitmapDrawable.setCornerRadius(cornerRadius);
imageView.setImageDrawable(bitmapDrawable);
}
});
Answer for the question that is redirected here:
"How to create a circular ImageView in Android?"
public static Bitmap getRoundBitmap(Bitmap bitmap) {
int min = Math.min(bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight());
Bitmap bitmapRounded = Bitmap.createBitmap(min, min, bitmap.getConfig());
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bitmapRounded);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setShader(new BitmapShader(bitmap, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP));
canvas.drawRoundRect((new RectF(0.0f, 0.0f, min, min)), min/2, min/2, paint);
return bitmapRounded;
}

Crop square image to circle - Programmatically

i was searching for past one day and i was not successful .
i get the image from API , and i download it to a bitmap file using the following code .
private Bitmap DownloadImage(String URL)
{
Bitmap bitmap = null;
InputStream in = null;
try
{
in = OpenHttpConnection(URL);
bitmap = BitmapFactory.decodeStream(in);
in.close();
}
catch (IOException e1)
{
e1.printStackTrace();
}
return bitmap;
}
private InputStream OpenHttpConnection(String urlString) throws IOException
{
InputStream in = null;
int response = -1;
URL url = new URL(urlString);
URLConnection conn = url.openConnection();
if (!(conn instanceof HttpURLConnection))
throw new IOException("Not an HTTP connection");
try
{
HttpURLConnection httpConn = (HttpURLConnection) conn;
httpConn.setAllowUserInteraction(false);
httpConn.setInstanceFollowRedirects(true);
httpConn.setRequestMethod("GET");
httpConn.connect();
response = httpConn.getResponseCode();
if (response == HttpURLConnection.HTTP_OK)
{
in = httpConn.getInputStream();
}
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
throw new IOException("Error connecting");
}
return in;
}
And i get the image as a square and i want to crop the four corners and make it to circular image . Is there any possible way to achieve ?
Any related answers are welcomed . Thanks in advance .
Once the bitmap is retrieved RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory can be used to generate a RoundedBitmapDrawable from the v4 Support Library. That Drawable can then be applied to an ImageView or directly drawn to a Canvas.
// Create the RoundedBitmapDrawable.
RoundedBitmapDrawable roundDrawable = RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(getResources(), bitmap);
roundDrawable.setCircular(true);
// Apply it to an ImageView.
ImageView imageView = (ImageView)findViewById(R.id.imageView);
imageView.setImageDrawable(roundDrawable);
// Alternatively, draw it to an canvas (e.g. in onDraw where a Canvas is available).
// setBounds since there's no View handling size and positioning.
roundDrawable.setBounds(left, top, right, bottom);
roundDrawable.draw(canvas);
public class MainActivity extends Activity {
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
// TODO Auto-generated method stub
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
DrawingView dv = new DrawingView(this);
setContentView(dv);
}
class DrawingView extends View {
Bitmap bitmap;
public DrawingView(Context context) {
super(context);
bitmap = BitmapFactory.decodeResource(context.getResources(),
R.drawable.glossy_overlay);
}
#Override
public void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
Paint paint = new Paint();
// paint.setColor(Color.CYAN);
canvas.drawBitmap(getclip(), 30, 20, paint);
}
public Bitmap getclip() {
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(bitmap.getWidth(),
bitmap.getHeight(), Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final int color = 0xff424242;
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, bitmap.getWidth(),
bitmap.getHeight());
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
// paint.setColor(color);
canvas.drawCircle(bitmap.getWidth() / 2,
bitmap.getHeight() / 2, bitmap.getWidth() / 2, paint);
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(bitmap, rect, rect, paint);
return output;
}
}
}
use the function below to draw a circle on bitmap and then set the circled bitmap to imageView
public static Bitmap getClip(Bitmap bitmap) {
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(bitmap.getWidth(),
bitmap.getHeight(), Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight());
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
canvas.drawCircle(bitmap.getWidth() / 2f, bitmap.getHeight() / 2f,
bitmap.getWidth() / 2f, paint);
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(bitmap, rect, rect, paint);
return output;
}
Note: Dividing numbers must be float
Roman Nurik propose a very direct use of shaders to do things like that, with a custom drawable.
I change the code a bit to make an oval image and tested myself. The effect and performance are really good:
public class StreamDrawable extends Drawable {
private static final boolean USE_VIGNETTE = true;
private final RectF mRect = new RectF();
private final BitmapShader mBitmapShader;
private final Paint mPaint;
private final int mMargin;
public StreamDrawable(Bitmap bitmap, int margin) {
mBitmapShader = new BitmapShader(bitmap,
Shader.TileMode.CLAMP, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP);
mPaint = new Paint();
mPaint.setAntiAlias(true);
mPaint.setShader(mBitmapShader);
mMargin = margin;
}
#Override
protected void onBoundsChange(Rect bounds) {
super.onBoundsChange(bounds);
mRect.set(mMargin, mMargin, bounds.width() - mMargin, bounds.height() - mMargin);
if (USE_VIGNETTE) {
RadialGradient vignette = new RadialGradient(
mRect.centerX(), mRect.centerY() * 1.0f / 0.7f, mRect.centerX() * 1.3f,
new int[] { 0, 0, 0x7f000000 }, new float[] { 0.0f, 0.7f, 1.0f },
Shader.TileMode.CLAMP);
Matrix oval = new Matrix();
oval.setScale(1.0f, 0.7f);
vignette.setLocalMatrix(oval);
mPaint.setShader(
new ComposeShader(mBitmapShader, vignette, PorterDuff.Mode.SRC_OVER));
}
}
#Override
public void draw(Canvas canvas) {
canvas.drawOval(mRect, mPaint);
}
#Override
public int getOpacity() {
return PixelFormat.TRANSLUCENT;
}
#Override
public void setAlpha(int alpha) {
mPaint.setAlpha(alpha);
}
#Override
public void setColorFilter(ColorFilter cf) {
mPaint.setColorFilter(cf);
}
}
This can be simply done in xml, Please see my answer here:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/18287979/665930
<RelativeLayout
android:id="#+id/icon_layout"
android:layout_width="#dimen/icon_mask"
android:layout_height="#dimen/icon_mask"
android:layout_alignParentLeft="true"
android:layout_alignParentTop="true" >
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/icon"
android:layout_width="#dimen/icon"
android:layout_height="#dimen/icon"
android:layout_centerInParent="true"
android:scaleType="fitXY" >
</ImageView>
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/icon_mask"
android:layout_width="#dimen/icon_mask"
android:layout_height="#dimen/icon_mask"
android:layout_centerInParent="true"
android:background="#drawable/circle"
android:scaleType="fitXY" >
</ImageView>
</RelativeLayout>
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" android:shape="oval" >
<gradient android:startColor="#00FFFFFF" android:endColor="#00FFFFFF"
android:angle="270"/>
<stroke android:width="10dp" android:color="#FFAAAAAA"/>
I tried the solutions above but none worked well for me. This is because my phone camera don't take square image but just rectangle images. So, I make some changes in the #actsai solution to always take the minor dimension and then crop the image in a circle:
public static Bitmap getBitmapClip(Bitmap bitmap) {
int maxLenth = bitmap.getWidth() <= bitmap.getHeight() ? bitmap.getWidth() : bitmap.getHeight();
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(maxLenth,
maxLenth, Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, maxLenth, maxLenth);
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
canvas.drawCircle(maxLenth / 2, maxLenth / 2,
maxLenth / 2, paint);
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(PorterDuff.Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(bitmap, rect, rect, paint);
return output;
}
I used the following scale property to fill my ImageView with the new bitmap:
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/iv_photo"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:layout_gravity="center"
android:scaleType="fitXY" />
After hunting lot of answers I came up with this small hack which exploits FrameLayout(overlays child views as a stack) and stroke attribute of oval-shape. This can be done simply in XML without much hassle and third party libraries.
Create new Layout resource file "circle_image.xml" under res/layout directory.
Add a new FrameLayout as the root view in the circle_image.xml.
Create an ImageView (base/background) to hold your Image or Icon which you want to crop as the first child in the FrameLayout.
Create an ImageView (mask/foreground) to hold the shape(oval made into circle with size attribute having same height and width) that masks the background image as the second/last child inside the FrameLayout.
Note:
our idea here is to exclude the area around the circle and display the contents of the image that is visible inside the circle)
Create new Drawable resource file "circle_mask.xml" under res/drawable directory.
Add new shape with android:shape="oval" in the circle_mask.xml.
Add size tag for the shape to specify height and width which must be equal(to make it a circle) and should match that of its parent FrameLayout.
Add solid tag for the shape to specify the transparency inside the circle.
10.Add stroke tag for the shape so that there will be a ring of particular width(android:width) with the color specified by the android:color attribute.
Note:
a. The color(stroke color) specified in the stoke tag is the MaskColor/BackgroundColor around our cropped image. since I wanted this color to be same as that of my base view which was a cardView. I used the same color "white".
b. The width (stroke width) is set to a huge value such that it is too thick with enough space for our cropped image in the centre.
c. The ImageView(top mask layer) created in Step-4 is also exploited by specifying a huge dimension that is much larger than its parent FrameLayout making it expand outside the FrameLayout dimensions. This fills up the area which we are interested in masking with the color of large stroke width ring.
circle_image.xml
<FrameLayout
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
android:id="#+id/icon_layout"
android:layout_width="64dp"
android:layout_height="64dp">
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/iv_profile_pic"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:src="#drawable/ic_launcher_background"
android:contentDescription="TODO"/>
<ImageView
android:layout_width="90dp"
android:layout_height="90dp"
android:layout_gravity="center"
android:background="#drawable/circle"
android:scaleType="fitXY" >
</ImageView>
</FrameLayout>
circle_mask.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<shape
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:shape="oval">
<size android:width="64dp"
android:height="64dp"/>
<solid android:color="#android:color/transparent"/>
<stroke
android:width="18dp"
android:color="#android:color/white" />
</shape>

How to use custom views, e.g. setting drawable

I think I'm a bit confused about how to use custom views. I'm following along with slides from a talk given by Eric Burke from Square (from this year's anddevcon, slides here: http://www.andevcon.com/AndevCon_II/downloadpresentation.aspx?aid=Taming_Android__User_Experience_Lessons_from_Square_pdf.zip&sid=2).
His code, or at least the part he showed in the slides, went something like this:
public class EditablePhoto extends View {
private Bitmap framedPhoto;
private Bitmap image;
private Drawable placeholder;
public EditablePhoto(Context context) {
super(context);
}
#Override protected void onMeasure(int widthMeasureSpec,
int heightMeasureSpec) {
int measuredWidth = getDefaultSize(getSuggestedMinimumWidth(), widthMeasureSpec);
int measuredHeight = getDefaultSize(getSuggestedMinimumHeight(), heightMeasureSpec);
//ensure view always square
int min = Math.min(measuredHeight, measuredWidth);
setMeasuredDimension(min, min);
}
#Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
if(placeholder == null && image==null) return;
if(framedPhoto == null) {
createFramedPhoto(Math.min(getWidth(), getHeight()));
}
canvas.drawBitmap(framedPhoto, 0, 0, null);
}
private void createFramedPhoto(int size) {
Drawable imageDrawable = (image!=null)
? new BitmapDrawable(image) : placeholder;
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(size, size,
Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
RectF outerRect = new RectF(0, 0, size, size);
float outerRadius = size / 18f;
//Red rectangle
Paint paint = new Paint(Paint.ANTI_ALIAS_FLAG);
paint.setColor(Color.RED);
canvas.drawRoundRect(outerRect, outerRadius, outerRadius, paint);
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(
PorterDuff.Mode.SRC_IN));
imageDrawable.setBounds(0, 0, size, size);
canvas.saveLayer(outerRect, paint, Canvas.ALL_SAVE_FLAG);
imageDrawable.draw(canvas);
canvas.restore();
}
}
What I don't get is how to actually use this View now.... Where and when do you set the bitmaps, which are private fields in this class...?
Generally confused and would love some enlightenment.
More than one year passed, but I hope this will help anyone who looking for the right answer. In my case, I putted this line of code
framedPhoto = output;
as the last one in createFramedPhoto() method. It works.
In the example, the author created a rounded rectangle as background then he draw the bitmap on it with XOR mode, so all pixel outside the rounded rectangle will be trim off.
OnDraw() is the method where you will Draw your view on canvas. here too you can analyze onDraw() will fisrt call CreateFramePhoto then draw this Bitmap on canvas .
You can add this customView in layout Either from xml or in Java Class
1) Through Xml :
<EditablePhoto android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:layout_gravity="center_vertical"
..........................
/>
dont forgate to add constructor EditablePhoto(Context context, AttributeSet attributeSet) for this case
2) through Java class :
EditablePhoto editablePhoto = new EditablePhoto(this);
addView(editablePhoto) // or do anthing you want with this

How to make an ImageView with rounded corners?

In Android, an ImageView is a rectangle by default. How can I make it a rounded rectangle (clip off all 4 corners of my Bitmap to be rounded rectangles) in the ImageView?
Note that from 2021 onwards, simply use ShapeableImageView
This is pretty late in response, but for anyone else that is looking for this, you can do the following code to manually round the corners of your images.
http://www.ruibm.com/?p=184
This isn't my code, but I've used it and it's works wonderfully. I used it as a helper within an ImageHelper class and extended it just a bit to pass in the amount of feathering I need for a given image.
Final code looks like this:
package com.company.app.utils;
import android.graphics.Bitmap;
import android.graphics.Canvas;
import android.graphics.Paint;
import android.graphics.PorterDuffXfermode;
import android.graphics.Rect;
import android.graphics.RectF;
import android.graphics.Bitmap.Config;
import android.graphics.PorterDuff.Mode;
public class ImageHelper {
public static Bitmap getRoundedCornerBitmap(Bitmap bitmap, int pixels) {
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap
.getHeight(), Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final int color = 0xff424242;
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight());
final RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
final float roundPx = pixels;
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
paint.setColor(color);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, roundPx, roundPx, paint);
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(bitmap, rect, rect, paint);
return output;
}
}
Another easy way is to use a CardView with the corner radius and an ImageView inside:
<androidx.cardview.widget.CardView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
app:cardCornerRadius="8dp"
android:layout_margin="5dp"
android:elevation="10dp">
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/roundedImageView"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:src="#drawable/image"
android:background="#color/white"
android:scaleType="centerCrop"
/>
</androidx.cardview.widget.CardView>
Clipping to rounded shapes was added to the View class in API 21.
Just do this:
Create a rounded shape drawable, something like this:
res/drawable/round_outline.xml
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:shape="rectangle">
<corners android:radius="10dp" />
...
</shape>
Set the drawable as your ImageView's background:
android:background="#drawable/round_outline"
According to this documentation, then all you need to do is add android:clipToOutline="true"
Unfortunately, there's a bug and that XML attribute is not recognized. Luckily, we can still set up clipping in Java:
In your activity or fragment: ImageView.setClipToOutline(true)
Here's what it will look like:
Note:
This method works for any drawable shape (not just rounded). It will clip the ImageView to whatever shape outline you've defined in your Drawable xml.
Special note about ImageViews
setClipToOutline() only works when the View's background is set to a shape drawable. If this background shape exists, View treats the shape's outline as the borders for clipping and shadowing purposes.
This means, if you want to use setClipToOutline() to round the corners on an ImageView, your image must be set using android:src instead of android:background (since background must be set to your rounded shape). If you MUST use background to set your image instead of src, you can use this workaround:
Create a layout and set its background to your shape drawable
Wrap that layout around your ImageView (with no padding)
The ImageView (including anything else in the layout) will now display with rounded layout shape.
While the above answer works, Romain Guy (a core Android developer) shows a better method in his blog which uses less memory by using a shader not creating a copy of the bitmap. The general gist of the functionality is here:
BitmapShader shader;
shader = new BitmapShader(bitmap, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setShader(shader);
RectF rect = new RectF(0.0f, 0.0f, width, height);
// rect contains the bounds of the shape
// radius is the radius in pixels of the rounded corners
// paint contains the shader that will texture the shape
canvas.drawRoundRect(rect, radius, radius, paint);
The advantages of this over other methods is that it:
does not create a separate copy of the bitmap, which uses a lot of memory with large images [vs most of the other answers here]
supports antialisasing [vs clipPath method]
supports alpha [vs xfermode+porterduff method]
supports hardware acceleration [vs clipPath method]
only draws once to the canvas [vs xfermode and clippath methods]
I've created a RoundedImageView based off this code that wraps this logic into an ImageView and adds proper ScaleType support and an optional rounded border.
Starting with the version 1.2.0-alpha03 of the Material Components Library there is the new ShapeableImageView.
You can use something like:
<com.google.android.material.imageview.ShapeableImageView
...
app:shapeAppearanceOverlay="#style/roundedImageView"
app:srcCompat="#drawable/ic_image" />
with in your themes.xml:
<style name="roundedImageView" parent="">
<item name="cornerFamily">rounded</item>
<item name="cornerSize">8dp</item>
</style>
Or programmatically:
float radius = getResources().getDimension(R.dimen.default_corner_radius);
imageView.setShapeAppearanceModel(imageView.getShapeAppearanceModel()
.toBuilder()
.setAllCorners(CornerFamily.ROUNDED,radius)
.build());
With jetpack compose you can apply a clip Modifier using a RoundedCornerShape:
Image(
painter = painterResource(R.drawable.xxxx),
contentDescription = "xxxx",
contentScale = ContentScale.Crop,
modifier = Modifier
.size(64.dp)
.clip(RoundedCornerShape(8.dp))
)
In the v21 of the Support library there is now a solution to this: it's called RoundedBitmapDrawable.
It's basically just like a normal Drawable except you give it a corner radius for the clipping with:
setCornerRadius(float cornerRadius)
So, starting with Bitmap src and a target ImageView, it would look something like this:
RoundedBitmapDrawable dr = RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(res, src);
dr.setCornerRadius(cornerRadius);
imageView.setImageDrawable(dr);
A quick xml solution -
<android.support.v7.widget.CardView
android:layout_width="40dp"
android:layout_height="40dp"
app:cardElevation="0dp"
app:cardCornerRadius="4dp">
<ImageView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:id="#+id/rounded_user_image"
android:scaleType="fitXY"/>
</android.support.v7.widget.CardView>
You can set your desired width, height and radius on CardView and scaleType on ImageView.
With AndroidX, use <androidx.cardview.widget.CardView>
I have done by Custom ImageView:
public class RoundRectCornerImageView extends ImageView {
private float radius = 18.0f;
private Path path;
private RectF rect;
public RoundRectCornerImageView(Context context) {
super(context);
init();
}
public RoundRectCornerImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
init();
}
public RoundRectCornerImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyle) {
super(context, attrs, defStyle);
init();
}
private void init() {
path = new Path();
}
#Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
rect = new RectF(0, 0, this.getWidth(), this.getHeight());
path.addRoundRect(rect, radius, radius, Path.Direction.CW);
canvas.clipPath(path);
super.onDraw(canvas);
}
}
How to use:
<com.mypackage.RoundRectCornerImageView
android:id="#+id/imageView"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:background="#drawable/image"
android:scaleType="fitXY" />
Output:
Hope this would help you.
I found that both methods were very helpful in coming up with a working solution. Here is my composite version, that is pixel independent and allows you to have some square corners with the rest of the corners having the same radius (which is the usual use case).
With thanks to both of the solutions above:
public static Bitmap getRoundedCornerBitmap(Context context, Bitmap input, int pixels , int w , int h , boolean squareTL, boolean squareTR, boolean squareBL, boolean squareBR ) {
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(w, h, Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final float densityMultiplier = context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density;
final int color = 0xff424242;
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, w, h);
final RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
//make sure that our rounded corner is scaled appropriately
final float roundPx = pixels*densityMultiplier;
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
paint.setColor(color);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, roundPx, roundPx, paint);
//draw rectangles over the corners we want to be square
if (squareTL ){
canvas.drawRect(0, h/2, w/2, h, paint);
}
if (squareTR ){
canvas.drawRect(w/2, h/2, w, h, paint);
}
if (squareBL ){
canvas.drawRect(0, 0, w/2, h/2, paint);
}
if (squareBR ){
canvas.drawRect(w/2, 0, w, h/2, paint);
}
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(PorterDuff.Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(input, 0,0, paint);
return output;
}
Also, I overrode ImageView to put this in so I could define it in xml.
You may want to add in some of the logic that the super call makes here, but I've commented it as it's not helpful in my case.
#Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
//super.onDraw(canvas);
Drawable drawable = getDrawable();
Bitmap b = ((BitmapDrawable)drawable).getBitmap() ;
Bitmap bitmap = b.copy(Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888, true);
int w = getWidth(), h = getHeight();
Bitmap roundBitmap = CropImageView.getRoundedCornerBitmap( getContext(), bitmap,10 , w, h , true, false,true, false);
canvas.drawBitmap(roundBitmap, 0,0 , null);
}
Hope this helps!
Rounded image Using ImageLoader here
Create DisplayImageOptions:
DisplayImageOptions options = new DisplayImageOptions.Builder()
// this will make circle, pass the width of image
.displayer(new RoundedBitmapDisplayer(getResources().getDimensionPixelSize(R.dimen.image_dimen_menu)))
.cacheOnDisc(true)
.build();
imageLoader.displayImage(url_for_image,ImageView,options);
Or you can user Picasso Library from Square.
Picasso.with(mContext)
.load(com.app.utility.Constants.BASE_URL+b.image)
.placeholder(R.drawable.profile)
.error(R.drawable.profile)
.transform(new RoundedTransformation(50, 4))
.resizeDimen(R.dimen.list_detail_image_size, R.dimen.list_detail_image_size)
.centerCrop()
.into(v.im_user);
you can download RoundedTransformation file here
here
As all the answers seemed too complicated for me just for round corners I thought and came to another solution which I think is worth to share, just with XML in case you have some space around the image:
Create a bordered shape with transparent content like this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:shape="rectangle">
<corners
android:radius="30dp" />
<stroke
android:color="#ffffffff"
android:width="10dp" />
</shape>
Then in a RelativeLayout you can first place your image and then in the same location above the shape with another ImageView. The cover-shape should be larger in size by the amount of the border width. Be careful to take a larger corner radius as the outer radius is defined but the inner radius is what covers your image.
Hope it helps somebody, too.
Edit as per CQM request the relative layout example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<RelativeLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent" >
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/imageToShow"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:layout_alignBottom="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_alignLeft="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_alignRight="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_alignTop="#+id/imgCorners"
android:background="#ffffff"
android:contentDescription="#string/desc"
android:padding="5dp"
android:scaleType="centerCrop" />
<ImageView
android:id="#+id/imgCorners"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:adjustViewBounds="true"
android:contentDescription="#string/desc"
android:src="#drawable/corners_white" />
</RelativeLayout>
It can be done with a ShapeableImageView using a ShapeAppearanceOverlay:
<com.google.android.material.imageview.ShapeableImageView
android:id="#+id/avatar"
android:layout_width="64dp"
android:layout_height="64dp"
android:padding="4dp"
app:shapeAppearance="#style/ShapeAppearanceOverlay.Avatar"/>
Where style ShapeAppearanceOverlay.Avatar resides in res/values/styles.xml:
<style name="ShapeAppearanceOverlay.Avatar" parent="ShapeAppearance.MaterialComponents.SmallComponent">
<item name="cornerFamily">rounded</item>
<item name="cornerSize">50%</item>
</style>
This just need equal layout_height and layout_width set, else with will be a pill an no circle.
My implementation of ImageView with rounded corners widget, that (down||up)sizes image to required dimensions. It utilizes code form CaspNZ.
public class ImageViewRounded extends ImageView {
public ImageViewRounded(Context context) {
super(context);
}
public ImageViewRounded(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
}
public ImageViewRounded(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyle) {
super(context, attrs, defStyle);
}
#Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
BitmapDrawable drawable = (BitmapDrawable) getDrawable();
if (drawable == null) {
return;
}
if (getWidth() == 0 || getHeight() == 0) {
return;
}
Bitmap fullSizeBitmap = drawable.getBitmap();
int scaledWidth = getMeasuredWidth();
int scaledHeight = getMeasuredHeight();
Bitmap mScaledBitmap;
if (scaledWidth == fullSizeBitmap.getWidth() && scaledHeight == fullSizeBitmap.getHeight()) {
mScaledBitmap = fullSizeBitmap;
} else {
mScaledBitmap = Bitmap.createScaledBitmap(fullSizeBitmap, scaledWidth, scaledHeight, true /* filter */);
}
Bitmap roundBitmap = ImageUtilities.getRoundedCornerBitmap(getContext(), mScaledBitmap, 5, scaledWidth, scaledHeight,
false, false, false, false);
canvas.drawBitmap(roundBitmap, 0, 0, null);
}
}
As of recently, there is another way - using Glide's Generated API. It takes some initial work but then gives you all the power of Glide with the flexibility to do anything because you writhe the actual code so I think it's a good solution for the long run. Plus, the usage is very simple and neat.
First, setup Glide version 4+:
implementation 'com.github.bumptech.glide:glide:4.6.1'
annotationProcessor 'com.github.bumptech.glide:compiler:4.6.1'
Then create Glid's app module class to trigger the annotation processing:
#GlideModule
public final class MyAppGlideModule extends AppGlideModule {}
Then create the Glide extension which actually does the work. You can customize it to do whatever you want:
#GlideExtension
public class MyGlideExtension {
private MyGlideExtension() {}
#NonNull
#GlideOption
public static RequestOptions roundedCorners(RequestOptions options, #NonNull Context context, int cornerRadius) {
int px = Math.round(cornerRadius * (context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().xdpi / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));
return options.transforms(new RoundedCorners(px));
}
}
After adding these files, build your project.
Then use it in your code like this:
GlideApp.with(this)
.load(imageUrl)
.roundedCorners(getApplicationContext(), 5)
.into(imageView);
There is a cool library that allows you to shape imageviews.
Here is an example:
<com.github.siyamed.shapeimageview.mask.PorterShapeImageView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
app:siShape="#drawable/shape_rounded_rectangle"
android:src="#drawable/neo"
app:siSquare="true"/>
Shape definition:
<shape android:shape="rectangle" xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
<corners
android:topLeftRadius="18dp"
android:topRightRadius="18dp"
android:bottomLeftRadius="18dp"
android:bottomRightRadius="18dp" />
<solid android:color="#color/black" />
</shape>
Result:
Try the Material Components Library and use the ShapeableImageView.
Somethig like this :
Java :
imageView=new ShapeableImageView(context);
imageView.setShapeAppearanceModel(
imageView.getShapeAppearanceModel()
.toBuilder()
.setAllCornerSizes(20)
.build());
Kotlin :
val imageView = ShapeableImageView(context)
imageView.setShapeAppearanceModel(
imageView.getShapeAppearanceModel()
.toBuilder()
.setAllCornerSizes(20f)
.build())
Here is a simple example overriding imageView, you can then also use it in layout designer to preview.
public class RoundedImageView extends ImageView {
public RoundedImageView(Context context) {
super(context);
}
public RoundedImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
}
public RoundedImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyleAttr) {
super(context, attrs, defStyleAttr);
}
#TargetApi(Build.VERSION_CODES.LOLLIPOP)
public RoundedImageView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyleAttr, int defStyleRes) {
super(context, attrs, defStyleAttr, defStyleRes);
}
#Override
public void setImageDrawable(Drawable drawable) {
float radius = 0.1f;
Bitmap bitmap = ((BitmapDrawable) drawable).getBitmap();
RoundedBitmapDrawable rid = RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(getResources(), bitmap);
rid.setCornerRadius(bitmap.getWidth() * radius);
super.setImageDrawable(rid);
}
}
This is for fast solution. Radius is used on all corners and is based of percentage of bitmap width.
I just overrided setImageDrawable and used support v4 method for rounded bitmap drawable.
Usage:
<com.example.widgets.RoundedImageView
android:layout_width="39dp"
android:layout_height="39dp"
android:src="#drawable/your_drawable" />
Preview with imageView and custom imageView:
Kotlin
import android.graphics.BitmapFactory
import android.os.Bundle
import android.support.v4.graphics.drawable.RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory
import kotlinx.android.synthetic.main.activity_main.*
val bitmap = BitmapFactory.decodeResource(resources, R.drawable.myImage)
val rounded = RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(resources, bitmap)
rounded.cornerRadius = 20f
profileImageView.setImageDrawable(rounded)
To make ImageView Circular we can change cornerRadius with:
rounded.isCircular = true
Apply a shape to your imageView as below:
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:shape="rectangle" >
<solid android:color="#faf5e6" />
<stroke
android:width="1dp"
android:color="#808080" />
<corners android:radius="15dp" />
<padding
android:bottom="5dp"
android:left="5dp"
android:right="5dp"
android:top="5dp" />
</shape>
it may be helpful to you friend.
You should extend ImageView and draw your own rounded rectangle.
If you want a frame around the image you could also superimpose the rounded frame on top of the image view in the layout.
[edit]Superimpose the frame on to op the original image, by using a FrameLayout for example. The first element of the FrameLayout will be the image you want to diplay rounded. Then add another ImageView with the frame. The second ImageView will be displayed on top of the original ImageView and thus Android will draw it's contents above the orignal ImageView.
Props to George Walters II above, I just took his answer and extended it a bit to support rounding individual corners differently. This could be optimized a bit further (some of the target rects overlap), but not a whole lot.
I know this thread is a bit old, but its one of the top results for queries on Google for how to round corners of ImageViews on Android.
/**
* Use this method to scale a bitmap and give it specific rounded corners.
* #param context Context object used to ascertain display density.
* #param bitmap The original bitmap that will be scaled and have rounded corners applied to it.
* #param upperLeft Corner radius for upper left.
* #param upperRight Corner radius for upper right.
* #param lowerRight Corner radius for lower right.
* #param lowerLeft Corner radius for lower left.
* #param endWidth Width to which to scale original bitmap.
* #param endHeight Height to which to scale original bitmap.
* #return Scaled bitmap with rounded corners.
*/
public static Bitmap getRoundedCornerBitmap(Context context, Bitmap bitmap, float upperLeft,
float upperRight, float lowerRight, float lowerLeft, int endWidth,
int endHeight) {
float densityMultiplier = context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density;
// scale incoming bitmap to appropriate px size given arguments and display dpi
bitmap = Bitmap.createScaledBitmap(bitmap,
Math.round(endWidth * densityMultiplier),
Math.round(endHeight * densityMultiplier), true);
// create empty bitmap for drawing
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(
Math.round(endWidth * densityMultiplier),
Math.round(endHeight * densityMultiplier), Config.ARGB_8888);
// get canvas for empty bitmap
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
int width = canvas.getWidth();
int height = canvas.getHeight();
// scale the rounded corners appropriately given dpi
upperLeft *= densityMultiplier;
upperRight *= densityMultiplier;
lowerRight *= densityMultiplier;
lowerLeft *= densityMultiplier;
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setColor(Color.WHITE);
// fill the canvas with transparency
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
// draw the rounded corners around the image rect. clockwise, starting in upper left.
canvas.drawCircle(upperLeft, upperLeft, upperLeft, paint);
canvas.drawCircle(width - upperRight, upperRight, upperRight, paint);
canvas.drawCircle(width - lowerRight, height - lowerRight, lowerRight, paint);
canvas.drawCircle(lowerLeft, height - lowerLeft, lowerLeft, paint);
// fill in all the gaps between circles. clockwise, starting at top.
RectF rectT = new RectF(upperLeft, 0, width - upperRight, height / 2);
RectF rectR = new RectF(width / 2, upperRight, width, height - lowerRight);
RectF rectB = new RectF(lowerLeft, height / 2, width - lowerRight, height);
RectF rectL = new RectF(0, upperLeft, width / 2, height - lowerLeft);
canvas.drawRect(rectT, paint);
canvas.drawRect(rectR, paint);
canvas.drawRect(rectB, paint);
canvas.drawRect(rectL, paint);
// set up the rect for the image
Rect imageRect = new Rect(0, 0, width, height);
// set up paint object such that it only paints on Color.WHITE
paint.setXfermode(new AvoidXfermode(Color.WHITE, 255, AvoidXfermode.Mode.TARGET));
// draw resized bitmap onto imageRect in canvas, using paint as configured above
canvas.drawBitmap(bitmap, imageRect, imageRect, paint);
return output;
}
Romain Guy is where it's at.
Minified version as follows.
Bitmap bitmap = ((BitmapDrawable) getResources().getDrawable(R.drawable.image)).getBitmap();
Bitmap bitmapRounded = Bitmap.createBitmap(bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight(), bitmap.getConfig());
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bitmapRounded);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setShader(new BitmapShader(bitmap, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP));
canvas.drawRoundRect((new RectF(0.0f, 0.0f, bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight())), 10, 10, paint);
imageView.setImageBitmap(bitmapRounded);
Why not do clipping in draw()?
Here is my solution:
Extend RelativeLayout with clipping
Put ImageView (or other views) into the layout:
Code:
public class RoundRelativeLayout extends RelativeLayout {
private final float radius;
public RoundRelativeLayout(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
TypedArray attrArray = context.obtainStyledAttributes(attrs,
R.styleable.RoundRelativeLayout);
radius = attrArray.getDimension(
R.styleable.RoundRelativeLayout_radius, 0);
}
private boolean isPathValid;
private final Path path = new Path();
private Path getRoundRectPath() {
if (isPathValid) {
return path;
}
path.reset();
int width = getWidth();
int height = getHeight();
RectF bounds = new RectF(0, 0, width, height);
path.addRoundRect(bounds, radius, radius, Direction.CCW);
isPathValid = true;
return path;
}
#Override
protected void dispatchDraw(Canvas canvas) {
canvas.clipPath(getRoundRectPath());
super.dispatchDraw(canvas);
}
#Override
public void draw(Canvas canvas) {
canvas.clipPath(getRoundRectPath());
super.draw(canvas);
}
#Override
protected void onMeasure(int widthMeasureSpec, int heightMeasureSpec) {
int oldWidth = getMeasuredWidth();
int oldHeight = getMeasuredHeight();
super.onMeasure(widthMeasureSpec, heightMeasureSpec);
int newWidth = getMeasuredWidth();
int newHeight = getMeasuredHeight();
if (newWidth != oldWidth || newHeight != oldHeight) {
isPathValid = false;
}
}
}
This pure xml solution was good enough in my case. http://www.techrepublic.com/article/pro-tip-round-corners-on-an-android-imageview-with-this-hack/
EDIT
Here's the answer in a nutshell:
In the /res/drawable folder, create a frame.xml file. In it, we define a simple rectangle with rounded corners and a transparent center.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" android:shape="rectangle">
<solid android:color="#00ffffff" />
<padding android:left="6dp"
android:top="6dp"
android:right="6dp"
android:bottom="6dp" />
<corners android:radius="12dp" />
<stroke android:width="6dp" android:color="#ffffffff" />
</shape>
In your layout file you add a LinearLayout that contains a standard ImageView, as well as a nested FrameLayout. The FrameLayout uses padding and the custom drawable to give the illusion of rounded corners.
<LinearLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:orientation="vertical"
android:layout_gravity="center"
android:gravity="center"
android:background="#ffffffff">
<ImageView
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:padding="6dp"
android:src="#drawable/tr"/>
<FrameLayout
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content">
<ImageView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:padding="6dp"
android:src="#drawable/tr"/>
<ImageView
android:src="#drawable/frame"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent" />
</FrameLayout>
</LinearLayout>
None of the methods provided in the answers worked for me. I found the following way works if your android version is 5.0 or above:
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.LOLLIPOP) {
ViewOutlineProvider provider = new ViewOutlineProvider() {
#Override
public void getOutline(View view, Outline outline) {
int curveRadius = 24;
outline.setRoundRect(0, 0, view.getWidth(), (view.getHeight()+curveRadius), curveRadius);
}
};
imageview.setOutlineProvider(provider);
imageview.setClipToOutline(true);
}
No xml shapes to be defined, and the code above create corners only for top, which normal methods won't work. If you need 4 corners to be rounded, remove:
"+ curveRadius"
From the parameter for bottom in setRoundRect. You can further expand the shape to any others by specifying outlines that suit your needs. Check out the following link:
Android Developer Documentation.
Note, as with any measure in Android, you have to "convert" the size typically from DP. In the example above, say you want the radius to be 24
int curveRadius = 24;
For example you may be later adding a border in a drawable with the radius set as "24" and you wish it to match. Hence,
float desiredRadius = 24;
float radiusConverted = TypedValue.applyDimension(
TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_DIP,
desiredRadius,
itemView.getContext().getResources().getDisplayMetrics());
and then
int curveRadius = radiusConverted;
The following creates a rounded rectangle layout object that draws a rounded rectangle around any child objects that are placed in it. It also demonstrates how to create views and layouts programmatically without using the layout xml files.
package android.example;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.graphics.Color;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.util.DisplayMetrics;
import android.util.TypedValue;
import android.view.ViewGroup.LayoutParams;
import android.widget.LinearLayout;
import android.widget.TextView;
public class MessageScreen extends Activity {
/** Called when the activity is first created. */
#Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
int mainBackgroundColor = Color.parseColor("#2E8B57");
int labelTextColor = Color.parseColor("#FF4500");
int messageBackgroundColor = Color.parseColor("#3300FF");
int messageTextColor = Color.parseColor("#FFFF00");
DisplayMetrics metrics = new DisplayMetrics();
getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay().getMetrics(metrics);
float density = metrics.density;
int minMarginSize = Math.round(density * 8);
int paddingSize = minMarginSize * 2;
int maxMarginSize = minMarginSize * 4;
TextView label = new TextView(this);
/*
* The LayoutParams are instructions to the Layout that will contain the
* View for laying out the View, so you need to use the LayoutParams of
* the Layout that will contain the View.
*/
LinearLayout.LayoutParams labelLayoutParams = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
label.setLayoutParams(labelLayoutParams);
label.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_SP, 18);
label.setPadding(paddingSize, paddingSize, paddingSize, paddingSize);
label.setText(R.string.title);
label.setTextColor(labelTextColor);
TextView message = new TextView(this);
RoundedRectangle.LayoutParams messageLayoutParams = new RoundedRectangle.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.FILL_PARENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
/*
* This is one of the calls must made to force a ViewGroup to call its
* draw method instead of just calling the draw method of its children.
* This tells the RoundedRectangle to put some extra space around the
* View.
*/
messageLayoutParams.setMargins(minMarginSize, paddingSize,
minMarginSize, maxMarginSize);
message.setLayoutParams(messageLayoutParams);
message.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_SP, paddingSize);
message.setText(R.string.message);
message.setTextColor(messageTextColor);
message.setBackgroundColor(messageBackgroundColor);
RoundedRectangle messageContainer = new RoundedRectangle(this);
LinearLayout.LayoutParams messageContainerLayoutParams = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.FILL_PARENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
messageContainerLayoutParams.setMargins(paddingSize, 0, paddingSize, 0);
messageContainer.setLayoutParams(messageContainerLayoutParams);
messageContainer.setOrientation(LinearLayout.VERTICAL);
/*
* This is one of the calls must made to force a ViewGroup to call its
* draw method instead of just calling the draw method of its children.
* This tells the RoundedRectangle to color the the exta space that was
* put around the View as well as the View. This is exterior color of
* the RoundedRectangle.
*/
messageContainer.setBackgroundColor(mainBackgroundColor);
/*
* This is one of the calls must made to force a ViewGroup to call its
* draw method instead of just calling the draw method of its children.
* This is the interior color of the RoundedRectangle. It must be
* different than the exterior color of the RoundedRectangle or the
* RoundedRectangle will not call its draw method.
*/
messageContainer.setInteriorColor(messageBackgroundColor);
// Add the message to the RoundedRectangle.
messageContainer.addView(message);
//
LinearLayout main = new LinearLayout(this);
LinearLayout.LayoutParams mainLayoutParams = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
LayoutParams.FILL_PARENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
main.setLayoutParams(mainLayoutParams);
main.setOrientation(LinearLayout.VERTICAL);
main.setBackgroundColor(mainBackgroundColor);
main.addView(label);
main.addView(messageContainer);
setContentView(main);
}
}
The class for RoundedRectangle layout object is as defined here:
/**
* A LinearLayout that draws a rounded rectangle around the child View that was added to it.
*/
package android.example;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.content.Context;
import android.graphics.Canvas;
import android.graphics.Paint;
import android.graphics.Rect;
import android.graphics.RectF;
import android.util.AttributeSet;
import android.util.DisplayMetrics;
import android.widget.LinearLayout;
/**
* A LinearLayout that has rounded corners instead of square corners.
*
* #author Danny Remington
*
* #see LinearLayout
*
*/
public class RoundedRectangle extends LinearLayout {
private int mInteriorColor;
public RoundedRectangle(Context p_context) {
super(p_context);
}
public RoundedRectangle(Context p_context, AttributeSet attributeSet) {
super(p_context, attributeSet);
}
// Listener for the onDraw event that occurs when the Layout is drawn.
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) {
Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, getWidth(), getHeight());
RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
DisplayMetrics metrics = new DisplayMetrics();
Activity activity = (Activity) getContext();
activity.getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay().getMetrics(metrics);
float density = metrics.density;
int arcSize = Math.round(density * 10);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setColor(mInteriorColor);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, arcSize, arcSize, paint);
}
/**
* Set the background color to use inside the RoundedRectangle.
*
* #param Primitive int - The color inside the rounded rectangle.
*/
public void setInteriorColor(int interiorColor) {
mInteriorColor = interiorColor;
}
/**
* Get the background color used inside the RoundedRectangle.
*
* #return Primitive int - The color inside the rounded rectangle.
*/
public int getInteriorColor() {
return mInteriorColor;
}
}
If you are using Glide Library this would be helpful:
Glide.with(getApplicationContext())
.load(image_url)
.asBitmap()
.centerCrop()
.into(new BitmapImageViewTarget(imageView) {
#Override
protected void setResource(Bitmap resource) {
RoundedBitmapDrawable circularBitmapDrawable =
RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(getApplicationContext().getResources(), resource);
circularBitmapDrawable.setCornerRadius(dpToPx(10));
circularBitmapDrawable.setAntiAlias(true);
imageView.setImageDrawable(circularBitmapDrawable);
}
});
public int dpToPx(int dp) {
DisplayMetrics displayMetrics = getApplicationContext().getResources().getDisplayMetrics();
return Math.round(dp * (displayMetrics.xdpi / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));
}
Thanks a lot to first answer. Here is modified version to convert a rectangular image into a square one (and rounded) and fill color is being passed as parameter.
public static Bitmap getRoundedBitmap(Bitmap bitmap, int pixels, int color) {
Bitmap inpBitmap = bitmap;
int width = 0;
int height = 0;
width = inpBitmap.getWidth();
height = inpBitmap.getHeight();
if (width <= height) {
height = width;
} else {
width = height;
}
Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(width, height, Config.ARGB_8888);
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final Rect rect = new Rect(0, 0, width, height);
final RectF rectF = new RectF(rect);
final float roundPx = pixels;
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
canvas.drawARGB(0, 0, 0, 0);
paint.setColor(color);
canvas.drawRoundRect(rectF, roundPx, roundPx, paint);
paint.setXfermode(new PorterDuffXfermode(Mode.SRC_IN));
canvas.drawBitmap(inpBitmap, rect, rect, paint);
return output;
}
if your image is on internet the best way is using glide and RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory (from API 21 - but available in support library) like so:
Glide.with(ctx).load(url).asBitmap().centerCrop().into(new BitmapImageViewTarget(imageView) {
#Override
protected void setResource(Bitmap res) {
RoundedBitmapDrawable bitmapDrawable =
RoundedBitmapDrawableFactory.create(ctx.getResources(), res);
bitmapDrawable.setCircular(true);//comment this line and uncomment the next line if you dont want it fully cricular
//circularBitmapDrawable.setCornerRadius(cornerRadius);
imageView.setImageDrawable(bitmapDrawable);
}
});
Answer for the question that is redirected here:
"How to create a circular ImageView in Android?"
public static Bitmap getRoundBitmap(Bitmap bitmap) {
int min = Math.min(bitmap.getWidth(), bitmap.getHeight());
Bitmap bitmapRounded = Bitmap.createBitmap(min, min, bitmap.getConfig());
Canvas canvas = new Canvas(bitmapRounded);
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setAntiAlias(true);
paint.setShader(new BitmapShader(bitmap, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP, Shader.TileMode.CLAMP));
canvas.drawRoundRect((new RectF(0.0f, 0.0f, min, min)), min/2, min/2, paint);
return bitmapRounded;
}

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