1 page.title=Layouts 2 page.tags="view","viewgroup" 3 @jd:body 4 5 <div id="qv-wrapper"> 6 <div id="qv"> 7 <h2>In this document</h2> 8 <ol> 9 <li><a href="#write">Write the XML</a></li> 10 <li><a href="#load">Load the XML Resource</a></li> 11 <li><a href="#attributes">Attributes</a> 12 <ol> 13 <li><a href="#id">ID</a></li> 14 <li><a href="#layout-params">Layout Parameters</a></li> 15 </ol> 16 </li> 17 <li><a href="#Position">Layout Position</a></li> 18 <li><a href="#SizePaddingMargins">Size, Padding and Margins</a></li> 19 <li><a href="#CommonLayouts">Common Layouts</a></li> 20 <li><a href="#AdapterViews">Building Layouts with an Adapter</a> 21 <ol> 22 <li><a href="#FillingTheLayout">Filling an adapter view with data</a></li> 23 <li><a href="#HandlingUserSelections">Handling click events</a></li> 24 </ol> 25 </li> 26 </ol> 27 28 <h2>Key classes</h2> 29 <ol> 30 <li>{@link android.view.View}</li> 31 <li>{@link android.view.ViewGroup}</li> 32 <li>{@link android.view.ViewGroup.LayoutParams}</li> 33 </ol> 34 35 <h2>See also</h2> 36 <ol> 37 <li><a href="{@docRoot}training/basics/firstapp/building-ui.html">Building a Simple User 38 Interface</a></li> </div> 39 </div> 40 41 <p>A layout defines the visual structure for a user interface, such as the UI for an <a 42 href="{@docRoot}guide/components/activities.html">activity</a> or <a 43 href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/appwidgets/index.html">app widget</a>. 44 You can declare a layout in two ways:</p> 45 <ul> 46 <li><strong>Declare UI elements in XML</strong>. Android provides a straightforward XML 47 vocabulary that corresponds to the View classes and subclasses, such as those for widgets and layouts.</li> 48 <li><strong>Instantiate layout elements at runtime</strong>. Your 49 application can create View and ViewGroup objects (and manipulate their properties) programmatically. </li> 50 </ul> 51 52 <p>The Android framework gives you the flexibility to use either or both of these methods for declaring and managing your application's UI. For example, you could declare your application's default layouts in XML, including the screen elements that will appear in them and their properties. You could then add code in your application that would modify the state of the screen objects, including those declared in XML, at run time. </p> 53 54 <div class="sidebox-wrapper"> 55 <div class="sidebox"> 56 <ul> 57 <li>The <a href="{@docRoot}tools/sdk/eclipse-adt.html">ADT 58 Plugin for Eclipse</a> offers a layout preview of your XML — 59 with the XML file opened, select the <strong>Layout</strong> tab.</li> 60 <li>You should also try the 61 <a href="{@docRoot}tools/debugging/debugging-ui.html#hierarchyViewer">Hierarchy Viewer</a> tool, 62 for debugging layouts — it reveals layout property values, 63 draws wireframes with padding/margin indicators, and full rendered views while 64 you debug on the emulator or device.</li> 65 <li>The <a href="{@docRoot}tools/debugging/debugging-ui.html#layoutopt">layoutopt</a> tool lets 66 you quickly analyze your layouts and hierarchies for inefficiencies or other problems.</li> 67 </div> 68 </div> 69 70 <p>The advantage to declaring your UI in XML is that it enables you to better separate the presentation of your application from the code that controls its behavior. Your UI descriptions are external to your application code, which means that you can modify or adapt it without having to modify your source code and recompile. For example, you can create XML layouts for different screen orientations, different device screen sizes, and different languages. Additionally, declaring the layout in XML makes it easier to visualize the structure of your UI, so it's easier to debug problems. As such, this document focuses on teaching you how to declare your layout in XML. If you're 71 interested in instantiating View objects at runtime, refer to the {@link android.view.ViewGroup} and 72 {@link android.view.View} class references.</p> 73 74 <p>In general, the XML vocabulary for declaring UI elements closely follows the structure and naming of the classes and methods, where element names correspond to class names and attribute names correspond to methods. In fact, the correspondence is often so direct that you can guess what XML attribute corresponds to a class method, or guess what class corresponds to a given xml element. However, note that not all vocabulary is identical. In some cases, there are slight naming differences. For 75 example, the EditText element has a <code>text</code> attribute that corresponds to 76 <code>EditText.setText()</code>. </p> 77 78 <p class="note"><strong>Tip:</strong> Learn more about different layout types in <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/layout-objects.html">Common 79 Layout Objects</a>. There are also a collection of tutorials on building various layouts in the 80 <a href="{@docRoot}resources/tutorials/views/index.html">Hello Views</a> tutorial guide.</p> 81 82 <h2 id="write">Write the XML</h2> 83 84 <p>Using Android's XML vocabulary, you can quickly design UI layouts and the screen elements they contain, in the same way you create web pages in HTML — with a series of nested elements. </p> 85 86 <p>Each layout file must contain exactly one root element, which must be a View or ViewGroup object. Once you've defined the root element, you can add additional layout objects or widgets as child elements to gradually build a View hierarchy that defines your layout. For example, here's an XML layout that uses a vertical {@link android.widget.LinearLayout} 87 to hold a {@link android.widget.TextView} and a {@link android.widget.Button}:</p> 88 <pre> 89 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> 90 <LinearLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" 91 android:layout_width="fill_parent" 92 android:layout_height="fill_parent" 93 android:orientation="vertical" > 94 <TextView android:id="@+id/text" 95 android:layout_width="wrap_content" 96 android:layout_height="wrap_content" 97 android:text="Hello, I am a TextView" /> 98 <Button android:id="@+id/button" 99 android:layout_width="wrap_content" 100 android:layout_height="wrap_content" 101 android:text="Hello, I am a Button" /> 102 </LinearLayout> 103 </pre> 104 105 <p>After you've declared your layout in XML, save the file with the <code>.xml</code> extension, 106 in your Android project's <code>res/layout/</code> directory, so it will properly compile. </p> 107 108 <p>More information about the syntax for a layout XML file is available in the <a 109 href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/resources/layout-resource.html">Layout Resources</a> document.</p> 110 111 <h2 id="load">Load the XML Resource</h2> 112 113 <p>When you compile your application, each XML layout file is compiled into a 114 {@link android.view.View} resource. You should load the layout resource from your application code, in your 115 {@link android.app.Activity#onCreate(android.os.Bundle) Activity.onCreate()} callback implementation. 116 Do so by calling <code>{@link android.app.Activity#setContentView(int) setContentView()}</code>, 117 passing it the reference to your layout resource in the form of: 118 <code>R.layout.<em>layout_file_name</em></code> 119 For example, if your XML layout is saved as <code>main_layout.xml</code>, you would load it 120 for your Activity like so:</p> 121 <pre> 122 public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) { 123 super.onCreate(savedInstanceState); 124 setContentView(R.layout.main_layout); 125 } 126 </pre> 127 128 <p>The <code>onCreate()</code> callback method in your Activity is called by the Android framework when 129 your Activity is launched (see the discussion about lifecycles, in the 130 <a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/activities.html#Lifecycle">Activities</a> 131 document).</p> 132 133 134 <h2 id="attributes">Attributes</h2> 135 136 <p>Every View and ViewGroup object supports their own variety of XML attributes. 137 Some attributes are specific to a View object (for example, TextView supports the <code>textSize</code> 138 attribute), but these attributes are also inherited by any View objects that may extend this class. 139 Some are common to all View objects, because they are inherited from the root View class (like 140 the <code>id</code> attribute). And, other attributes are considered "layout parameters," which are 141 attributes that describe certain layout orientations of the View object, as defined by that object's 142 parent ViewGroup object.</p> 143 144 <h3 id="id">ID</h3> 145 146 <p>Any View object may have an integer ID associated with it, to uniquely identify the View within the tree. 147 When the application is compiled, this ID is referenced as an integer, but the ID is typically 148 assigned in the layout XML file as a string, in the <code>id</code> attribute. 149 This is an XML attribute common to all View objects 150 (defined by the {@link android.view.View} class) and you will use it very often. 151 The syntax for an ID, inside an XML tag is:</p> 152 <pre>android:id="@+id/my_button"</pre> 153 154 <p>The at-symbol (@) at the beginning of the string indicates that the XML parser should parse and expand the rest 155 of the ID string and identify it as an ID resource. The plus-symbol (+) means that this is a new resource name that must 156 be created and added to our resources (in the <code>R.java</code> file). There are a number of other ID resources that 157 are offered by the Android framework. When referencing an Android resource ID, you do not need the plus-symbol, 158 but must add the <code>android</code> package namespace, like so:</p> 159 <pre>android:id="@android:id/empty"</pre> 160 <p>With the <code>android</code> package namespace in place, we're now referencing an ID from the <code>android.R</code> 161 resources class, rather than the local resources class.</p> 162 163 <p>In order to create views and reference them from the application, a common pattern is to:</p> 164 <ol> 165 <li>Define a view/widget in the layout file and assign it a unique ID: 166 <pre> 167 <Button android:id="@+id/my_button" 168 android:layout_width="wrap_content" 169 android:layout_height="wrap_content" 170 android:text="@string/my_button_text"/> 171 </pre> 172 </li> 173 <li>Then create an instance of the view object and capture it from the layout 174 (typically in the <code>{@link android.app.Activity#onCreate(Bundle) onCreate()}</code> method): 175 <pre> 176 Button myButton = (Button) findViewById(R.id.my_button); 177 </pre> 178 </li> 179 </ol> 180 <p>Defining IDs for view objects is important when creating a {@link android.widget.RelativeLayout}. 181 In a relative layout, sibling views can define their layout relative to another sibling view, 182 which is referenced by the unique ID.</p> 183 <p>An ID need not be unique throughout the entire tree, but it should be 184 unique within the part of the tree you are searching (which may often be the entire tree, so it's best 185 to be completely unique when possible).</p> 186 187 188 <h3 id="layout-params">Layout Parameters</h3> 189 190 <p>XML layout attributes named <code>layout_<em>something</em></code> define 191 layout parameters for the View that are appropriate for the ViewGroup in which it resides.</p> 192 193 <p>Every ViewGroup class implements a nested class that extends {@link 194 android.view.ViewGroup.LayoutParams}. This subclass 195 contains property types that define the size and position for each child view, as 196 appropriate for the view group. As you can see in figure 1, the parent 197 view group defines layout parameters for each child view (including the child view group).</p> 198 199 <img src="{@docRoot}images/layoutparams.png" alt="" /> 200 <p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 1.</strong> Visualization of a view hierarchy with layout 201 parameters associated with each view.</p> 202 203 <p>Note that every LayoutParams subclass has its own syntax for setting 204 values. Each child element must define LayoutParams that are appropriate for its parent, 205 though it may also define different LayoutParams for its own children. </p> 206 207 <p>All view groups include a width and height (<code>layout_width</code> and 208 <code>layout_height</code>), and each view is required to define them. Many 209 LayoutParams also include optional margins and borders. <p> 210 211 <p>You can specify width and height with exact measurements, though you probably 212 won't want to do this often. More often, you will use one of these constants to 213 set the width or height: </p> 214 215 <ul> 216 <li><var>wrap_content</var> tells your view to size itself to the dimensions 217 required by its content</li> 218 <li><var>fill_parent</var> (renamed <var>match_parent</var> in API Level 8) 219 tells your view to become as big as its parent view group will allow.</li> 220 </ul> 221 222 <p>In general, specifying a layout width and height using absolute units such as 223 pixels is not recommended. Instead, using relative measurements such as 224 density-independent pixel units (<var>dp</var>), <var>wrap_content</var>, or 225 <var>fill_parent</var>, is a better approach, because it helps ensure that 226 your application will display properly across a variety of device screen sizes. 227 The accepted measurement types are defined in the 228 <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/resources/available-resources.html#dimension"> 229 Available Resources</a> document.</p> 230 231 232 <h2 id="Position">Layout Position</h2> 233 <p> 234 The geometry of a view is that of a rectangle. A view has a location, 235 expressed as a pair of <em>left</em> and <em>top</em> coordinates, and 236 two dimensions, expressed as a width and a height. The unit for location 237 and dimensions is the pixel. 238 </p> 239 240 <p> 241 It is possible to retrieve the location of a view by invoking the methods 242 {@link android.view.View#getLeft()} and {@link android.view.View#getTop()}. The former returns the left, or X, 243 coordinate of the rectangle representing the view. The latter returns the 244 top, or Y, coordinate of the rectangle representing the view. These methods 245 both return the location of the view relative to its parent. For instance, 246 when getLeft() returns 20, that means the view is located 20 pixels to the 247 right of the left edge of its direct parent. 248 </p> 249 250 <p> 251 In addition, several convenience methods are offered to avoid unnecessary 252 computations, namely {@link android.view.View#getRight()} and {@link android.view.View#getBottom()}. 253 These methods return the coordinates of the right and bottom edges of the 254 rectangle representing the view. For instance, calling {@link android.view.View#getRight()} 255 is similar to the following computation: <code>getLeft() + getWidth()</code>. 256 </p> 257 258 259 <h2 id="SizePaddingMargins">Size, Padding and Margins</h2> 260 <p> 261 The size of a view is expressed with a width and a height. A view actually 262 possess two pairs of width and height values. 263 </p> 264 265 <p> 266 The first pair is known as <em>measured width</em> and 267 <em>measured height</em>. These dimensions define how big a view wants to be 268 within its parent. The 269 measured dimensions can be obtained by calling {@link android.view.View#getMeasuredWidth()} 270 and {@link android.view.View#getMeasuredHeight()}. 271 </p> 272 273 <p> 274 The second pair is simply known as <em>width</em> and <em>height</em>, or 275 sometimes <em>drawing width</em> and <em>drawing height</em>. These 276 dimensions define the actual size of the view on screen, at drawing time and 277 after layout. These values may, but do not have to, be different from the 278 measured width and height. The width and height can be obtained by calling 279 {@link android.view.View#getWidth()} and {@link android.view.View#getHeight()}. 280 </p> 281 282 <p> 283 To measure its dimensions, a view takes into account its padding. The padding 284 is expressed in pixels for the left, top, right and bottom parts of the view. 285 Padding can be used to offset the content of the view by a specific amount of 286 pixels. For instance, a left padding of 2 will push the view's content by 287 2 pixels to the right of the left edge. Padding can be set using the 288 {@link android.view.View#setPadding(int, int, int, int)} method and queried by calling 289 {@link android.view.View#getPaddingLeft()}, {@link android.view.View#getPaddingTop()}, 290 {@link android.view.View#getPaddingRight()} and {@link android.view.View#getPaddingBottom()}. 291 </p> 292 293 <p> 294 Even though a view can define a padding, it does not provide any support for 295 margins. However, view groups provide such a support. Refer to 296 {@link android.view.ViewGroup} and 297 {@link android.view.ViewGroup.MarginLayoutParams} for further information. 298 </p> 299 300 <p>For more information about dimensions, see 301 <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/resources/more-resources.html#Dimension">Dimension Values</a>. 302 </p> 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 <style type="text/css"> 310 div.layout { 311 float:left; 312 width:200px; 313 margin:0 0 20px 20px; 314 } 315 div.layout.first { 316 margin-left:0; 317 clear:left; 318 } 319 </style> 320 321 322 323 324 <h2 id="CommonLayouts">Common Layouts</h2> 325 326 <p>Each subclass of the {@link android.view.ViewGroup} class provides a unique way to display 327 the views you nest within it. Below are some of the more common layout types that are built 328 into the Android platform.</p> 329 330 <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Although you can nest one or more layouts within another 331 layout to acheive your UI design, you should strive to keep your layout hierarchy as shallow as 332 possible. Your layout draws faster if it has fewer nested layouts (a wide view hierarchy is 333 better than a deep view hierarchy).</p> 334 335 <!-- 336 <h2 id="framelayout">FrameLayout</h2> 337 <p>{@link android.widget.FrameLayout FrameLayout} is the simplest type of layout 338 object. It's basically a blank space on your screen that you can 339 later fill with a single object — for example, a picture that you'll swap in and out. 340 All child elements of the FrameLayout are pinned to the top left corner of the screen; you cannot 341 specify a different location for a child view. Subsequent child views will simply be drawn over 342 previous ones, 343 partially or totally obscuring them (unless the newer object is transparent). 344 </p> 345 --> 346 347 348 <div class="layout first"> 349 <h4><a href="layout/linear.html">Linear Layout</a></h4> 350 <a href="layout/linear.html"><img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/linearlayout-small.png" alt="" /></a> 351 <p>A layout that organizes its children into a single horizontal or vertical row. It 352 creates a scrollbar if the length of the window exceeds the length of the screen.</p> 353 </div> 354 355 <div class="layout"> 356 <h4><a href="layout/relative.html">Relative Layout</a></h4> 357 <a href="layout/relative.html"><img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/relativelayout-small.png" alt="" 358 /></a> 359 <p>Enables you to specify the location of child objects relative to each other (child A to 360 the left of child B) or to the parent (aligned to the top of the parent).</p> 361 </div> 362 363 <!-- 364 <div class="layout"> 365 <h4><a href="layout/tabs.html">Tabs</a></h4> 366 <a href="layout/tabs.html"><img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/tabs-small.png" alt="" /></a> 367 <p>Provides a tab selection list that monitors clicks and enables the application to change 368 the screen whenever a tab is clicked.</p> 369 </div> 370 371 <div class="layout first"> 372 <h4><a href="layout/grid.html">Table Layout</a></h4> 373 <a href="layout/table.html"><img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/gridlayout-small.png" alt="" /></a> 374 <p>A tabular layout with an arbitrary number of rows and columns, each cell holding the 375 widget of your choice. The rows resize to fit the largest column. The cell borders are not 376 visible.</p> 377 </div> 378 --> 379 380 <div class="layout"> 381 <h4><a href="{@docRoot}guide/webapps/webview.html">Web View</a></h4> 382 <a href="{@docRoot}guide/webapps/webview.html"><img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/webview-small.png" 383 alt="" /></a> 384 <p>Displays web pages.</p> 385 </div> 386 387 388 389 390 <h2 id="AdapterViews" style="clear:left">Building Layouts with an Adapter</h2> 391 392 <p>When the content for your layout is dynamic or not pre-determined, you can use a layout that 393 subclasses {@link android.widget.AdapterView} to populate the layout with views at runtime. A 394 subclass of the {@link android.widget.AdapterView} class uses an {@link android.widget.Adapter} to 395 bind data to its layout. The {@link android.widget.Adapter} behaves as a middle-man between the data 396 source and the {@link android.widget.AdapterView} layout—the {@link android.widget.Adapter} 397 retrieves the data (from a source such as an array or a database query) and converts each entry 398 into a view that can be added into the {@link android.widget.AdapterView} layout.</p> 399 400 <p>Common layouts backed by an adapter include:</p> 401 402 <div class="layout first"> 403 <h4><a href="layout/listview.html">List View</a></h4> 404 <a href="layout/listview.html"><img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/listview-small.png" alt="" /></a> 405 <p>Displays a scrolling single column list.</p> 406 </div> 407 408 <div class="layout"> 409 <h4><a href="layout/gridview.html">Grid View</a></h4> 410 <a href="layout/gridview.html"><img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/gridview-small.png" alt="" /></a> 411 <p>Displays a scrolling grid of columns and rows.</p> 412 </div> 413 414 415 416 <h3 id="FillingTheLayout" style="clear:left">Filling an adapter view with data</h3> 417 418 <p>You can populate an {@link android.widget.AdapterView} such as {@link android.widget.ListView} or 419 {@link android.widget.GridView} by binding the {@link android.widget.AdapterView} instance to an 420 {@link android.widget.Adapter}, which retrieves data from an external source and creates a {@link 421 android.view.View} that represents each data entry.</p> 422 423 <p>Android provides several subclasses of {@link android.widget.Adapter} that are useful for 424 retrieving different kinds of data and building views for an {@link android.widget.AdapterView}. The 425 two most common adapters are:</p> 426 427 <dl> 428 <dt>{@link android.widget.ArrayAdapter}</dt> 429 <dd>Use this adapter when your data source is an array. By default, {@link 430 android.widget.ArrayAdapter} creates a view for each array item by calling {@link 431 java.lang.Object#toString()} on each item and placing the contents in a {@link 432 android.widget.TextView}. 433 <p>For example, if you have an array of strings you want to display in a {@link 434 android.widget.ListView}, initialize a new {@link android.widget.ArrayAdapter} using a 435 constructor to specify the layout for each string and the string array:</p> 436 <pre> 437 ArrayAdapter adapter = new ArrayAdapter<String>(this, 438 android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1, myStringArray); 439 </pre> 440 <p>The arguments for this constructor are:</p> 441 <ul> 442 <li>Your app {@link android.content.Context}</li> 443 <li>The layout that contains a {@link android.widget.TextView} for each string in the array</li> 444 <li>The string array</li> 445 </ul> 446 <p>Then simply call 447 {@link android.widget.ListView#setAdapter setAdapter()} on your {@link android.widget.ListView}:</p> 448 <pre> 449 ListView listView = (ListView) findViewById(R.id.listview); 450 listView.setAdapter(adapter); 451 </pre> 452 453 <p>To customize the appearance of each item you can override the {@link 454 java.lang.Object#toString()} method for the objects in your array. Or, to create a view for each 455 item that's something other than a {@link android.widget.TextView} (for example, if you want an 456 {@link android.widget.ImageView} for each array item), extend the {@link 457 android.widget.ArrayAdapter} class and override {@link android.widget.ArrayAdapter#getView 458 getView()} to return the type of view you want for each item.</p> 459 460 </dd> 461 462 <dt>{@link android.widget.SimpleCursorAdapter}</dt> 463 <dd>Use this adapter when your data comes from a {@link android.database.Cursor}. When 464 using {@link android.widget.SimpleCursorAdapter}, you must specify a layout to use for each 465 row in the {@link android.database.Cursor} and which columns in the {@link android.database.Cursor} 466 should be inserted into which views of the layout. For example, if you want to create a list of 467 people's names and phone numbers, you can perform a query that returns a {@link 468 android.database.Cursor} containing a row for each person and columns for the names and 469 numbers. You then create a string array specifying which columns from the {@link 470 android.database.Cursor} you want in the layout for each result and an integer array specifying the 471 corresponding views that each column should be placed:</p> 472 <pre> 473 String[] fromColumns = {ContactsContract.Data.DISPLAY_NAME, 474 ContactsContract.CommonDataKinds.Phone.NUMBER}; 475 int[] toViews = {R.id.display_name, R.id.phone_number}; 476 </pre> 477 <p>When you instantiate the {@link android.widget.SimpleCursorAdapter}, pass the layout to use for 478 each result, the {@link android.database.Cursor} containing the results, and these two arrays:</p> 479 <pre> 480 SimpleCursorAdapter adapter = new SimpleCursorAdapter(this, 481 R.layout.person_name_and_number, cursor, fromColumns, toViews, 0); 482 ListView listView = getListView(); 483 listView.setAdapter(adapter); 484 </pre> 485 <p>The {@link android.widget.SimpleCursorAdapter} then creates a view for each row in the 486 {@link android.database.Cursor} using the provided layout by inserting each {@code 487 fromColumns} item into the corresponding {@code toViews} view.</p>.</dd> 488 </dl> 489 490 491 <p>If, during the course of your application's life, you change the underlying data that is read by 492 your adapter, you should call {@link android.widget.ArrayAdapter#notifyDataSetChanged()}. This will 493 notify the attached view that the data has been changed and it should refresh itself.</p> 494 495 496 497 <h3 id="HandlingUserSelections">Handling click events</h3> 498 499 <p>You can respond to click events on each item in an {@link android.widget.AdapterView} by 500 implementing the {@link android.widget.AdapterView.OnItemClickListener} interface. For example:</p> 501 502 <pre> 503 // Create a message handling object as an anonymous class. 504 private OnItemClickListener mMessageClickedHandler = new OnItemClickListener() { 505 public void onItemClick(AdapterView parent, View v, int position, long id) { 506 // Do something in response to the click 507 } 508 }; 509 510 listView.setOnItemClickListener(mMessageClickedHandler); 511 </pre> 512 513 514 515