Book Image

Android 9 Development Cookbook - Third Edition

By : Rick Boyer
Book Image

Android 9 Development Cookbook - Third Edition

By: Rick Boyer

Overview of this book

The Android OS has the largest installation base of any operating system in the world. There has never been a better time to learn Android development to write your own applications, or to make your own contributions to the open source community! With this extensively updated cookbook, you'll find solutions for working with the user interfaces, multitouch gestures, location awareness, web services, and device features such as the phone, camera, and accelerometer. You also get useful steps on packaging your app for the Android Market. Each recipe provides a clear solution and sample code you can use in your project from the outset. Whether you are writing your first app or your hundredth, this is a book that you will come back to time and time again, with its many tips and tricks on the rich features of Android Pie.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

Applying a style to a View


A style is a collection of property settings to define the look of a View. As you have already seen while defining layouts, a view offers many settings to determine how it looks, as well as functions. We have already set a view height, width, background color, and padding, plus there are many more settings such as text color, font, text size, margin, and so on. Creating a style is as simple as pulling these settings from the layout and putting them in a style resource.

In this recipe, we will go through the steps of creating a style and hooking it up to a view.

Similar to Cascading Style Sheets, Android Styles allow you to specify your design settings separate from the UI code.

Getting ready

Create a new Android Studio project and call it Styles. Use the default wizard options to create a Phone & Tablet project and select Empty Activity when prompted for the Activity type. We haven't looked at it before, but by default, the wizard also creates a styles.xml file...