After I moved my app to 5.0, I had to move from the basic tabs to the slidingTabLayout that a google developer provides .
The problem is, I can\'t figure out how to
in class SlidingTabLayout method populateTabStrip() add
LinearLayout.LayoutParams lp = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
0, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT, 1f);
tabView.setLayoutParams(lp);
use setDistributeEvenly()
, it will do what you want. like this:
slideTab = (SlidingTabLayout)findViewById(R.id.requestSlideTab);
slideTab.setDistributeEvenly(true);
slideTab.setViewPager(viewPager);
EDIT: SlidingTabLayout copied from Google IO
import android.content.Context;
import android.graphics.Typeface;
import android.support.v4.view.PagerAdapter;
import android.support.v4.view.ViewPager;
import android.util.AttributeSet;
import android.util.SparseArray;
import android.util.TypedValue;
import android.view.Gravity;
import android.view.LayoutInflater;
import android.view.View;
import android.view.ViewGroup;
import android.widget.HorizontalScrollView;
import android.widget.LinearLayout;
import android.widget.TextView;
/**
* To be used with ViewPager to provide a tab indicator component which give constant feedback as to
* the user's scroll progress.
* <p>
* To use the component, simply add it to your view hierarchy. Then in your
* {@link android.app.Activity} or {@link android.support.v4.app.Fragment} call
* {@link #setViewPager(ViewPager)} providing it the ViewPager this layout is being used for.
* <p>
* The colors can be customized in two ways. The first and simplest is to provide an array of colors
* via {@link #setSelectedIndicatorColors(int...)}. The
* alternative is via the {@link TabColorizer} interface which provides you complete control over
* which color is used for any individual position.
* <p>
* The views used as tabs can be customized by calling {@link #setCustomTabView(int, int)},
* providing the layout ID of your custom layout.
*/
public class SlidingTabLayout extends HorizontalScrollView {
/**
* Allows complete control over the colors drawn in the tab layout. Set with
* {@link #setCustomTabColorizer(TabColorizer)}.
*/
public interface TabColorizer {
/**
* @return return the color of the indicator used when {@code position} is selected.
*/
int getIndicatorColor(int position);
}
private static final int TITLE_OFFSET_DIPS = 24;
private static final int TAB_VIEW_PADDING_DIPS = 16;
private static final int TAB_VIEW_TEXT_SIZE_SP = 18;
private int mTitleOffset;
private int mTabViewLayoutId;
private int mTabViewTextViewId;
private boolean mDistributeEvenly;
private ViewPager mViewPager;
private SparseArray<String> mContentDescriptions = new SparseArray<String>();
private ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener mViewPagerPageChangeListener;
private final SlidingTabStrip mTabStrip;
public SlidingTabLayout(Context context) {
this(context, null);
}
public SlidingTabLayout(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
this(context, attrs, 0);
}
public SlidingTabLayout(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyle) {
super(context, attrs, defStyle);
// Disable the Scroll Bar
setHorizontalScrollBarEnabled(false);
// Make sure that the Tab Strips fills this View
setFillViewport(true);
mTitleOffset = (int) (TITLE_OFFSET_DIPS * getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density);
mTabStrip = new SlidingTabStrip(context);
addView(mTabStrip, LayoutParams.MATCH_PARENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
}
/**
* Set the custom {@link TabColorizer} to be used.
*
* If you only require simple custmisation then you can use
* {@link #setSelectedIndicatorColors(int...)} to achieve
* similar effects.
*/
public void setCustomTabColorizer(TabColorizer tabColorizer) {
mTabStrip.setCustomTabColorizer(tabColorizer);
}
public void setDistributeEvenly(boolean distributeEvenly) {
mDistributeEvenly = distributeEvenly;
}
/**
* Sets the colors to be used for indicating the selected tab. These colors are treated as a
* circular array. Providing one color will mean that all tabs are indicated with the same color.
*/
public void setSelectedIndicatorColors(int... colors) {
mTabStrip.setSelectedIndicatorColors(colors);
}
/**
* Set the {@link ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener}. When using {@link SlidingTabLayout} you are
* required to set any {@link ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener} through this method. This is so
* that the layout can update it's scroll position correctly.
*
* @see ViewPager#setOnPageChangeListener(ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener)
*/
public void setOnPageChangeListener(ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener listener) {
mViewPagerPageChangeListener = listener;
}
/**
* Set the custom layout to be inflated for the tab views.
*
* @param layoutResId Layout id to be inflated
* @param textViewId id of the {@link TextView} in the inflated view
*/
public void setCustomTabView(int layoutResId, int textViewId) {
mTabViewLayoutId = layoutResId;
mTabViewTextViewId = textViewId;
}
/**
* Sets the associated view pager. Note that the assumption here is that the pager content
* (number of tabs and tab titles) does not change after this call has been made.
*/
public void setViewPager(ViewPager viewPager) {
mTabStrip.removeAllViews();
mViewPager = viewPager;
if (viewPager != null) {
viewPager.setOnPageChangeListener(new InternalViewPagerListener());
populateTabStrip();
}
}
/**
* Create a default view to be used for tabs. This is called if a custom tab view is not set via
* {@link #setCustomTabView(int, int)}.
*/
protected TextView createDefaultTabView(Context context) {
TextView textView = new TextView(context);
textView.setGravity(Gravity.CENTER);
textView.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_SP, TAB_VIEW_TEXT_SIZE_SP);
textView.setTypeface(Typeface.DEFAULT_BOLD);
textView.setLayoutParams(new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
ViewGroup.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT, ViewGroup.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT));
TypedValue outValue = new TypedValue();
getContext().getTheme().resolveAttribute(android.R.attr.selectableItemBackground,
outValue, true);
textView.setBackgroundResource(outValue.resourceId);
textView.setAllCaps(true);
int padding = (int) (TAB_VIEW_PADDING_DIPS * getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density);
textView.setPadding(padding, padding, padding, padding);
return textView;
}
private void populateTabStrip() {
final PagerAdapter adapter = mViewPager.getAdapter();
final View.OnClickListener tabClickListener = new TabClickListener();
for (int i = 0; i < adapter.getCount(); i++) {
View tabView = null;
TextView tabTitleView = null;
if (mTabViewLayoutId != 0) {
// If there is a custom tab view layout id set, try and inflate it
tabView = LayoutInflater.from(getContext()).inflate(mTabViewLayoutId, mTabStrip,
false);
tabTitleView = (TextView) tabView.findViewById(mTabViewTextViewId);
}
if (tabView == null) {
tabView = createDefaultTabView(getContext());
}
if (tabTitleView == null && TextView.class.isInstance(tabView)) {
tabTitleView = (TextView) tabView;
}
if (mDistributeEvenly) {
LinearLayout.LayoutParams lp = (LinearLayout.LayoutParams) tabView.getLayoutParams();
lp.width = 0;
lp.weight = 1;
}
tabTitleView.setText(adapter.getPageTitle(i));
tabView.setOnClickListener(tabClickListener);
String desc = mContentDescriptions.get(i, null);
if (desc != null) {
tabView.setContentDescription(desc);
}
mTabStrip.addView(tabView);
if (i == mViewPager.getCurrentItem()) {
tabView.setSelected(true);
}
}
}
public void setContentDescription(int i, String desc) {
mContentDescriptions.put(i, desc);
}
@Override
protected void onAttachedToWindow() {
super.onAttachedToWindow();
if (mViewPager != null) {
scrollToTab(mViewPager.getCurrentItem(), 0);
}
}
private void scrollToTab(int tabIndex, int positionOffset) {
final int tabStripChildCount = mTabStrip.getChildCount();
if (tabStripChildCount == 0 || tabIndex < 0 || tabIndex >= tabStripChildCount) {
return;
}
View selectedChild = mTabStrip.getChildAt(tabIndex);
if (selectedChild != null) {
int targetScrollX = selectedChild.getLeft() + positionOffset;
if (tabIndex > 0 || positionOffset > 0) {
// If we're not at the first child and are mid-scroll, make sure we obey the offset
targetScrollX -= mTitleOffset;
}
scrollTo(targetScrollX, 0);
}
}
private class InternalViewPagerListener implements ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener {
private int mScrollState;
@Override
public void onPageScrolled(int position, float positionOffset, int positionOffsetPixels) {
int tabStripChildCount = mTabStrip.getChildCount();
if ((tabStripChildCount == 0) || (position < 0) || (position >= tabStripChildCount)) {
return;
}
mTabStrip.onViewPagerPageChanged(position, positionOffset);
View selectedTitle = mTabStrip.getChildAt(position);
int extraOffset = (selectedTitle != null)
? (int) (positionOffset * selectedTitle.getWidth())
: 0;
scrollToTab(position, extraOffset);
if (mViewPagerPageChangeListener != null) {
mViewPagerPageChangeListener.onPageScrolled(position, positionOffset,
positionOffsetPixels);
}
}
@Override
public void onPageScrollStateChanged(int state) {
mScrollState = state;
if (mViewPagerPageChangeListener != null) {
mViewPagerPageChangeListener.onPageScrollStateChanged(state);
}
}
@Override
public void onPageSelected(int position) {
if (mScrollState == ViewPager.SCROLL_STATE_IDLE) {
mTabStrip.onViewPagerPageChanged(position, 0f);
scrollToTab(position, 0);
}
for (int i = 0; i < mTabStrip.getChildCount(); i++) {
mTabStrip.getChildAt(i).setSelected(position == i);
}
if (mViewPagerPageChangeListener != null) {
mViewPagerPageChangeListener.onPageSelected(position);
}
}
}
private class TabClickListener implements View.OnClickListener {
@Override
public void onClick(View v) {
for (int i = 0; i < mTabStrip.getChildCount(); i++) {
if (v == mTabStrip.getChildAt(i)) {
mViewPager.setCurrentItem(i);
return;
}
}
}
}
}
Why wouldn't you use the PagerSlidingTabStrip lib?
With this lib, you only have to call setShouldExpand(true)
. If the total width of the tabs doesn't exceed the screen's width, the tabs container will be expanded to match the screen width.
I really think you should use this lib, it's pretty good and very easy to use.
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState)
{
ViewPager viewPager = findViewById(R.id.view_pager, null);
PagerSlidingTabStrip tabs = findViewById(R.id.tabs, null);
// ...
tabs.setShouldExpand(true);
tabs.setViewPager(viewPager);
// ...
}