Screen resolution / Physical size

十年热恋 提交于 2019-12-08 14:07:09

问题


I'm implementing an app for Android(API 10). I have few designs for tablet(supposedly) and for mobile phone. Regarding the previous sentence it might sound a bit stupid: in my opinion layouts should be picked according to device's physical size - not resolution, otherwise there might be a phone with high resolution that renders, say, a grid of 5x5, in rather confusing, inadequately small-sized way. In order to provide division by physical size I gotta use /res/layout-* folders. Agreed ?

Also: I'm a bit confused about multiple-screens guide's definition on physical size. Would you mind explaining what physical size is in terms of Android mean, what it's measured in? Is there any correlation with dpi?

Thanks.


回答1:


A workaround for api level 10 could be something like this:

  1. use the compat lib from the SDK so that you can design with fragments.

  2. Assume everything before android 3 is a phone. For example use your layout files in layout/* for this (and the rest will be based it on unless overriden). This assumption is basically only wrong for the original Samsung Galaxy Tab 7" from 2009.

  3. Assume everything on android 3.x is a tablet (they are), so do some tablet specific layout if you want and have them under layout-v11 (and maybe also layout-v12 if there is anything specific to android 3.1). Tablet specific layout could mean that you arrange your fragments differently and/or show multiple fragments at the same time.

  4. Everything newer (android 3.2+) you can use the new stuff from api level 13. Such as layout-sw600dp/ for some layouts etc etc. http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html#DeclaringTabletLayouts




回答2:


Physical size is usually measured in inches, it simply tells you the real device's screen size (usually 3-4" inches for phones and 8-11" for tablets).

dpi, is NOT correlated with it. Dpi expresses screen density, how many pixels are shown in a given area (usually a square inch). It could be considered as a measure of screen quality.

Resolution is given by the product of the two; it expresses the total number of physical pixels on a screen.

Going back to your first question, you should be density independent as much as possible; your app should "look the same" on devices with different densities. The /res/layout-* folders are designed to provide this feature, the system scales drawable resources to the appropriate size and you could then declare in your manifest that your app supports any density:

android:anyDensity="true"

On page http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/resources/providing-resources.html#BestMatch you can learn how Android choose the best matching resource.




回答3:


With Android API 10 the best option for targeting tablets is probably just distinguishing the actual size of the screen in the code using something like: https://stackoverflow.com/a/5789916/1319155 and then just load a different drawable if the size value returned was greater than 6 (or whatever size you want to declare as a "tablet").

The reason you can't really just use the size folders (i.e. layout/large) is because the folders don't distinguish between phones and tablets very well. A kindle fire and galaxy nexus may both be considered "large" devices.

The reason you can't really use dpi is because that is not a good reflection on what type of device it is, just how "dense" the pixels are on a screen. Most new phones are much denser (having more pixels per inch) than tablets anyway.




回答4:


There are two ways of doing this. From Android 1.6 (API 4) on, there are four layouts that describe the physical size of the display: small, normal, large, and xlarge. As described on http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html , these correspond to:

  • xlarge screens are at least 960dp x 720dp
  • large screens are at least 640dp x 480dp
  • normal screens are at least 470dp x 320dp
  • small screens are at least 426dp x 320dp

Note that these are measured in DP, not DPI. DPI is Dots Per Inch, and specifies screen density. DP, also written DIP, are Density-Independent Pixels. Again from the guide:

Density-independent pixel (dp)

A virtual pixel unit that you should use when defining UI layout, to express layout dimensions or position in a density-independent way. The density-independent pixel is equivalent to one physical pixel on a 160 dpi screen, which is the baseline density assumed by the system for a "medium" density screen. At runtime, the system transparently handles any scaling of the dp units, as necessary, based on the actual density of the screen in use. The conversion of dp units to screen pixels is simple: px = dp * (dpi / 160). For example, on a 240 dpi screen, 1 dp equals 1.5 physical pixels. You should always use dp units when defining your application's UI, to ensure proper display of your UI on screens with different densities.

In other words, 160 DP = 1". Applying this standard, we see:

  • xlarge screens are at least 6" x 4.5" (7.5" diagonal)
  • large screens are at least 4" x 3" (5" diagonal)
  • normal screens are at least 2.9" x 2" (3.5" diagonal)
  • small screens are at least 2.6" x 2" (3.3" diagonal)

(Not sure why the selection is so odd, but that's what they defined.)

From Android 3.2 on (API 13), there are more options, as described here: http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html#DeclaringTabletLayouts

Here you can use "smallest screen width," "available width," or "available height" options to define your own categories; again, the unit in question is DP, which is 1/160". Note that these specify the smaller of the two dimensions on the device--e.g., for a 7" tablet they recommend specifying layout-sw600dp, that is, "smallest width 3.75 inches," which would be intermediate between the "large" and "xlarge" sizes defined in API 4. They have a number of specific comments about this topic, including notes about how the widths are measured (it may exclude things like the notification bar), so it's worth taking a look at the documentation.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10414100/screen-resolution-physical-size

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