To use preset sizes to set up the autosizing of TextView in XML, use the android namespace and set the following attributes: Set the autoSizeText attribute to either none or uniform. none is a default value and uniform lets TextView scale uniformly on horizontal and vertical axes.
setTextSize(float size) method to set the size of text. textView.
you can extend the TextView class and overwrite the setText() function. In this function you check for text length or word cound. Better than counting the text length or the word cound a better way would be to use the "maxLines" attribute along with "ellipsize" attribute to attain the desired effect.
app:autoSizeMinTextSize=”10sp” using this attribute the TextView will be resized up to the size of 10sp and app:autoSizeStepGranularity=”2sp” using this attribute we are uniformly reducing the size of the TextView as 2sp when it goes out of the screen.
EDIT: And As I Search on StackOverflow now I found This Question is Duplicate of : This and This
You need to use another function setTextSize(unit, size)
with unit SP
like this,
tv.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_SP, 18f);
Please read more for TypedValue constants.
You should use the resource folders such as
values-ldpi
values-mdpi
values-hdpi
And write the text size in 'dimensions.xml' file for each range.
And in the java code you can set the text size with
textView.setTextSize(getResources().getDimension(R.dimen.textsize));
Sample dimensions.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<resources>
<dimen name="textsize">15sp</dimen>
</resources>
There is probably no need to use the ldpi
, mdpi
or hdpi
qualifiers in this case.
When you define a dimension in a resource file you include the measurement unit. If you use sp units they are scaled according to the screen density so text at 15sp should appear roughly the same size on screens of differing density.
(The real screen density of the device isn't going to exactly match as Android generalises screen density into 120, 160, 240, 320, 480 and 640 dpi
groups.)
When calling getResources().getDimension(R.dimen.textsize)
it will return the size in pixels. If using sp it will scaled by the screen density,
Calling setText(float)
sets the size in sp units
. This is where the issue is,
i.e you have pixels measurements on one hand and sp unit
on the other to fix do this:
textView.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_PX,
getResources().getDimension(R.dimen.textsize));
Note you can also use
getResources().getDimensionPixelSize(R.dimen.textSize);
instead of getDimension()
and it will round and convert to an non fractional value.
After long time stuck this issue, finally solved like this
textView.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_PX,
getResources().getDimension(R.dimen.textsize));
create folder like this res/values/dimens.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<resources>
<dimen name="textsize">8sp</dimen>
</resources>
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