I am editing to make the question simpler, hoping that helps towards an accurate answer.
Say I have the following oval
shape:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" android:shape="oval">
<solid android:angle="270"
android:color="#FFFF0000"/>
<stroke android:width="3dp"
android:color="#FFAA0055"/>
</shape>
How do I set the color programmatically, from within an activity class?
Note: Answer has been updated to cover the scenario where background
is an instance of ColorDrawable
. Thanks Tyler Pfaff, for pointing this out.
The drawable is an oval and is the background of an ImageView
Get the Drawable
from imageView
using getBackground()
:
Drawable background = imageView.getBackground();
Check against usual suspects:
if (background instanceof ShapeDrawable) {
// cast to 'ShapeDrawable'
ShapeDrawable shapeDrawable = (ShapeDrawable) background;
shapeDrawable.getPaint().setColor(ContextCompat.getColor(mContext,R.color.colorToSet));
} else if (background instanceof GradientDrawable) {
// cast to 'GradientDrawable'
GradientDrawable gradientDrawable = (GradientDrawable) background;
gradientDrawable.setColor(ContextCompat.getColor(mContext,R.color.colorToSet));
} else if (background instanceof ColorDrawable) {
// alpha value may need to be set again after this call
ColorDrawable colorDrawable = (ColorDrawable) background;
colorDrawable.setColor(ContextCompat.getColor(mContext,R.color.colorToSet));
}
Compact version:
Drawable background = imageView.getBackground();
if (background instanceof ShapeDrawable) {
((ShapeDrawable)background).getPaint().setColor(ContextCompat.getColor(mContext,R.color.colorToSet));
} else if (background instanceof GradientDrawable) {
((GradientDrawable)background).setColor(ContextCompat.getColor(mContext,R.color.colorToSet));
} else if (background instanceof ColorDrawable) {
((ColorDrawable)background).setColor(ContextCompat.getColor(mContext,R.color.colorToSet));
}
Note that null-checking is not required.
However, you should use mutate()
on the drawables before modifying them if they are used elsewhere. (By default, drawables loaded from XML share the same state.)
A simpler solution nowadays would be to use your shape as a background and then programmatically change its color via:
view.background.setColorFilter(Color.parseColor("#343434"), PorterDuff.Mode.SRC_ATOP)
See PorterDuff.Mode for the available options.
UPDATE (API 29):
The above method is deprecated since API 29 and replaced by the following:
view.background.colorFilter = BlendModeColorFilter(Color.parseColor("#343434"), BlendMode.SRC_ATOP)
See BlendMode for the available options.
Do like this:
ImageView imgIcon = findViewById(R.id.imgIcon);
GradientDrawable backgroundGradient = (GradientDrawable)imgIcon.getBackground();
backgroundGradient.setColor(getResources().getColor(R.color.yellow));
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