I am working on an example about Support Library and Toolbar, this is the code of the layout on the Android documentation
<android.support.v7.widget.Toolbar android:id="@+id/my_toolbar" android:layout_width="match_parent" android:layout_height="?attr/actionBarSize" android:background="?attr/colorPrimary" android:elevation="4dp" android:theme="@style/ThemeOverlay.AppCompat.ActionBar" app:popupTheme="@style/ThemeOverlay.AppCompat.Light"/>
It is the first time I see these ?attr
and I have no clue about what they mean or where are these values stored. Are these custom or are they predefined on the Android framework?
Reference: Android Toolbar Documentation
In specific, android:layout_marginTop="? android:attr/actionBarSize" means: "the size (height) of the action bar".
Keywords: Mobile Android Attribute. 1. declare-style leable defines some attributes, writes some identical attributes together, defines a name, or can be directly defined. In the following two ways, just use declare-style leable to organize similar attributes together.
?attr/
references to attributes. Attributes are values specified in an app's theme. The attributes in your example are all values specified in the themes provided by the support library. Android also has its very own attributes which can be used with ?android:attr/
.
The actual value that is going to be used in the end depends on the theme used to inflate the said layout. This theme can be specified in the manifest in the <application/>
block for an app wide theme or in the <activity/>
block for a specific activity. You can also override this theme during runtime by using a different context (see ContextThemeWrapper and LayoutInflater)
It is considered good practice to use theme attributes instead of hardcoded values in your layouts, as it allows for easy customization. For example, when you create custom views, you can use ?attr/colorAccent
so that the user of the view doesn't have to provide a color, and it is going to use the colorAccent
used in the app themes instead.
This becomes even more relevant today, as with the introduction of Dark Themes in Android Q, your layouts should specify an attribute so that the end value is different when using a light theme vs a dark theme.
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