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Hands-On Android UI Development

You're reading from   Hands-On Android UI Development Design and develop attractive user interfaces for Android applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788475051
Length 348 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jason Morris Jason Morris
Author Profile Icon Jason Morris
Jason Morris
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Creating Android Layouts FREE CHAPTER 2. Designing Form Screens 3. Taking Actions 4. Composing User Interfaces 5. Binding Data to Widgets 6. Storing and Retrieving Data 7. Creating Overview Screens 8. Designing Material Layouts 9. Navigating Effectively 10. Making Overviews Even Better 11. Polishing Your Design 12. Customizing Widgets and Layouts 13. Activity Lifecycle
14. Test Your Knowledge Answers

Creating the DatePickerLayout


Each of these areas can easily be encapsulated in a Java class and reused elsewhere in your application. In Chapter 3, Taking Actions, you wrote the DatePickerWrapper class, which can turn any TextView widget into a date selection widget. However, DatePickerWrapper doesn't create the TextView label or change the styling of the widgets to look like TextInputLayout. This means that you need to copy that styling into each layout where you want a date-picker, which can quickly lead to inconsistencies in your user interface. While it's good to have the events and state decoupled from the display logic, it would also be nice to have them grouped together in a single structure that can be reused without every layout having to specify the date picker widgets by hand, and then bind them to the DatePickerWrapper in its code.

While it's not obvious at first, the Android layout XML files can reference any View class and not just those defined in the core and support packages...

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