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The app I'm developing contains 2 separate layouts: one is for the regular phones, other for small tablets such as NOOKcolor. The decision which is which is made based on the screen width resolution (currently 600dip). It looks great on Nook but terrible on HTC Rezound, which has a 720 x 1280 display. On the latter, regardless of higher resolution, everything (text, images, etc) look much larger so it gets all bunched up.

What would be a good approach to pick the right device? Perhaps detect physical size (4.3" vs 7") vs resolution?

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2 Answers 2

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Use the following method to detect your device's screen size:

    /**
     * Checks if the screen size is equal or above given length
     * @param activity activity screen
     * @param screen_size diagonal size of screen, for example 7.0 inches
     * @return True if its equal or above, else false
     */
    public static boolean checkScreenSize(Activity activity, double screen_size)
    {
        Display display = activity.getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay();
        DisplayMetrics displayMetrics = new DisplayMetrics();
        display.getMetrics(displayMetrics);

        int width = displayMetrics.widthPixels / displayMetrics.densityDpi;
        int height = displayMetrics.heightPixels / displayMetrics.densityDpi;

        double screenDiagonal = Math.sqrt( width * width + height * height );
        return (screenDiagonal >= screen_size );
    }
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  • What?? I put 7.0 as the input param, and it returns false for my Kindle Fire. May 23, 2012 at 16:23
  • strange, because i tested it on my device and its working perfectly fine. try logging screenDiagonal before return and see what it actually calculates for your device
    – waqaslam
    May 24, 2012 at 7:33
  • It returns 6.708203932499369. So you have to take that into account. May 24, 2012 at 23:59
  • @Waqas FYI: your method on Asus Transformer Pad TF300 returns diagonal 8.94(in landscape) & 8.60(in portrait). There is something off. May 25, 2012 at 0:16
  • densityDPI won't be an accurate value so you can't use it this way. For instance, a medium density phone will most often times report a dpi of 160, even though it's physical dpi might be some other value. You can try using xdpi and ydpi but I've found that's not always accurate either, such as on some Samsung devices. It seems to me that there's no great way to figure out the physical size of a screen, which is absurd. Jul 23, 2012 at 20:56
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Check out the documentation for Supporting Multiple Screens. You can follow a predetermined folder naming structure so that Android will load different layouts and drawables for different screen sizes/densities.

For example:

res/layout/my_layout.xml             // layout for normal screen size ("default")
res/layout-small/my_layout.xml       // layout for small screen size
res/layout-large/my_layout.xml       // layout for large screen size
res/layout-xlarge/my_layout.xml      // layout for extra large screen size
res/layout-xlarge-land/my_layout.xml // layout for extra large in landscape orientation

res/drawable-mdpi/my_icon.png        // bitmap for medium density
res/drawable-hdpi/my_icon.png        // bitmap for high density
res/drawable-xhdpi/my_icon.png       // bitmap for extra high density
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  • For pre-honeycomb this is somewhat useless
    – Bostone
    Apr 9, 2012 at 22:31

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