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I have images in drawable-hdpi(big images) and in drawable-mdpi(small images)

I opened my app on Kindle fire (its get layout from layout-large) and it use images from drawable-mdpi , is any way to let app to get images from drawable-hdpi when screen size is large?

thanks

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3 Answers 3

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I think what you are looking for is to use configuration qualifiers.

It seems you are really misunderstanding what these folders do. Your android will select folder based on it's screen size or pixel-density.

Your Kindle Fire has a medium Pixel density and a large screen. So it selects its resources from the res folders with those given qualifiers.

res/layout-large/my_layout.xml

and images from

res/drawable-mdpi/my_icon.png

You cannot tell your kindle to get images from the hdpi folder because it does not have a high pixel density.

So you could either create a folder called

res/drawable-large-mdpi/ 

specifically for your Kindle Fire device.

Or just make sure the right images are in the right folders.

EDIT: Size qualifiers are deprecated from 3.2.

While deprecated, they still work. Although results may not be what expected (for example: 5" and 7" are seen as same size -large-which still have difference). So they added dp qualifiers to use beyond 3.2. Which are much better. developer.android.com/guide/practices/… It kinda works like media-queries

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    You can create a folder called drawable-large to let it get your images based on screen-size or drawable-large-mdpi for large screen with medium pixel density (which your kindle fire has). Which is bad practice because you should load images based on screen density.
    – Timmetje
    Jul 13, 2012 at 11:46
  • thank you I understand now, I used res/drawable-large, drawable-small and drawable-normal to use images thanks
    – Bera
    Jul 13, 2012 at 12:15
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    to find out what folder your device prefers, use an app called "ScreenInfo" it shows you the DPI and Screen Class for your device. Sep 6, 2013 at 21:29
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    Size qualifiers are deprecated in 3.2 and above. Is res/drawable-large-mdpi exempt from this or do you have any alternatives for these versions?
    – sturrockad
    Sep 12, 2013 at 11:08
  • While deprecated, they still work. Although results may not be what expected (for example: 5" and 7" are seen as same size -large-which still have difference). So they added dp qualifiers to use beyond 3.2. Which are much better. developer.android.com/guide/practices/… It kinda works like media-queries..
    – Timmetje
    Dec 3, 2013 at 12:16
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Updating this with the new qualifiers for Android.

Use of size qualifiers such as drawable-large are deprecated in 3.2 or above.

To use the latest method of supporting multiple layouts and densities, you can use the following:

res/drawable-sw600dp-mdpi

In this example, sw600dprepresents the smallest width available to the activity in density-independent pixels,600dpin this case. This is deemed as being a little more fitting for device-specific layouts and drawables as the width is provided instead of a generalized size grouping such aslarge`.

There are also new options for available width and height, full information available here: Supporting Multiple Screens

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All qualifiers are processed in the order they appear in Table2.

Read How Android Finds the Best-matching Resource.

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  • I have to change drawable-hdpi to drawable-large-hdpi? it does not work
    – Bera
    Jul 13, 2012 at 11:37
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    No change it to drawable-large-mdpi, because your Kindle Fire has large screen and medium density. (It does not have high desnity so it doesnt get it from the hdpi qualifier.
    – Timmetje
    Jul 13, 2012 at 11:47

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