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I currently have a view in my Android app and the view is playing a frame animation. I want to animate the view to increase its size to 150%. When I apply a scale animation to it, and the scale animation is completed, I want the viewer to stay at that new size for the rest of the activity's life cycle. Unfortunately right now when the scale-up animation is complete, the view snaps back to the original size. How can I get it to keep the new animated transformation?

I'm using

myView.startAnimation(AnimationUtils.loadAnimation(mContext,R.anim.scaleUp150));

Thanks!

7 Answers 7

150

Make sure you add below attributes to the root element in your animation xml:

android:fillAfter="true" 
android:fillEnabled="true"
8
  • 7
    This is the real answer. The OP should change this to be the accepted answer. Thank you Qlimax!! (P.S. this is not documented in the "Animation" section of the Dev Guide, it is only documented in the javadocs for the Animation class. Such poor documentation!)
    – Neil Traft
    Sep 9, 2010 at 1:36
  • 7
    where to put this code? in <set ...></set> or in animation tags(translate|rotate|scale)? Aug 2, 2011 at 8:27
  • 5
    as mentioned below, you have to add it to the set paramter
    – cV2
    Aug 13, 2012 at 13:42
  • 3
    This does not work. I want the view's real size to change with the animation. It only changes the content. I am changing scale Y from 1.0 to 0.0 and the animation happens but leaves an empty space where the view used to be. Also, I tried View.GONE but that snaps the other views into the empty space. I need the other views to follow the scaling view's size while it shrinks. How to get that working?
    – Sudhanshu
    Jul 28, 2014 at 20:11
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    Any one else reading this be noted that fillAfter will only keeps the view pixels stay while the actual view will still at initial position. You need to manually set LayoutParams of your view probably in onAminationEnd (listener). Nov 14, 2014 at 5:25
53

try constructing the animation from code and setting the properties like this

anim.setFillEnabled(true);
anim.setFillAfter(true);
1
32

if you want to put your animation in an xml, it may need this to help:

<set
android:fillEnabled="true"
android:fillAfter="true"
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">

<translate
    android:fromYDelta="0"
    android:toYDelta="-20%p"
    android:duration="7000" />

</set>

https://stackoverflow.com/a/6519233/371749

please also appreciate the other answer, helped me :) good luck!

23

Nowadays it has become very easy:

view.animate().x(valueX).y(valueY).setDuration(500).start();

(In this snippet ViewPropertyAnimator has been used).

There is possible to append multiple other options either.

The View will be located in the new position.

1
  • This should be posted as trending topic
    – Kotik_o
    Feb 18, 2016 at 16:12
2

EDIT: Qlimax's answer is better, but since the OP hasn't returned to change the checkmark and I can't delete an accepted answer, I'll copy it up here: just set fillAfter=true fillEnabled=true

My original answer (which works, but is mildly ridiculous by comparison) follows:

For things to work as expected after the animation, at least according to this thread, you will have to write an onAnimationEnd handler, and in there, manually adjust the "real" (pre-transformation) bounds of your view to match the end result of the scale animation.

3
  • Hi Walter. I have overwritten the onAnimationEnd, but I don't know how to adjust the "real" bounds of the view to match the scale of the animation. I do know what exact dp I want it to end up, but I can't find the function to "setWidth()" or "setHeight()".
    – justinl
    Jul 28, 2010 at 2:31
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    I believe those are stored in the LayoutParams. You should be able to do view.getLayoutParams().width = newWidth; view.getLayoutParams().height = newHeight; view.requestLayout();. (The latter call is necessary to inform the view tree that it needs to be recalculated.) Jul 28, 2010 at 16:07
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    This is an incredibly roundabout way of doing things. All one needs to do is set attributes android:fillEnabled and android:fillAfter to both be true.
    – Neil Traft
    Sep 9, 2010 at 1:38
1

Actually, as the animation you are using seems to be one embedded in the Android framework, I'm not sure you can change anything in it.
However, you can create you own animation by following the example in the documentation. And you will have to put android:fillAfter="true" if you want the scaling to be kept after the end of the animation.

1
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    scaleUp150 is a custom animation I wrote in xml (though it's extremely basic). I did put the android:fillAfter="true" inside the animation but it still snaps back to the original size :S
    – justinl
    Jul 28, 2010 at 2:32
1

Put android:fillAfter="true" in the SET tag - as putting them in animation tag confines them to the "transition parameters" or "during/while animating parameters". The parameters in the SET will apply the transformation you are looking for after it finishes the animations.

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