2

I am new to BlackBerry Development (5.0). I have a little experience in Android Applications Development. What I'm trying to do is fill an image on the whole screen (Horizontally) Similar to what you could do in Android using fill_parent in a layout file. I've looked on some forums to find a solution, but didn't get a satisfactory one.

This is how I'm getting my image

Bitmap headerLogo = Bitmap.getBitmapResource("uperlogo.png");
BitmapField headerLogoField = 
    new BitmapField(headerLogo, BitmapField.USE_ALL_WIDTH | Field.FIELD_HCENTER);
setTitle(headerLogoField);

This code is giving me my header on top (as required) and in the center. I simply want this to stretch horizontally to cover all space.

1 Answer 1

3

It is possible to stretch the Bitmap horizontally before creating the BitmapField, and that will solve the problem. But stretching Bitmap and using it as title will create problem for devices that supports screen rotation (e.g. Storm, Torch series). In that case you have to maintain two stretched Bitmap instance, one for the portrait mode and other for landscape mode. And you also need to write some extra code for setting the appropriate Bitmap depending on the orientation. If you don't want to do that then check following 2 approaches:


Using CustomBitmapField instance

A CustomBitmapField that can stretch Bitmap horizontally can be used. Check the implementation.

class MyScreen extends MainScreen {

    public MyScreen() {
        Bitmap bm = Bitmap.getBitmapResource("uperlogo.png");
        setTitle(new CustomBitmapField(bm));
    }

    class CustomBitmapField extends Field {
        private Bitmap bmOriginal;
        private Bitmap bm;

        private int bmHeight;

        public CustomBitmapField(Bitmap bm) {
            this.bmOriginal = bm;
            this.bmHeight = bm.getHeight();
        }

        protected void layout(int width, int height) {
            bm = new Bitmap(width, bmHeight);
            bmOriginal.scaleInto(bm, Bitmap.FILTER_BILINEAR);
            setExtent(width, bmHeight);
        }

        protected void paint(Graphics graphics) {
            graphics.drawBitmap(0, 0, bm.getWidth(), bmHeight, bm, 0, 0);
        }
    }
}


Using Background instance

Background object can solve the problem easily. If a Background instance can be set to a HorizontalFieldManager which will use all the width available to its, then in case of screen rotation it will take care of its size and background painting. And the Background instance will itself take care of the streching of the supplied Bitmap. Check the following code.

class MyScreen extends MainScreen {

    public MyScreen() {
        setTitle(getMyTitle());         
    }

    private Field getMyTitle() {
        // Logo.
        Bitmap bm = Bitmap.getBitmapResource("uperlogo.png");

        // Create a manager that contains only a dummy field that doesn't 
        // paint anything and has same height as the logo. Background of the 
        // manager will serve as the title.

        HorizontalFieldManager hfm = new HorizontalFieldManager(USE_ALL_WIDTH);
        Background bg = BackgroundFactory.createBitmapBackground(bm, Background.POSITION_X_LEFT, Background.POSITION_Y_TOP, Background.REPEAT_SCALE_TO_FIT);
        hfm.setBackground(bg);
        hfm.add(new DummyField(bm.getHeight()));

        return hfm;
    }

    // Implementation of a dummy field
    class DummyField extends Field {
        private int logoHeight;

        public DummyField(int height) {
            logoHeight = height;
        }

        protected void layout(int width, int height) {
            setExtent(1, logoHeight);
        }

        protected void paint(Graphics graphics) {
        }
    }
}
1
  • The "Using Background Instance" implementation solved my problem. Thanks a bunch :)
    – Jazib
    Aug 7, 2012 at 9:20

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.