Is there any way in android to adjust the textsize in a textview to fit the space it occupies?

E.g. I'm using a TableLayout and adding several textviews to each row. Since I don't want the textviews to wrap the text I rather see that it lowers the font size of the content.

Any ideas?

I have tried measureText, but since I don't know the size of the column it seems troublesome to use. This is the code where I want to change the font size to something that fits

TableRow row = new TableRow(this);   
for(int i=0;i<ColumnNames.length; i++){    

TextView textColumn = new TextView(this);      
textColumn.setText(ColumnNames[i]);
textColumn.setPadding(0, 0, 1, 0);
textColumn.setTextColor(getResources().getColor(R.drawable.text_default));          

row.addView(textColumn, new TableRow.LayoutParams()); 
} 
table.addView(row, new TableLayout.LayoutParams());  
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8 Answers

I've written a class that extends TextView and does this. It just uses measureText as you suggest. Basically it has a maximum text size and minimum text size (which can be changed) and it just runs through the sizes between them in decrements of 1 until it finds the biggest one that will fit. Not particularly elegant, but I don't know of any other way.

Here is the code:

import android.content.Context;
import android.graphics.Paint;
import android.util.AttributeSet;
import android.widget.TextView;

public class FontFitTextView extends TextView {

    public FontFitTextView(Context context) {
        super(context);
        initialise();
    }

    public FontFitTextView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
        super(context, attrs);
        initialise();
    }

    private void initialise() {
        testPaint = new Paint();
        testPaint.set(this.getPaint());
        //max size defaults to the intially specified text size unless it is too small
        maxTextSize = this.getTextSize();
        if (maxTextSize < 11) {
            maxTextSize = 20;
        }
        minTextSize = 10;
    }

    /* Re size the font so the specified text fits in the text box
     * assuming the text box is the specified width.
     */
    private void refitText(String text, int textWidth) { 
        if (textWidth > 0) {
            int availableWidth = textWidth - this.getPaddingLeft() - this.getPaddingRight();
            float trySize = maxTextSize;

            testPaint.setTextSize(trySize);
            while ((trySize > minTextSize) && (testPaint.measureText(text) > availableWidth)) {
                trySize -= 1;
                if (trySize <= minTextSize) {
                    trySize = minTextSize;
                    break;
                }
                testPaint.setTextSize(trySize);
            }

            this.setTextSize(trySize);
        }
    }

    @Override
    protected void onTextChanged(final CharSequence text, final int start, final int before, final int after) {
        refitText(text.toString(), this.getWidth());
    }

    @Override
    protected void onSizeChanged (int w, int h, int oldw, int oldh) {
        if (w != oldw) {
            refitText(this.getText().toString(), w);
        }
    }

    //Getters and Setters
    public float getMinTextSize() {
        return minTextSize;
    }

    public void setMinTextSize(int minTextSize) {
        this.minTextSize = minTextSize;
    }

    public float getMaxTextSize() {
        return maxTextSize;
    }

    public void setMaxTextSize(int minTextSize) {
        this.maxTextSize = minTextSize;
    }

    //Attributes
    private Paint testPaint;
    private float minTextSize;
    private float maxTextSize;

}
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4  
A binary search would generally be faster than a linear search. – Ted Hopp Jan 28 '11 at 7:13
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The solution below incorporates all of the suggestions here. It starts with what was originally posted by Dunni. It uses a binary search like gjpc's, but it is a bit more readable. It also include's gregm's bug fixes and a bug-fix of my own.

import android.content.Context;
import android.graphics.Paint;
import android.util.AttributeSet;
import android.util.TypedValue;
import android.widget.TextView;

public class FontFitTextView extends TextView {

    public FontFitTextView(Context context) {
        super(context);
        initialise();
    }

    public FontFitTextView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
        super(context, attrs);
        initialise();
    }

    private void initialise() {
        mTestPaint = new Paint();
        mTestPaint.set(this.getPaint());
        //max size defaults to the initially specified text size unless it is too small
    }

    /* Re size the font so the specified text fits in the text box
     * assuming the text box is the specified width.
     */
    private void refitText(String text, int textWidth) 
    { 
        if (textWidth <= 0)
            return;
        int targetWidth = textWidth - this.getPaddingLeft() - this.getPaddingRight();
        float hi = 100;
        float lo = 2;
        final float threshold = 0.5f; // How close we have to be

        mTestPaint.set(this.getPaint());

        while((hi - lo) > threshold) {
            float size = (hi+lo)/2;
            mTestPaint.setTextSize(size);
            if(mTestPaint.measureText(text) >= targetWidth) 
                hi = size; // too big
            else
                lo = size; // too small
        }
        // Use lo so that we undershoot rather than overshoot
        this.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_PX, lo);
    }

    @Override
    protected void onMeasure(int widthMeasureSpec, int heightMeasureSpec)
    {
        super.onMeasure(widthMeasureSpec, heightMeasureSpec);
        int parentWidth = MeasureSpec.getSize(widthMeasureSpec);
        int height = getMeasuredHeight();
        refitText(this.getText().toString(), parentWidth);
        this.setMeasuredDimension(parentWidth, height);
    }

    @Override
    protected void onTextChanged(final CharSequence text, final int start, final int before, final int after) {
        refitText(text.toString(), this.getWidth());
    }

    @Override
    protected void onSizeChanged (int w, int h, int oldw, int oldh) {
        if (w != oldw) {
            refitText(this.getText().toString(), w);
        }
    }

    //Attributes
    private Paint mTestPaint;
}
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Thanks for combining all the feedback. I see that the solution takes only width into consideration. My problem is that the fond exceeds the height. – kilaka Dec 19 '11 at 14:19
Here is the code with the height taken into consideration. ppl.ug/8JpoARYw9SA . Thanks a lot to all the guys here. – kilaka Dec 19 '11 at 15:05
Oh, it seems to partially work at runtime. On a device ot emulator, the text is cut half way up. On the Eclipse layout editor it looks fine. Any ideas? – kilaka Dec 19 '11 at 16:27
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Works with modification

You need to set the text view size like this because otherwise setTextSize assumes the value is in SP units:

setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_PX, trySize);

And you needed to explicitly add this code.

@Override
protected void onMeasure(int widthMeasureSpec, int heightMeasureSpec)
{
    super.onMeasure(widthMeasureSpec, heightMeasureSpec);
    int parentWidth = MeasureSpec.getSize(widthMeasureSpec);
    int parentHeight = MeasureSpec.getSize(heightMeasureSpec);
    refitText(this.getText().toString(), parentWidth);
}
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Slight modification to onMeasure:

@Override
protected void onMeasure(int widthMeasureSpec, int heightMeasureSpec)
{
    super.onMeasure(widthMeasureSpec, heightMeasureSpec);
    int parentWidth = MeasureSpec.getSize(widthMeasureSpec);
    int parentHeight = MeasureSpec.getSize(heightMeasureSpec);
    refitText(this.getText().toString(), parentWidth);
    this.setMeasuredDimension(parentWidth, parentHeight);
}

And binary search on refitText:

private void refitText(String text, int textWidth) 
{ 
    if (textWidth > 0) 
    {
        int availableWidth = textWidth - this.getPaddingLeft() - this.getPaddingRight();         
        int trySize = (int)maxTextSize;
        int increment = ~( trySize - (int)minTextSize ) / 2;

        testPaint.setTextSize(trySize);
        while ((trySize > minTextSize) && (testPaint.measureText(text) > availableWidth)) 
        {
            trySize += increment;
            increment = ( increment == 0 ) ? -1 : ~increment / 2;
            if (trySize <= minTextSize) 
            {
                trySize = (int)minTextSize;
                break;
            }
            testPaint.setTextSize(trySize);
        }

        this.setTextSize( TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_PX, trySize);
    }
}
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1  
Instead of a binary search, a simple scaling works pretty well: trySize *= availableWidth / measured_width (then clamped to minTextSize). – Ted Hopp Mar 2 '11 at 0:05
feedback

I found the following to work nicely for me. It doesn't loop and accounts for both height and width. Note that it is important to specify the PX unit when calling setTextSize on the view. Thanks to the tip in a previous post for this!

Paint paint = adjustTextSize(getPaint(), numChars, maxWidth, maxHeight);
setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_PX,paint.getTextSize());

Here is the routine I use, passing in the getPaint() from the view. A 10 character string with a 'wide' character is used to estimate the width independent from the actual string.

private static final String text10="OOOOOOOOOO";
public static Paint adjustTextSize(Paint paint, int numCharacters, int widthPixels, int heightPixels) {
    float width = paint.measureText(text10)*numCharacters/text10.length();
    float newSize = (int)((widthPixels/width)*paint.getTextSize());
    paint.setTextSize(newSize);

    // remeasure with font size near our desired result
    width = paint.measureText(text10)*numCharacters/text10.length();
    newSize = (int)((widthPixels/width)*paint.getTextSize());
    paint.setTextSize(newSize);

    // Check height constraints
    FontMetricsInt metrics = paint.getFontMetricsInt();
    float textHeight = metrics.descent-metrics.ascent;
    if (textHeight > heightPixels) {
        newSize = (int)(newSize * (heightPixels/textHeight));
        paint.setTextSize(newSize);
    }

    return paint;
}
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How do you incorporate it in a layout xml? – kilaka Dec 19 '11 at 17:11
This code is useful for placing text within an existing view into a constrained size area or you can create your own derived class from TextView and override the onMeasure as shown in other posts. By itself it cannot be used in a layout. – Glenn Feb 3 at 23:20
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I had the same problem and wrote a class that seems to work for me. Basically, I used a static layout to draw the text in a separate canvas and remeasure until I find a font size that fits. You can see the class posted in the topic below. I hope it helps.

Auto Scale TextView Text to Fit within Bounds

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I used a variation of Dunni solution above, but that particular code didn't work for me. In particular, when trying to use the Paint object set to have the traits of the view's Paint object, and then calling measureText(), it doesn't return the same value as directly calling the view's Paint object. Perhaps there are some differences in the way my views are set up that make the behavior different.

My solution was to directly use the view's Paint, even though there might be some performance penalties in changing the font size for the view multiple times.

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Check my solution based on dunni's code here Auto Scale TextView Text to Fit within Bounds

Note: I didn't implement it with a loop.

PS: thanks dunni

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