Okay, I've been reading and searching around, and am now banging my head against the wall trying to figure this out. Here's what I have so far:

package com.pockdroid.sandbox;

import android.content.Context;
import android.graphics.Canvas;
import android.graphics.Color;
import android.graphics.Paint;
import android.graphics.Rect;
import android.widget.ImageView;

public class ShadowImageView extends ImageView {

private Rect mRect;
private Paint mPaint;

public ShadowImageView(Context context)
{
    super(context);
    mRect = new Rect();
    mPaint = new Paint();
    mPaint.setAntiAlias(true);
    mPaint.setShadowLayer(2f, 1f, 1f, Color.BLACK);
}

@Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) 
{
    Rect r = mRect;
    Paint paint = mPaint;

    canvas.drawRect(r, paint);
    super.onDraw(canvas);
}

@Override
protected void onMeasure(int w, int h)
{
    super.onMeasure(w,h);
    int mH, mW;
    mW = getSuggestedMinimumWidth() < getMeasuredWidth()? getMeasuredWidth() : getSuggestedMinimumWidth();
    mH = getSuggestedMinimumHeight() < getMeasuredHeight()? getMeasuredHeight() : getSuggestedMinimumHeight();
    setMeasuredDimension(mW + 5, mH + 5);
}

}

The "+5" in the measurements are there as temporary; From what I understand I'll need to do some math to determine the size that the drop shadow adds to the canvas, right?

But when I use this:

public View getView(int position, View convertView, ViewGroup parent) {
    ShadowImageView sImageView;
    if (convertView == null) {
        sImageView = new ShadowImageView(mContext);
        GridView.LayoutParams lp = new GridView.LayoutParams(85, 85);
        sImageView.setLayoutParams(lp);

        sImageView.setScaleType(ImageView.ScaleType.CENTER);
        sImageView.setPadding(5,5,5,5);
    } else {
        sImageView = (ShadowImageView) convertView;
    }

    sImageView.setImageBitmap(bitmapList.get(position));
    return sImageView;
}

in my ImageView, I still get just a normal ImageView when I run the program.

Any thoughts? Thanks.

EDIT: So I spoke with RomainGuy some in the IRC channel, and I have it working now for plain rectangular images with the below code. It still won't draw the shadow directly to my bitmap's transparency though, so I'm still working on that.

@Override
protected void onDraw(Canvas canvas) 
{
    Bitmap bmp = BitmapFactory.decodeResource(getResources(), R.drawable.omen);
    Paint paint = new Paint();
    paint.setAntiAlias(true);
    paint.setShadowLayer(5.5f, 6.0f, 6.0f, Color.BLACK);
    canvas.drawColor(Color.GRAY);
    canvas.drawRect(50, 50, 50 + bmp.getWidth(), 50 + bmp.getHeight(), paint);
    canvas.drawBitmap(bmp, 50, 50, null);       
}
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"it working now for plain rectangular images" ... so it doesn't work for non-rectangular images, and then I assume it also doesn't work for 9patch-images, correct? Did you meanwhile get it to work? Cause this approach by Romain Guy doesn't work for me in my test yet. – Mathias Lin Feb 24 '11 at 10:33
Hmm, interesting question. I would think you could probably take your View that's using the 9-patch, and wrap it in a FrameLayout, and give the FrameLayout the drop shadow 9-patch background. But yeah, it only works for rectangular images, because there's no way for a 9-patch to follow transparency contours. I unfortunately haven't found a better solution, however, I haven't really tried again since. – kcoppock Feb 24 '11 at 14:21
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3 Answers

up vote 32 down vote accepted

Okay, I don't foresee any more answers on this one, so what I ended up going with for now is just a solution for rectangular images. I've used the following NinePatch:

alt text

along with the appropriate padding in XML:

<ImageView
        android:id="@+id/image_test"
        android:background="@drawable/drop_shadow"
        android:layout_width="wrap_content"
        android:layout_height="wrap_content"
        android:paddingLeft="6px"
        android:paddingTop="4px"
        android:paddingRight="8px"
        android:paddingBottom="9px"
        android:src="@drawable/pic1"
        />

to get a fairly good result:

alt text

Not ideal, but it'll do.

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Don't forget to save the png as drop_shadow.9.png. – NPike Apr 25 at 22:44
Wow, I spent way too much time trying to do this in code. Much more elegant solution! – Nik Reiman May 22 at 9:55
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This is taken from Romain Guy's presentation at Devoxx, pdf found here.

Paint mShadow = new Paint(); 
// radius=10, y-offset=2, color=black 
mShadow.setShadowLayer(10.0f, 0.0f, 2.0f, 0xFF000000); 
// in onDraw(Canvas) 
canvas.drawBitmap(bitmap, 0.0f, 0.0f, mShadow);

Hope this helps.

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I will definitely try this later! Thanks for the PDF as well, looks like interesting stuff. Is this presentation video available online to watch? – kcoppock Sep 16 '10 at 4:29
3  
Don't forget for Honeycomb and above invoke setLayerType(LAYER_TYPE_SOFTWARE, mShadow). If not you will not see your shadow. – Dmitriy_Boichenko Dec 7 '11 at 17:08
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Here you are. Set source of ImageView statically in xml or dynamically in code.

Shadow is here white.

<RelativeLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    android:layout_width="wrap_content" android:layout_height="wrap_content">

    <View android:layout_width="wrap_content" android:layout_height="wrap_content"
        android:background="@android:color/white" android:layout_alignLeft="@+id/image"
        android:layout_alignRight="@id/image" android:layout_alignTop="@id/image"
        android:layout_alignBottom="@id/image" android:layout_marginLeft="10dp"
        android:layout_marginBottom="10dp" />

    <ImageView android:id="@id/image" android:layout_width="wrap_content"
        android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:src="..."
        android:padding="5dp" />

</RelativeLayout>
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Definitely not what I'm looking for. I'm wanting an actual rendered drop shadow that fades to transparent; that will just give me a white box behind my image. – kcoppock Sep 15 '10 at 13:52
2  
@kcoppock - there's no need to downvote this answer - it wasn't really that bad. – CaspNZ Feb 13 '11 at 23:08
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