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I'm trying to create an activity that presents some data to the user. The data is such that it can be divided into 'words', each being a widget, and sequence of 'words' would form the data ('sentence'?), the ViewGroup widget containing the words. As space required for all 'words' in a 'sentence' would exceed the available horizontal space on the display, I would like to wrap these 'sentences' as you would a normal piece of text.

The following code:

public class WrapTest extends Activity {
	/** Called when the activity is first created. */
	@Override
	public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
		super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
		LinearLayout l = new LinearLayout(this);
		LinearLayout.LayoutParams lp = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
				LinearLayout.LayoutParams.FILL_PARENT,
				LinearLayout.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
		LinearLayout.LayoutParams mlp = new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(
				new ViewGroup.MarginLayoutParams(
						LinearLayout.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT,
						LinearLayout.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT));
		mlp.setMargins(0, 0, 2, 0);

		for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
			TextView t = new TextView(this);
			t.setText("Hello");
			t.setBackgroundColor(Color.RED);
			t.setSingleLine(true);
			l.addView(t, mlp);
		}

		setContentView(l, lp);
	}
}

yields something like the left picture, but I would want a layout presenting the same widgets like in the right one.

non-wrapping wrapping

Is there such a layout or combination of layouts and parameters, or do I have to implement my own ViewGroup for this?

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2 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

I made my own layout that does what I want, but it is quite limited at the moment. I'll have to add the xml-support stuff later, but this should be enough as a proof of concept. Comments and improvement suggestions are of course welcome

The activity:

package se.fnord.xmms2.predicate;

import se.fnord.android.layout.PredicateLayout;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.graphics.Color;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.widget.TextView;

public class Predicate extends Activity {
    /** Called when the activity is first created. */
    @Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);

        PredicateLayout l = new PredicateLayout(this);
        for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
            TextView t = new TextView(this);
            t.setText("Hello");
            t.setBackgroundColor(Color.RED);
            t.setSingleLine(true);
            l.addView(t, new PredicateLayout.LayoutParams(2, 0));
        }

        setContentView(l);
    }
}

Or in an XML layout:

<se.fnord.android.layout.PredicateLayout
    android:id="@+id/predicate_layout"
    android:layout_width="fill_parent" 
    android:layout_height="wrap_content"
/>

And the Layout:

package se.fnord.android.layout;

import android.content.Context;
import android.util.AttributeSet;
import android.view.View;
import android.view.ViewGroup;

/**
 * ViewGroup that arranges child views in a similar way to text, with them laid
 * out one line at a time and "wrapping" to the next line as needed.
 * 
 * Code licensed under CC-by-SA
 *  
 * @author Henrik Gustafsson
 * @see http://stackoverflow.com/questions/549451/line-breaking-widget-layout-for-android
 * @license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/
 *
 */
public class PredicateLayout extends ViewGroup {

    private int line_height;

    public static class LayoutParams extends ViewGroup.LayoutParams {
        public final int horizontal_spacing;
        public final int vertical_spacing;

        /**
         * @param horizontal_spacing Pixels between items, horizontally
         * @param vertical_spacing Pixels between items, vertically
         */
        public LayoutParams(int horizontal_spacing, int vertical_spacing) {
            super(0, 0);
            this.horizontal_spacing = horizontal_spacing;
            this.vertical_spacing = vertical_spacing;     
        }
    }

    public PredicateLayout(Context context) {
        super(context);
    }

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

    @Override
    protected void onMeasure(int widthMeasureSpec, int heightMeasureSpec) {
        assert(MeasureSpec.getMode(widthMeasureSpec) != MeasureSpec.UNSPECIFIED);

        final int width = MeasureSpec.getSize(widthMeasureSpec) - getPaddingLeft() - getPaddingRight();
        int height = MeasureSpec.getSize(heightMeasureSpec) - getPaddingTop() - getPaddingBottom();
        final int count = getChildCount();
        int line_height = 0;

        int xpos = getPaddingLeft();
        int ypos = getPaddingTop();

        for (int i = 0; i < count; i++) {
            final View child = getChildAt(i);
            if (child.getVisibility() != GONE) {
                final LayoutParams lp = (LayoutParams) child.getLayoutParams();
                child.measure(
                        MeasureSpec.makeMeasureSpec(width, MeasureSpec.AT_MOST),
                        MeasureSpec.makeMeasureSpec(height, MeasureSpec.AT_MOST));

                final int childw = child.getMeasuredWidth();
                line_height = Math.max(line_height, child.getMeasuredHeight() + lp.vertical_spacing);

                if (xpos + childw > width) {
                    xpos = getPaddingLeft();
                    ypos += line_height;
                }

                xpos += childw + lp.horizontal_spacing;
            }
        }
        this.line_height = line_height;

        if (MeasureSpec.getMode(heightMeasureSpec) == MeasureSpec.UNSPECIFIED){
            height = ypos + line_height;
        }
        setMeasuredDimension(width, height);
    }

    @Override
    protected ViewGroup.LayoutParams generateDefaultLayoutParams() {
        return new LayoutParams(1, 1); // default of 1px spacing
    }

    @Override
    protected boolean checkLayoutParams(ViewGroup.LayoutParams p) {
        if (p instanceof LayoutParams)
            return true;
        return false;
    }

    @Override
    protected void onLayout(boolean changed, int l, int t, int r, int b) {
        final int count = getChildCount();
        final int width = r - l;
        int xpos = getPaddingLeft();
        int ypos = getPaddingTop();

        for (int i = 0; i < count; i++) {
            final View child = getChildAt(i);
            if (child.getVisibility() != GONE) {
                final int childw = child.getMeasuredWidth();
                final int childh = child.getMeasuredHeight();
                final LayoutParams lp = (LayoutParams) child.getLayoutParams();
                if (xpos + childw > width) {
                    xpos = getPaddingLeft();
                    ypos += line_height;
                }
                child.layout(xpos, ypos, xpos + childw, ypos + childh);
                xpos += childw + lp.horizontal_spacing;
            }
        }
    }
}

With the result:

Wrapped widgets

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Looks painful. I'm coming to you for programmatic layout questions.... – Will Feb 19 at 0:12
I only did it programmatically because it's much less to paste in order to communicate the idea :) – Henrik Gustafsson Feb 19 at 10:56
What license do you want this code snippet to have? I'd like to use it in a project (and have fixed the LayoutParam.WRAP_CONTENT problem here: staticfree.info/clip/2009-10-20T132442 ) – Steve Pomeroy Oct 20 at 17:25
The site made me agree that "user contributed content licensed under cc-wiki with attribution required", so... Check the bottom for details – Henrik Gustafsson Oct 20 at 17:29
Also, if you make any improvements it'd be neat if you posted them here :) – Henrik Gustafsson Oct 20 at 17:30
show 3 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

Try setting both of lp's LayoutParams to be WRAP_CONTENT.

Setting mlp to be WRAP_CONTENT, WRAP_CONTENT ensures that your TextView(s) t are just wide and tall enough enough to hold "Hello" or whatever String you put in them. I think l may not be aware of how wide your t's are. The setSingleLine(true) may be contributing too.

link|flag
As far as I know, LinearLayout does not do any wrapping. WRAP_CONTENT on both axes would make the LinearLayout-widget one line high and extend way off the screen. And from what I understand, the setSingleLine on the text-widget only affects the size and shape of that widget, not its parents layout. – Henrik Gustafsson Feb 18 at 10:22

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