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Difference of px, dp, dip and sp in android

I am new to Android and I was trying out this tutorial

In that tutorial, they used the unit "sp" for textSize attribute and "dp" for other attributes.

Please tell me how sp differs from dp?

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2 Answers 2

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The dp has constant ratio transition to px: dp = px * ratio. Where ratio will never change on any particular device.

While sp (s for scaled) has scalable ratio: sp = px * ratio * scale. Where ratio never changes, but scale is user configurable. This scale can be used by people who need larger font sizes, for example, to use device more comfortably.

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    This feels wrong, why are our layouts based on dp but all text rendered inside that layout scaled to user's sp settings? If the text becomes larger, shouldn't the containing view also grows to accommodate them?
    – chakrit
    Mar 18, 2014 at 15:36
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    So, to simplify: sp = dp * scale Mar 24, 2014 at 19:47
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    @chakrit You can use sp to build your layouts too.
    – Hassaan
    Jun 4, 2014 at 22:15
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    @chakrit Not necessarily. If your views grow larger, the layout of your application will be different, which raises difficult questions. Should the views overlap? Should one displace another? Etc. Feb 19, 2015 at 0:40
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    @chakrit Even if layouts are using dp, they should still be able to tolerate text becoming larger to some degree, otherwise this is poor design. Say, if a text label is constrained in width, it can still grow in height. If it's constrained in both, then you may have problems when the text becomes larger, for example, when translating into another language.
    – Malcolm
    Dec 26, 2016 at 9:11
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Sp is scaled independently with respect to the normal font size of the device. http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html

Similarly, you should prefer the sp (scale-independent pixel) to define text sizes. The sp scale factor depends on a user setting and the system scales the size the same as it does for dp.

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