I got so sick of dealing with bulleted text that I wrote a TextView
subclass I call BulletTextView
.
I have texts in the resource file, as you do. I formatted all the texts to use the Unicode bullet character \u2022 to mark the bullets. So a sample text might look like this:
<string name="product_description_text">Our product is absolutely amazing, because
it has these features:
\n\n\u2022 First awesome feature
\n\u2022 Second awesome feature
\n\u2022 Third awesome feature
\n\n(Note that users with a free trial license can\'t access these features.)\n</string>
BulletTextView
overrides TextView.setText()
to scan the text for the bullet characters, remove them and save the positions to mark the bulleted spans:
@Override
public void setText(CharSequence text, BufferType type) {
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
List<Integer> markers = new ArrayList<Integer>();
for (int i = 0; i < text.length(); i++) {
char ch = text.charAt(i);
switch (ch) {
case '\u2022':
// we found a bullet, mark the start of bullet span but don't append the bullet char
markers.add(sb.length());
// ... I do some other stuff here to skip whitespace etc.
break;
case '\n':
// we found a newline char, mark the end of the bullet span
sb.append(ch);
markers.add(sb.length());
// ... I do some stuff here to weed out the newlines without matching bullets
break;
// ... I have some special treatment for some other characters,
// for instance, a tab \t means a newline within the span
default:
// any other character just add it to the string
sb.append(ch);
break;
}
}
// ... at the end of the loop I have some code to check for an unclosed span
// create the spannable to put in the TextView
SpannableString spannableString = new SpannableString(sb.toString());
// go through the markers two at a time and set the spans
for (int i = 0; i < markers.size(); i += 2) {
int start = markers.get(i);
int end = markers.get(i+1);
spannableString.setSpan(new BulletSpan(gapWidth), start, end, Spannable.SPAN_PARAGRAPH);
}
super.setText(spannableString, BufferType.SPANNABLE);
}
I left out some code that was specific to my application, but this is the basic framework for solving your problem.
Not sure about making your bullet a different color, but there is a BulletSpan
constructor public BulletSpan(int gapWidth, int color)
that may do the trick.
I tried to figure out how to use LineHeight to make larger lines to separate the bullet paragraphs, but I couldn't make it work. I just use a newline to separate the two bullet sections.