3

In the Android documentation for BottomSheetBehavior, it says I can use the following attribute in XML:

BottomSheetBehavior_Layout_behavior_hideable

I tried this:

android:BottomSheetBehavior_Layout_behavior_hideable="true"

But that gave me the following error:

Unknown attribute android:BottomSheetBehavior_Layout_behavior_hideable

That error is discussed at Unknown attribute android:layout_width, layout_height, id, gravity, layout_gravity, padding but none of those solutions worked for me because they were about syncing project files. Mine are synced. Nobody questioned the validity of the attribute name, which is what I think is my problem here.

Then I tried this:

app:BottomSheetBehavior_Layout_behavior_hideable="true"

But that gave me the following error:

Unexpected namespace prefix "app" found for tag

That error is discussed at Unexpected namespace prefix "app" found for tag RelativeLayout - Android? but none of those solutions worked for me, and--more central to my question--there the attribute seems to be written like this:

app:behavior_hideable="true"

Is app:behavior_hideable the correct way to write BottomSheetBehavior_Layout_behavior_hideable? What is the name of the mechanism that performs this translation? Where is its documentation?

1 Answer 1

3

There are a couple of components to the answer.

  1. In the constructor for a BottomSheetBehavior, xml attributes are read out as follows Source:

TypedArray a = context.obtainStyledAttributes(attrs, R.styleable.BottomSheetBehavior_Layout); setHideable(a.getBoolean(R.styleable.BottomSheetBehavior_Layout_behavior_hideable, false));

  1. These attributes are typically defined in an attrs.xml file. Here's the attrs.xml for the BottomSheetBehavior.

So what's happening here is a LayoutInflater is calling the constructor, and xml attributes are accessed via R.styleable.[name_of_style]_[name_of_attribute]. When you want to apply the style in xml, you simply use the name of the attribute. In the case, the name of the style is "BottomSheetBehavior_Layout", and the name of the attribute is "behavior_hideable". Similarly, you could also use "behavior_skipCollapsed" and "behavior_fitToContents".

For more information on styling, the official docs are here: https://developer.android.com/training/custom-views/create-view#customattr

2

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.