170

I can't tell the difference between ImageView.ScaleType.CENTER_INSIDE and ImageView.ScaleType.FIT_CENTER.

CENTER_INSIDE

Scale the image uniformly (maintain the image's aspect ratio) so that both dimensions (width and height) of the image will be equal to or less than the corresponding dimension of the view (minus padding).

FIT_CENTER

Compute a scale that will maintain the original src aspect ratio, but will also ensure that src fits entirely inside dst. At least one axis (X or Y) will fit exactly. The result is centered inside dst.

Can someone illuminate the difference between the two?

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  • 1
    They are identical except that, if it happens that the box is actually BIGGER than the image, CENTER_INSIDE will NOT expand the image
    – Fattie
    Mar 30, 2021 at 12:40
  • 1
    @Fattie Thank you! Makes sense once you know it. Apr 29, 2021 at 15:37

3 Answers 3

281

Here's a graphical illustration of the difference between CENTER_INSIDE and FIT_CENTER.


Image used (100 × 100):

Android_Robot_100.png


Small image view (75 × 50):

CENTER_INSIDE:

CENTER_INSIDE for small image view

FIT_CENTER:

FIT_CENTER for small image view

Both CENTER_INSIDE and FIT_CENTER shrink the image.


Large image view (300 × 200):

CENTER_INSIDE:

CENTER_INSIDE for large image view

FIT_CENTER:

FIT_CENTER for large image view

CENTER_INSIDE does not enlarge the image, FIT_CENTER does.


The Android robot is reproduced or modified from work created and shared by Google and used according to terms described in the Creative Commons 3.0 Attribution License.

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163

FIT_CENTER is going to make sure that the source completely fits inside the container, and either the horizontal or vertical axis is going to be exact.

CENTER_INSIDE is going to center the image inside the container, rather than making the edges match exactly.

so if you had a square box that was 10" x 10" and an image that was 8"x8", the CENTER_INSIDE would be directly in the middle of the box with 2" between the source and the destination container.

With the FIT_CENTER, that same image from the example above, would fit the entire container, because the sides are equal, and one axis is going to match the destination. With FIT_CENTER, if you had a box that was 5" x 10", and an image that was 5" x 7", the image would be proportionally scaled, so one of the axis's would fit, but would still center the image inside the destination.

They are similar, but one is made so that the source will fill the destination as much as possible, while the other just centers the image inside the destination.

Hope that clarifies a little

8
  • Note that center/centerInside, etc. don't actually centre the image, as far as I can tell. At least in the case when the image is smaller than the view. I could be wrong.
    – Timmmm
    Nov 21, 2012 at 17:39
  • 5
    it sounds that FIT_CENTER is (almost) always more favorable.
    – cheng yang
    Mar 5, 2013 at 21:48
  • 2
    This still doesn't make sense because FIT_CENTER states that At least one axis (X or Y) will fit exactly. Doesn't this imply that both do the same thing? Mar 22, 2013 at 17:20
  • 57
    Basically, the documentation isn't clear that CENTER_INSIDE doesn't scale UP (only DOWN)
    – Ken
    May 22, 2014 at 0:28
  • 1
    @Ken It ignores the scenario where the image is larger than the view box, in which case CENTER_INSIDE does scale it down, and thus becomes unnecessarily complicated as well. The other answers explain this correctly and much more succinctly.
    – Livven
    Mar 30, 2016 at 22:05
62

They are the same if the image is bigger than the container. If the image is smaller then the container CENTER_INSIDE will NOT scale the image up while FIT_CENTER will.

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