Study android, now I've some images to put into drawable dirs (hdpi/ldpi/mdpi/xhdpi). I read a lot but again I don't understand. Which size should be an image for every directories?
9 Answers
Hope this will help...
mdpi is the reference density -- that is, 1 px on an mdpi display is equal to 1 dip. The ratio for asset scaling is:
ldpi | mdpi | hdpi | xhdpi | xxhdpi | xxxhdpi
0.75 | 1 | 1.5 | 2 | 3 | 4
Although you don't really need to worry about tvdpi unless you're developing specifically for Google TV or the original Nexus 7 -- but even Google recommends simply using hdpi assets. You probably don't need to worry about xxhdpi either (although it never hurts, and at least the launcher icon should be provided at xxhdpi), and xxxhdpi is just a constant in the source code right now (no devices use it, nor do I expect any to for a while, if ever), so it's safe to ignore as well.
What this means is if you're doing a 48dip image and plan to support up to xhdpi resolution, you should start with a 96px image (144px if you want native assets for xxhdpi) and make the following images for the densities:
ldpi | mdpi | hdpi | xhdpi | xxhdpi | xxxhdpi
36 x 36 | 48 x 48 | 72 x 72 | 96 x 96 | 144 x 144 | 192 x 192
And these should display at roughly the same size on any device, provided you've placed these in density-specific folders (e.g. drawable-xhdpi, drawable-hdpi, etc.)
For reference, the pixel densities for these are:
ldpi | mdpi | hdpi | xhdpi | xxhdpi | xxxhdpi
120 | 160 | 240 | 320 | 480 | 640
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1That image you shared is fantastic! Thank you! I've been searching for a good explanation of sizing, and now my search is over. May 28, 2014 at 21:20
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1Thanks @Rafique, but I'm confuse about of the another icons dimensions. Mar 4, 2017 at 5:19
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I have a full explanation already posted here
Basically, General guidelines for designing images are:
ldpi is 0.75x dimensions of mdpi
hdpi is 1.5x dimensions of mdpi
xhdpi is 2x dimensinons of mdpi
Usually, I design mdpi images for a 320x480 screen and then multiply the dimensions as per the above rules to get images for other resolutions.
Please refer to the full explanation for a more detailed answer.
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1I guess your concept of "brief" is different than mine. This is a comprehensive answer, and well done. Great explanation (this concept is hard!).– BoogerJan 17, 2013 at 15:12
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@wtsang02 It is a dup. The OP seems to be new so I thought I'd post it again for convenience. Jan 17, 2013 at 15:13
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1@Anup Cowkur thanks for the answer! A question: if I've a source image (i.e. 1600x960 size 47,3Kb) which size should have to put it on mdpi? Jan 17, 2013 at 16:01
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See the image for reference :- (Soruce :- Android Studio-Image Assets option and Android Office Site )
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1Thanks @pravin, but I'm confuse about of the another icons dimensions. Mar 4, 2017 at 5:10
Tablets supports tvdpi and for that scaling factor is 1.33 times dimensions of medium dpi
ldpi | mdpi | tvdpi | hdpi | xhdpi | xxhdpi | xxxhdpi
0.75 | 1 | 1.33 | 1.5 | 2 | 3 | 4
This means that if you generate a 400x400 image for xxxhdpi devices, you should generate the same resource in 300x300 for xxhdpi, 200x200 for xhdpi, 133x133 for tvdpi, 150x150 for hdpi, 100x100 for mdpi, and 75x75 for ldpi devices
low dpi is 0.75x dimensions of medium dpi
high dpi is 1.5x dimensions of medium dpi
extra high dpi is 2x dimensinons of medium dpi
It's a good practice to make all the images in vector based format so you can resize them easily using a vector design software like Illustrator etc..
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If you do use vector you still need to look at the bitmap output and probably tweak it so you don't get blurred edges where you need sharp ones! (e.g. the edge of a button might hit a pixel boundary and be nice and sharp at 1x but the edge will be on 50% between two pixels at 0.75X and look muddied). Personally I like using a bitmap at 2x making sure any edges I want to be sharp are on a multiple of 8 pixel boundary(you can add a grid in Photoshop), then scale the image to 0.75x, 1x, and 1.5x(0.75x will have sharp edges every 3 pixels, 1x will use 4 pixels, and 1.5x use 6 pixels).– GabeJan 15, 2014 at 17:44
As of Octoer 2020, the dimensions for Launcher, ActionBar/Tab and Notification icons are:
A very good online tool to generate launcher icons : https://romannurik.github.io/AndroidAssetStudio/icons-launcher.html
you can use Android Asset in android studio , and android Asset will give you image in this size as a drawable and the application will automatically use the size based on screen of device or emulate
Not just tab icons, notification and launcher lives an app. I was confused about the sizes of the other icons used for different situations in the app.
I'm using 32px mdpi (Action Bar icons) dimensions and I cannot say if it would be correct.