123

I am showing snackbar in a DialogFragment within the positive touch of the alert dialog. Here is my code snippet:

Snackbar snackbar = Snackbar.make(view, "Please enter customer name", Snackbar.LENGTH_LONG)
                .setAction("Action", null);
View sbView = snackbar.getView();
sbView.setBackgroundColor(Color.BLACK);
snackbar.show();

As you can see my snackbars background color is showing white color

I am passing the view of the DialogFragment to the snackbar. I want the background color to be black. How can I do this? I am returning the alertDialog in the DialogFragment. And the theme I am setting to the dialog as follow's:

<style name="MyAlertDialogStyle" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.Dialog.Alert">

    <!-- Used for the buttons -->
    <item name="colorAccent">@color/accent</item>
    <!-- Used for the title and text -->
    <item name="android:textColorPrimary">@color/primary</item>
    <!-- Used for the background -->
    <item name="android:background">@color/white</item>
</style>

Although I am setting the background color to white for the dialog, it should override by setting the background color to the snackbar.

2

21 Answers 21

195

Try setting background color like this:

sbView.setBackgroundColor(ContextCompat.getColor(getActivity(), R.color.BLACK));

It will work 100% !

3
  • 58
    you may need to do snackBarView.getView().setBackgrondColor(ContextCompat.getColor(getActivity(), R.color.BLACK));
    – Jason John
    May 6, 2016 at 14:41
  • 3
    If you found this page from Google and above solution didn't work for you, you may need to try this one instead: sbView.setBackgroundColor(getResources().getColor(R.color.BLACK)) Dec 19, 2017 at 13:24
  • @modu Note that getResources#getColor has been deprecated since API level 23 (Marshmallow) and ContextCompat#getColor should be used instead.
    – Edric
    Apr 9, 2018 at 1:50
94

you can do it like this

Snackbar snackbar;
snackbar = Snackbar.make(view, "Message", Snackbar.LENGTH_SHORT);
View snackBarView = snackbar.getView();
snackBarView.setBackgroundColor(yourColor);
TextView textView = (TextView) snackBarView.findViewById(android.support.design.R.id.snackbar_text);
textView.setTextColor(textColor);
snackbar.show();
4
  • 1
    as u can see i did exactly same thing but it not showing in black color
    – Ajinkya
    Dec 1, 2015 at 13:31
  • i have use the same in one of my project, try to display it in activity for testing, may be it is not working due to dialog Dec 1, 2015 at 16:24
  • ya its working on activity but i want it on the dialog fragment.
    – Ajinkya
    Dec 1, 2015 at 16:49
  • i think it is because of your view that you are passing to it Dec 1, 2015 at 17:07
38

As none of the other answers provided a custom style override (that I consider one of the safest update way to do that) I post here my solution.

I post a solution that already address the new AndroidX (support design 28) theme.

Provided that your application use a custom them called MyAppTheme in your AndroidManifest.xml:

<application
        android:name=".MyApplicationName"
        android:allowBackup="true"
        android:icon="@mipmap/icon"
        android:roundIcon="@mipmap/icon_round"
        android:label="@string/app_name"
        android:theme="@style/MyAppTheme">

Create (if you haven't already) values/style.xml file overriding the theme used by your application:

<style name="MyAppTheme" parent="Theme.MaterialComponents.Light.NoActionBar">
    <item name="colorPrimary">@color/myColorPrimary</item>
    <item name="colorPrimaryDark">@color/myColorPrimaryDark</item>
    <item name="colorAccent">@color/myColorAccent</item>
    <item name="snackbarStyle">@style/MySnackBarStyle</item>
</style>

<!-- snackbar style in res/values -->
<style name="MySnackBarStyle" parent="Widget.MaterialComponents.Snackbar">
    <item name="android:background">@color/mySnackbarBackgroundColor</item>
</style>

and provide your colors in your values/colors.xml file

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<resources>
    <color name="myColorPrimary">#008577</color>
    <color name="myColorPrimaryDark">#00574B</color>
    <color name="myColorAccent">#D81B60</color>
    <color name="mySnackbarBackgroundColor">#D81B60</color>
</resources>

UPDATE 2020

As the above solution removes the round corner of the snacker bacause setting the background this way uses the legacy snackbar design, if you want to preserve the material design you can.

  1. If you are targeting API 21+

replace android:background with android:backgroundTint

<!-- snackbar style in res/values-21/ -->
<style name="MySnackBarStyle" parent="Widget.MaterialComponents.Snackbar">
    <item name="android:backgroundTint">@color/mySnackbarBackgroundColor</item>
</style>
  1. If you are targeting API < 21 then if you decide to use legacy snackbar for API < 21 you could set your abouve MySnackbarStyle in res/values-21/ folder and leave the previous — legacy — style in your res/values folder.

  2. If you are targeting API < 21 and you want to have the material style of the snackbar also in this lower API levels you can change your snackbar style in your res/values/ this way:

<!-- snackbar style in res/values/ -->
<style name="MySnackBarStyle" parent="Widget.MaterialComponents.Snackbar">
    <item name="android:background">@drawable/my_snackbar_background</item>
</style>

and borrow your my_snackbar_background from the official repo, this way:

<!-- in res/drawable/ -->
<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    android:shape="rectangle">
    <corners android:radius="4dp"/>
    <solid android:color="@color/mySnackbarBackgroundColor"/>
</shape>

EDIT 2022:

If you only want to change a single snackbar, and not across the app, then you can use a ContextThemeWrapper as following;

ContextThemeWrapper ctw = new ContextThemeWrapper(this, R.style.CustomSnackbarTheme);
customSnackBar = Snackbar.make(ctw, view, "", Snackbar.LENGTH_LONG);

and in your style file

<style name="CustomSnackbarTheme">
    <item name="snackbarStyle">@style/MySnackBarStyle</item>
</style>

<style name="MySnackBarStyle" parent="Widget.MaterialComponents.Snackbar">
    <item name="android:background">@android:color/red</item>
</style>

Here is a playground repo.

enter image description here

7
  • 5
    This is the cleanest and best solution
    – TrackDave
    Aug 9, 2019 at 10:52
  • It's change the size of the snakbar
    – William
    Feb 20, 2020 at 13:38
  • Note that your AppTheme must inherits from Theme.MaterialComponents to compile
    – A.Mamode
    Apr 8, 2020 at 19:29
  • Thanks for my_snackbar_background. Without it Snackbar drew with rounder corners.
    – CoolMind
    May 25, 2020 at 15:55
  • 1
    this is the best solution
    – Abu Nayem
    Jan 12, 2021 at 5:51
25

Kotlin version (with an extension) :

Create in a file (for exemple SnackbarExtension.kt) an extension :

fun Snackbar.withColor(@ColorInt colorInt: Int): Snackbar{
   this.view.setBackgroundColor(colorInt)
   return this
}

Next, in your Activity/Fragment, you'll be able to do this :

Snackbar
  .make(coordinatorLayout, message, Snackbar.LENGTH_LONG)
  .withColor(YOUR_COLOR)
  .show()
1
  • Really like this answer, I added the text colouring as well: fun Snackbar.withColor(@ColorInt backgroundColor: Int, @ColorInt textColor: Int) : Snackbar { this.view.setBackgroundColor(backgroundColor) this.view.findViewById<TextView>(android.support.design.R.id.snackbar_text).setTextColor(textColor) return this }
    – willcwf
    Aug 27, 2018 at 17:06
21

If you want to define a background color for all your Snackbars, just override the design_snackbar_background_color value somewhere in your resources. For example:

<color name="design_snackbar_background_color" tools:override="true">@color/colorPrimaryLight</color>
3
  • This solution is cleanest and nice. Thanks!
    – AloDev
    Oct 10, 2018 at 8:48
  • 1
    Works great, just stick this in colors.xml and you are set!
    – A P
    Oct 21, 2018 at 17:19
  • Nope. Didn't work for me. Neither did any of the other solutions.
    – Johann
    Jun 28, 2019 at 9:15
17

With the Material Components Library just use the setBackgroundTint method.

    Snackbar snackbar = Snackbar.make(view, "Snackbar custom style", Snackbar.LENGTH_LONG);
    snackbar.setBackgroundTint(ContextCompat.getColor(this,R.color.secondaryColor));
    snackbar.show();

enter image description here


With Jetpack Compose you can customize the SnackbarHost defining a custom Snackbar

    snackbarHost = {
        // reuse default SnackbarHost to have default animation and timing handling
        SnackbarHost(it) { data ->
            Snackbar(
                snackbarData = data,
                backgroundColor = Color.Red
            )
        }
    },

Then just use it:

scope.launch {scaffoldState.snackbarHostState.showSnackbar("Snackbar text")}

enter image description here

16

Bellow code is useful for change the text color of message.

Snackbar snackbar = Snackbar.make(rootView, "Enter Your Message",Snackbar.LENGTH_SHORT);
View view = snackbar.getView();
TextView tv = (TextView)view.findViewById(android.support.design.R.id.snackbar_text);
tv.setTextColor(Color.RED);
snackbar.show();

Second Way: You can change color by changing theme of activity also.

7

It's too late but In case someone still needs help. Here is the working solution.

      Snackbar snackbar = Snackbar.make(mainView, text, Snackbar.LENGTH_LONG);
    View snackBarView = snackbar.getView();
    snackBarView.setBackgroundColor(context.getResources().getColor(R.color.btn_background_color));
    snackbar.show();
4

I made a little utils class so I can easily make custom colored snackbars thru out the app.

package com.yourapppackage.yourapp;

import android.support.design.widget.Snackbar;
import android.view.View;
import android.widget.Button;
import android.widget.TextView;

public class SnackbarUtils {

    private int BACKGROUND_COLOR;
    private int TEXT_COLOR;
    private int BUTTON_COLOR;
    private String TEXT;


    public SnackbarUtils(String aText, int aBgColor, int aTextColor, int aButtonColor){
        this.TEXT = aText;
        this.BACKGROUND_COLOR = aBgColor;
        this.TEXT_COLOR = aTextColor;
        this.BUTTON_COLOR = aButtonColor;
    }

    public Snackbar snackieBar(){
        Snackbar snackie = Snackbar.make(MainActivity.getInstance().findViewById(android.R.id.content), TEXT, Snackbar.LENGTH_LONG);
        View snackView = snackie.getView();
        TextView snackViewText = (TextView) snackView.findViewById(android.support.design.R.id.snackbar_text);
        Button snackViewButton = (Button) snackView.findViewById(android.support.design.R.id.snackbar_action);
        snackView.setBackgroundColor(BACKGROUND_COLOR);
        snackViewText.setTextColor(TEXT_COLOR);
        snackViewButton.setTextColor(BUTTON_COLOR);
        return snackie;
    }
}

then to use it, like this any where in the app:

new SnackbarUtils("This is the text displayed", Color.RED, Color.BLACK, Color.YELLOW).snackieBar().setAction("OTAY", v -> { 
     //donothing
     }).show();
4

While Working with xamarin android I found out that ContextCompat.GetColor() returns Int but the setBackgroundColor() expects a Parameter of type Color. So here is how I got it working in my xamarin android project.

Snackbar snackbarview =  Snackbar.Make(toolbar, message, Snackbar.LengthLong);
View snckView = snackbarview.View;                
snckView.SetBackgroundColor(Color.ParseColor(GetString(Resource.Color.colorPrimary)));
snackbarview.Show();
7
  • +1 for Xamarin View snckView = snackbarview.View; instead of snackbar.getView(); which is not available but ParseColor is not working.
    – Cfun
    Aug 15, 2020 at 18:33
  • @Cfun Can you explain your problem a bit more, so that i can help you with it. Aug 16, 2020 at 12:02
  • My bad I used System.Drawing.Color.ParseColor instead of Android.Graphics.Color.ParseColor. now I have: "the name 'getstring' does not exist in the current context"
    – Cfun
    Aug 16, 2020 at 13:21
  • @Cfun Are you getting this error in an activity or a fragment or you are calling the getString() in some other class? Aug 16, 2020 at 15:26
  • I am calling it in some other Class.
    – Cfun
    Aug 16, 2020 at 16:08
2

Put it in an Utility class:

public class Utility {
    public static void showSnackBar(Context context, View view, String text) {
        Snackbar sb = Snackbar.make(view, text, Snackbar.LENGTH_SHORT);
        sb.getView().setBackgroundColor(ContextCompat.getColor(context, R.color.colorAccent));
        sb.show();
    }
}

Using like this:

Utility.showSnackBar(getApplicationContext(), findViewById(android.R.id.content), "Add success!!!");
2

Old format using Java

mySnackbar.setBackgroundColor(ContextCompat.getColor(getActivity(), android.R.color.black));

Actualy format using kt

mySnackbar.setBackgroundTint(ContextCompat.getColor(applicationContext, android.R.color.black));
1

None of other solutions really worked for me. If I only set Snackbar's background color, the layout under TextView and Button was in default color. If I set TextView's background it did a little blink after SnackBar was shown. And layout around button was still in default color.

At the end I found out that the best way for me is to change background color of TextView's parent (SnackbarContentLayout). Now whole Snackbar is colored properly and it doesn't blink when it shows up.

snack = Snackbar.make(view, text, duration)
View view = snack.getView();
view.setBackgroundColor(BACKGROUND_COLOR);
TextView tv = view.findViewById(android.support.design.R.id.snackbar_text);
tv.setTextColor(TEXT_COLOR);
((SnackbarContentLayout) tv.getParent()).setBackgroundColor(BACKGROUND_COLOR);
1

setBackgroundResource() works just as well.

Snackbar snackbar = Snackbar.make(view, text, Snackbar.LENGTH_LONG);
View sbView = snackbar.getView();
sbView.setBackgroundResource(R.color.background);
snackbar.show();
1

I don't know why setBackgroundColor() didn't find in my project. That's why I created an extension function and it's fine now.

fun View.showSnackBar(message: String) {
    val snackBar = Snackbar.make(this, message, Snackbar.LENGTH_LONG)
    snackBar.setBackgroundTint(ContextCompat.getColor(this.context, R.color.colorAccent))
    snackBar.show()
}

and call it like bellow

activity_login.xml

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>

<FrameLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
    xmlns:tools="http://schemas.android.com/tools"
    android:id="@+id/login_holder_layout"
    android:layout_width="match_parent"
    android:layout_height="match_parent">

   // your UI

</FrameLayout>

LoginActivity.kt

login_holder_layout.showSnackBar("Invalid Email") 
1

Basically, the solutions that were provided have one disadvantage. They change the shape of snackbar and remove the radius.

Personally, prefer something like that

val snackbar = Snackbar.make(view, text, Snackbar.LENGTH_LONG);
val view = snackbar.getView();
val color = view.resources.getColor(colorId)
view.background.colorFilter = PorterDuffColorFilter(color, PorterDuff.Mode.SRC_ATOP)
1
  • @KishanSolanki You can use the this instead
    – Vaios
    Feb 9, 2021 at 9:24
1

For Kotlin:

Snackbar.make(view,"simple text",Snackbar.LENGTH_SHORT).setBackgroundTint(Color.RED).show()
1

July 2023 : Kotin Working Code Example

enter image description here

private fun showSnackBar(message: String) {
    rootView?.let {
        val snackBar = Snackbar.make(it, message, Snackbar.LENGTH_INDEFINITE).apply {
            setAction("Reload") {}
            view.setBackgroundColor(ContextCompat.getColor(it.context, R.color.yellow))
            show()
        }
    }
}
0
public class CustomBar {

public static void show(View view, String message, boolean isLong) {
    Snackbar s = Snackbar.make(view, message, isLong ? Snackbar.LENGTH_LONG : Snackbar.LENGTH_SHORT);
    s.getView().setBackgroundColor(ContextCompat.getColor(view.getContext(), R.color.red_900));
    s.show();
}

public static void show(View view, @StringRes int message, boolean isLong) {
    Snackbar s = Snackbar.make(view, message, isLong ? Snackbar.LENGTH_LONG : Snackbar.LENGTH_SHORT);
    s.getView().setBackgroundColor(ContextCompat.getColor(view.getContext(), R.color.red_900));
    s.show();
}

}

0

If you use Material 3 Theme

<style name="ApplicationTheme" parent="Theme.Material3.Dark.NoActionBar">
    <item name="snackbarStyle">@style/SnackbarStyle</item>
    <item name="snackbarTextViewStyle">@style/SnackbarTextViewStyle</item>
</style>

<style name="SnackbarStyle" parent="Widget.MaterialComponents.Snackbar">
    <item name="backgroundTint">@android:color/black</item>
</style>

<style name="SnackbarTextViewStyle" parent="Widget.MaterialComponents.Snackbar.TextView">
    <item name="android:textColor">@android:color/white</item>
</style>
-1

you can use this code on the material design library

you can use the way

create color code

open the res/values/colors.xml and add this line

<resources>
    <color name="custom_color_name">CustomCode</color>
</resources>

create Snackbar and change Background

open your activity or fragment and create Snackber

Snackbar snackbar= Snackbar.make(root,R.string.imageUploadTitle_error, BaseTransientBottomBar.LENGTH_LONG);

get Snackbar View

now you should get the SnackbarView and Change custom background in it

View snackview = snackbar.getView();

change background color

set the snackbar background color with this function

snackview.setBackgroundColor(ContextCompat.getColor(getActivity() , R.color.error));

showing this snackbar

now should show the Snackbar

snackbar.show();

so you can see changed background to custom color

1
  • what's new in your answer other than the given solutions? Feb 7, 2021 at 8:02

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