24

I have a styles called Red and Green and I have an if statment to find out which to apply, but I don't know the code to actually apply a style from the java.

2

4 Answers 4

37

There is no one line solution to this problem, but this worked for my use case. The problem is, the 'View(context, attrs, defStyle)' constructor does not refer to an actual style, it wants an attribute. So, we will:

  1. Define an attribute
  2. Create a style that you want to use
  3. Apply a style for that attribute on our theme
  4. Create new instances of our view with that attribute

In 'res/values/attrs.xml', define a new attribute:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<resources>
    <attr name="customTextViewStyle" format="reference"/>
    ...
</resources>    

In res/values/styles.xml' I'm going to create the style I want to use on my custom TextView

<style name="CustomTextView">
    <item name="android:textSize">18sp</item>
    <item name="android:textColor">@color/white</item>
    <item name="android:paddingLeft">14dp</item>
</style>

In 'res/values/themes.xml' or 'res/values/styles.xml', modify the theme for your application / activity and add the following style:

<resources>
    <style name="AppBaseTheme" parent="android:Theme.Light">
        <item name="customTextViewStyle">@style/CustomTextView</item>
    </style>
    ... 
</resources>

Finally, in your custom TextView, you can now use the constructor with the attribute and it will receive your style. Here, instead of always

public class CustomTextView extends TextView {

    public CustomTextView(Context context, int styleAttribute) {
        super(context, null, styleAttribute);
    }

    // You could also just apply your default style if none is given
    public CustomTextView(Context context) {
        super(context, null, R.attr.customTextViewStyle);
    }
}

With all of these components, you can now do an if/else statement to generate new views at runtime with the style you prefer

CustomTextView ctv;
if(useCustomStyles == true){
    ctv = new CustomTextView(context, R.attr.customTextViewStyle);
}else{
    ctv = new CustomTextView(context, R.attr.someOtherStyle);
}

It's worth noting that I repeatedly used customTextView in different variants and different places, but it is in no way required that the name of the view match the style or the attribute or anything. Also, this technique should work with any custom view, not just TextViews.

1
  • 1
    For me using <item name="@attr/customTextViewStyle"> did not work, I had to remove the @attr for it to work, so it's just <item name="customTextViewStyle">
    – petroni
    Mar 7, 2018 at 15:56
13

It is possible to apply styles programatically to TextViews using setTextAppearance(context, resid) method. (The resId of the style can be found in R.style.YourStyleName)

8

I found out this is only able to be done when creating an View from inside the Java. If it is defined in the XML before hand you cannot dynamically change the style.

2
  • 13
    How does this answer your own question? Mar 4, 2017 at 5:40
  • this is not a correct answer. Even if you set a drawable in the xml you can override that programatically. Mar 10, 2022 at 11:45
4

You can use the brand new Paris library to apply styles programmatically:

Paris.style(yourView).apply(condition ? R.style.Green : R.style.Red);

The only caveat is that not all attributes are supported (but many are and support can be added fairly easily by contributing to the library).

Disclaimer: I'm the original author of the library.

2
  • This should be flagged as the answer, by far ! Mar 4, 2022 at 22:50
  • It may be a library, but it really solved the problem. Why isn't it marked as an answer? May 24, 2022 at 10:33

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