111

I am receiving hex color values from a server (in this form, #xxxxxx , example #000000 for black)

How do I convert this to an integer value?

I tried doing Integer.valueOf("0x" + passedColor.substring(1, passedColor.length())) to get an even more hextastic 0x000000 result, but this isn't intepreted as an int here, any other suggestions?

I receive an error: 08-03 21:06:24.673: ERROR/AndroidRuntime(20231): java.lang.NumberFormatException: unable to parse '0x00C8FBFE' as integer

I am using the Android SDK for their setBackgroundColor(int color) function, which takes - as you might have guessed - an integer color value.

This is the OPPOSITE of this question: How to convert a color integer to a hex String in Android?

2

10 Answers 10

218

The real answer is to use:

Color.parseColor(myPassedColor) in Android, myPassedColor being the hex value like #000 or #000000 or #00000000.

However, this function does not support shorthand hex values such as #000.

3
49

Answer is really simple guys, in android if you want to convert hex color in to int, just use android Color class, example shown as below

this is for light gray color

Color.parseColor("#a8a8a8");

Thats it and you will get your result.

1
  • And just make it clear on how to use: someText.setTextColor(Color.parseColor("#f9e6ff") )
    – Brian M
    Sep 16, 2020 at 2:59
18
Integer.parseInt(myString.replaceFirst("#", ""), 16) 
6
  • 2
    thanks for the suggestion, I tried this just now to no avail, and it turns out an included Android function was the only kind of color result that works, even though they both return int. Color.parseColor(myPassedColor)) I didn't think this was an android specific problem, but turns out it was
    – CQM
    Aug 4, 2011 at 1:15
  • 4
    I don't know why people upvoted this; it doesn't work!! The colors here are being stored in 32 bits so printing them makes them display as longs. parseInt looks for an explicit `-' to denote a negative, and doesn't respect the sign bit for ints or longs. Thus it will give the wrong number. Jan 26, 2013 at 1:25
  • 1
    @enthdegree, To quote the OP, "I am receiving hex color values from a server (in this form, #xxxxxx" so the colors the OP deals with are 24 bits not 32 bits; there is no alpha channel. Jan 26, 2013 at 2:48
  • 1
    @AllDayAmazing, '#' is not a hex digit, sign, or decimal separator so parseInt will fail if it finds it on the input. Sep 15, 2014 at 3:28
  • My mistake, I'm so ingrained in what I'm doing that I read it quickly and saw parseColor(). You are very correct. Sep 15, 2014 at 4:35
8

I have the same problem that I found some color in form of #AAAAAA and I want to conver that into a form that android could make use of. I found that you can just use 0xFFAAAAAA so that android could automatically tell the color. Notice the first FF is telling alpha value. Hope it helps

5

The real answer is this simplest and easiest ....

String white = "#ffffff";
int whiteInt = Color.parseColor(white);
3

I was facing the same problem. This way I was able to solved it. As CQM said, using Color.parseColor() is a good solution to this issue.

Here is the code I used:

this.Button_C.setTextColor(Color.parseColor(prefs.getString("color_prefs", String.valueOf(R.color.green))));

In this case my target was to change the Button's text color (Button_C) when I change the color selection from my Preferences (color_prefs).

3

if you can pass the values as static const, you can convert the hex value to an Android (android.graphics.Color) using this online converter and put the color reference in the const, ie: color converter give me this value for this color #EE5670 = 0xFFEE5670.

static const Color redColor = const Color(0xFFEE5670);

https://convertingcolors.com/hex-color-EE5670.html?search=#EE5670

2

Based on CQM's answer and on ovokerie-ogbeta's answer to another question I've come up with this solution:

if (colorAsString.length() == 4) { // #XXX
    colorAsString = colorAsString.replaceAll("#([0-9a-fA-F])([0-9a-fA-F])([0-9a-fA-F])", "#$1$1$2$2$3$3");
}

int color = Color.parseColor(colorAsString);
1

Get Shared Preferences Color Code in String then Convert to integer and add layout-background color:

    sharedPreferences = getSharedPreferences(mypref, Context.MODE_PRIVATE);
    String sw=sharedPreferences.getString(name, "");
    relativeLayout.setBackgroundColor(Color.parseColor(sw));
0

Try this, create drawable in your resource...

<shape xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" >
    <solid android:color="@color/white"/>
    <size android:height="20dp"
        android:width="20dp"/>
</shape>

then use...

 Drawable mDrawable = getActivity().getResources().getDrawable(R.drawable.bg_rectangle_multicolor);
mDrawable.setColorFilter(Color.parseColor(color), PorterDuff.Mode.SRC_IN);
mView1.setBackground(mDrawable);

with color... "#FFFFFF"

if the color is transparent use... setAlpha

mView1.setAlpha(x); with x float 0-1 Ej (0.9f)

Good Luck

Your Answer

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

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