162

I am trying to calculate a variable amount of pixels to density independent pixels and vice-versa.

This formula (px to dp): dp = (int)(px / (displayMetrics.densityDpi / 160)); does not work on small devices because it is divided by zero.

This is my dp to px formula:

px = (int)(dp * (displayMetrics.densityDpi / 160));

Could someone give me some pointers?

3
  • 1
    Converting dp units to pixel units developer.android.com/guide/practices/… Nov 29, 2011 at 11:01
  • @Bram: I think your formula is just fine. How will you get a division by zero? displayMetrics.densityDpi will be either 120, 160, 240 or 320, never 0.
    – ct_rob
    Nov 29, 2011 at 11:06
  • 1
    I agree with @ct_rob . displayMetrics.densityDpi / 160 minimum value will be 0.75. You must have been casting to int in the incorrect place.
    – TomTaila
    Feb 13, 2017 at 15:52

21 Answers 21

331

Note: The widely used solution above is based on displayMetrics.density. However, the docs explain that this value is a rounded value, used with the screen 'buckets'. Eg. on my Nexus 10 it returns 2, where the real value would be 298dpi (real) / 160dpi (default) = 1.8625.

Depending on your requirements, you might need the exact transformation, which can be achieved like this:

[Edit] This is not meant to be mixed with Android's internal dp unit, as this is of course still based on the screen buckets. Use this where you want a unit that should render the same real size on different devices.

Convert dp to pixel:

public int dpToPx(int dp) {
    DisplayMetrics displayMetrics = getContext().getResources().getDisplayMetrics();
    return Math.round(dp * (displayMetrics.xdpi / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));     
}

Convert pixel to dp:

public int pxToDp(int px) {
    DisplayMetrics displayMetrics = getContext().getResources().getDisplayMetrics();
    return Math.round(px / (displayMetrics.xdpi / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));
}

Note that there are xdpi and ydpi properties, you might want to distinguish, but I can't imagine a sane display where these values differ greatly.

9
  • 13
    This will not calculate the correct value for dp/px on many devices (including your Nexus 10)! As you say displayMetrics.density is rounded to the nearest screen bucket, but so is the dp unit! Try drawing one object that is 160dp wide and just below it you draw another object that is dpToPx(160) pixels wide and you will see that the size of the two objects are different. Also some phones (such as Galaxy Mini and Galaxy S3 Mini) report completely wrong values for xdpi/ydpi so on these phones your methods will return completely wrong results.
    – nibarius
    Apr 14, 2014 at 14:45
  • @nibarius Yes you cannot mix Android's boxed dp calculations with the above. The above solution is meant as a separate density independent value based on the exact device physics. Needed eg where you want to show a line the exact same real length on different devices. Of course if the xdpi/ydpi inputs are not correctly set by some devices, it wont't work there.
    – Bachi
    Apr 15, 2014 at 21:13
  • 1
    xdpi and ydpi should not be used, because they are inaccurate on many devices, sometimes by a lot. Only DisplayMetrics.densityDpi is reliable, which is unfortunate, since it is imprecise by design. See Google forum thread for more info: groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/android-developers/g56jV0Hora0 May 28, 2014 at 18:33
  • 1
    I found this response and actually used many similar solutions but I just went through the docs and found getDimensionPixelOffSet with given a dimension(declared in dip/dp) returns the offset in pixels just like the handmade code. I tested and worked flawlessly. Hope it helps! Jul 9, 2014 at 18:52
  • 1
    Mehhh, this doesn't give correct value. Try: Resources r = getResources(); float px = TypedValue.applyDimension(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_DIP, 14, r.getDisplayMetrics()); As described here: stackoverflow.com/questions/4605527/converting-pixels-to-dp Jul 10, 2017 at 13:04
103

I solved my problem by using the following formulas. May other people benefit from it.

dp to px:

displayMetrics = context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics();
return (int)((dp * displayMetrics.density) + 0.5);

px to dp:

displayMetrics = context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics();
return (int) ((px/displayMetrics.density)+0.5);
7
  • 28
    @Vame The adding of 0.5 is used to round UP to the nearest integer value.. The 0.5 is added and then the result of the calculation is cast as an int causing it to truncate the mantissa and leaving characteristic as a properly rounded integer value. Aug 24, 2012 at 4:40
  • 3
    This is not always correct. When I have two layouts one inside another and then I round corners of each view (one by using dp, other converting to dp) corners doesn't match!
    – Marek
    Jun 7, 2013 at 3:00
  • I didn't have any problems with this technique. I used this for different layouts and it always worked as expected. Of course I used this few years ago and I am not sure if it still works. Perhaps you could try the other technique in PanaVTEC's answer. It could also be that there is more to rounding corners than just dp / px calculations.
    – Bram
    Jun 7, 2013 at 10:39
  • 5
    It's the same solution that is adopted on the Android developer site, so I guess it's correct :) . http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/screens_support.html#dips-pels
    – alocaly
    Apr 9, 2014 at 23:16
  • 1
    +1 Thanks man. Worked like a charm! Thank you for sharing this solution with us. Nov 8, 2014 at 20:11
44

Efficient way ever

DP to Pixel:

private int dpToPx(int dp)
{
    return (int) (dp * Resources.getSystem().getDisplayMetrics().density);
}

Pixel to DP:

private int pxToDp(int px)
{
    return (int) (px / Resources.getSystem().getDisplayMetrics().density);
}

Hope this will help you.

4
  • 6
    Better because there is no need to use Context :) Thanks. Mar 13, 2017 at 16:07
  • 2
    Best answer! Unfortunately the "Marked as correct" answer is wrong. Especially since it uses displayMetrics.xdpi which is different on any device. Sadly, this wrong answer additionally has the most upvotes.
    – toom
    Aug 16, 2018 at 22:21
  • 1
    nice. should be marked as best answer. kotlin: private fun dpToPx(dp: Int) = (dp * Resources.getSystem().displayMetrics.density).toInt()
    – Raphael C
    Jan 16, 2020 at 14:13
  • Not better, Resources.getSystem() is not always correct Jun 12, 2022 at 10:22
36

px to dp:

int valueInpx = ...;
int valueInDp= (int) TypedValue.applyDimension(
            TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_DIP, valueInpx , getResources()
                .getDisplayMetrics());
4
  • 7
    This is from DP to PX, but with this correction: typedValue.applyDimension( TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_PX, valueInDp , getResources() .getDisplayMetrics()); is from PX to DP, also this is the best answer
    – PaNaVTEC
    Apr 3, 2013 at 18:40
  • 1
    @PaNaVTEC, the solution you referenced for dp to px is incorrect. applyDimension only yields pixels. See android.googlesource.com/platform/frameworks/base/+/refs/heads/… wherein no conversion is performed for COMPLEX_UNIT_PX. Apr 21, 2015 at 2:18
  • This answer is plain wrong. It returns final values in pixels, never in dp. If you look at the source code, for the case TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_DIP, value * metrics.density is returned, where you actually need value * metrics.density. So what you are getting` valueInDp` is NOT in dp for valueInPx in px.
    – bitbybit
    Sep 5, 2016 at 13:23
  • ^typo, I meant "...where you actually need value / metrics.density"
    – bitbybit
    Sep 5, 2016 at 13:31
29

Just call getResources().getDimensionPixelSize(R.dimen.your_dimension) to convert from dp units to pixels

1
  • 3
    Per the documentation, this is the same as getDimension(), except the returned value is converted to integer pixels for use as a size. A size conversion involves rounding the base value, and ensuring that a non-zero base value is at least one pixel in size.
    – CJBS
    Jul 28, 2015 at 23:59
14

Use This function

private int dp2px(int dp) {
    return (int) TypedValue.applyDimension(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_DIP, dp, getResources().getDisplayMetrics());
}
7

Use these Kotlin extensions:

/**
 * Converts Pixel to DP.
 */
val Int.pxToDp: Int
    get() = (this / Resources.getSystem().displayMetrics.density).toInt()

/**
 * Converts DP to Pixel.
 */
val Int.dpToPx: Int
    get() = (this * Resources.getSystem().displayMetrics.density).toInt()
0
5
px = dp * (dpi / 160)

dp = px * (160 / dpi)
4
  • 1
    although, now that i think about it...how will there ever be a divsion by zero in Brams original formula? displayMetrics.densityDpi will be either 120, 160, 240 or 320, never 0.
    – ct_rob
    Nov 29, 2011 at 11:02
  • 2
    (displayMetrics.densityDpi / 160) - this part can get 0 on small devices, there it calculates for example 120/160, both values are int, which results in 0. Which ends up as (int) (px/0).
    – user658042
    Nov 29, 2011 at 11:06
  • ah, you're right. So all he needs to do is use a long in his formula: 160.0
    – ct_rob
    Nov 30, 2011 at 12:51
  • this answer is similar to upper one because of DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT has 160 value. but can you please let us know what is DPI here how we calculate it.
    – John smith
    Nov 21, 2017 at 11:25
3

In most of the cases, conversion functions are called frequently. We can optimize it by adding memoization. So,it does not calculate every-time the function is called.

Let's declare a HashMap which will store the calculated values.

private static Map<Float, Float> pxCache = new HashMap<>();

A function which calculates pixel values :

public static float calculateDpToPixel(float dp, Context context) {

        Resources resources = context.getResources();
        DisplayMetrics metrics = resources.getDisplayMetrics();
        float px = dp * (metrics.densityDpi / 160f);
        return px;

    }

A memoization function which returns the value from HashMap and maintains the record of previous values.

Memoization can be implemented in different ways in Java. For Java 7 :

public static float convertDpToPixel(float dp, final Context context) {

        Float f = pxCache.get(dp);
        if (f == null) {
            synchronized (pxCache) {
                f = calculateDpToPixel(dp, context);
                pxCache.put(dp, f);
            }

        }

        return f;
    }

Java 8 supports Lambda function :

public static float convertDpToPixel(float dp, final Context context) {

        pxCache.computeIfAbsent(dp, y ->calculateDpToPixel(dp,context));
}

Thanks.

2
  • nice addition to the given solutions.
    – Bram
    Jul 18, 2016 at 13:33
  • I would be surprised if the conversion calculation wasn't at least as fast as a map lookup, not to mention a synchronized one. Do you have any test results to demonstrate this optimization is beneficial? On Android where working memory is limited, trading memory for calculation effort isn't something you should do without good reason. Aug 22, 2016 at 20:07
2

Elegant kotlin solution :)

val Int.dp get() = this / (Resources.getSystem().displayMetrics.densityDpi.toFloat() / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT)
val Float.dp get() = this / (Resources.getSystem().displayMetrics.densityDpi.toFloat() / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT)

val Int.px get() = this * Resources.getSystem().displayMetrics.density
val Float.px get() = this * Resources.getSystem().displayMetrics.density

Usage:

val dpValue = 2.dp
val pxFromDpValue = 2.px

Improtant:

I am not sure if Resources.getSystem() will work correctly with orientation changes.

If want to work in for example fragment or activity just add it it in to base fragment or base activity and use it like this:

abstract class BaseFragment : Fragment() {

    val Int.dp get() = this / (resources.displayMetrics.densityDpi.toFloat() / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT)
    val Float.dp get() = this / (resources.displayMetrics.densityDpi.toFloat() / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT)

    val Int.px get() = this * resources.displayMetrics.density
    val Float.px get() = this * resources.displayMetrics.density

    .......
}
1

You can use [DisplayMatrics][1] and determine the screen density. Something like this:

int pixelsValue = 5; // margin in pixels
float d = context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density;
int margin = (int)(pixelsValue * d);

As I remember it's better to use flooring for offsets and rounding for widths.

1

try this http://labs.skinkers.com/content/android_dp_px_calculator/

2
  • I prefer this one as it includes xxhdpi and xxxhdpi and other units of measure. Jun 11, 2014 at 10:08
  • Link in answer is dead - "The domain Skinkers.com may be for sale. Click here to inquire about this domain."
    – Pang
    Jun 22, 2022 at 1:55
1

If you're looking for an online calculator for converting DP, SP, inches, millimeters, points or pixels to and from one another at different screen densities, this is the most complete tool I know of.

1

Below funtions worked well for me across devices.

It is taken from https://gist.github.com/laaptu/7867851

public static float convertPixelsToDp(float px){
    DisplayMetrics metrics = Resources.getSystem().getDisplayMetrics();
    float dp = px / (metrics.densityDpi / 160f);
    return Math.round(dp);
}

public static float convertDpToPixel(float dp){
    DisplayMetrics metrics = Resources.getSystem().getDisplayMetrics();
    float px = dp * (metrics.densityDpi / 160f);
    return Math.round(px);
}
1

// for getting in terms of Decimal/Float

public static float convertPixelsToDp(float px, Context context) {

    Resources resources = context.getResources();
    DisplayMetrics metrics = resources.getDisplayMetrics();
    float dp = px / (metrics.densityDpi / 160f);
    return Math.round(dp);
}



public static float convertDpToPixel(float dp, Context context) {
    DisplayMetrics metrics = Resources.getSystem().getDisplayMetrics();
    float px = dp * (metrics.densityDpi / 160f);
    return Math.round(px);
}


// for  getting in terms of Integer

private int convertPxToDp(int px, Context context) {
    Resources resources = context.getResources();
    return Math.round(px / (resources.getDisplayMetrics().xdpi / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));
}


private int convertDpToPx(int dp, Context context) {
    Resources resources = context.getResources();

    return Math.round(dp * (resources.getDisplayMetrics().xdpi / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));

}

________________________________________________________________________________

public static float convertPixelsToDp(float px){
    DisplayMetrics metrics = Resources.getSystem().getDisplayMetrics();
    float dp = px / (metrics.densityDpi / 160f);
    return Math.round(dp);
}

public static float convertDpToPixel(float dp){
    DisplayMetrics metrics = Resources.getSystem().getDisplayMetrics();
    float px = dp * (metrics.densityDpi / 160f);
    return Math.round(px);
}


private int convertDpToPx(int dp){
    return Math.round(dp*(getResources().getDisplayMetrics().xdpi/DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));

}

private int convertPxToDp(int px){
    return Math.round(px/(Resources.getSystem().getDisplayMetrics().xdpi/DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT));
}
0

Feel free to use this method I wrote:

int dpToPx(int dp)
{
    return (int) (dp * getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density + 0.5f);
}
3
  • What is the purpose of + 0.5f? Oct 3, 2022 at 18:12
  • To round up to a whole number
    – Ben Kane
    Oct 5, 2022 at 14:55
  • Same thing is done in the Android Docs for example
    – Ben Kane
    Oct 5, 2022 at 14:57
0

The answer accepted above is not fully accurate. According to information obtained by inspecting Android source code:

Resources.getDimension() and getDimensionPixelOffset()/getDimensionPixelSize() differ only in that the former returns float while the latter two return the same value rounded to int appropriatelly. For all of them, the return value is in raw pixels.

All three functions are implementedy by calling Resources.getValue() and converting thus obtained TypedValue by calling TypedValue.complexToDimension(), TypedValue.complexToDimensionPixelOffset() and TypedValue.complexToDimensionPixelSize(), respectively.

Therefore, if you want to obtain "raw" value together with the unit specified in XML source, call Resources.getValue() and use methods of the TypedValue class.

0

with help of other answers I wrote this function.

public static int convertToPixels(Context context, int nDP)
{
        final float conversionScale = context.getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density; 
        return (int) ((nDP * conversionScale) + 0.5f) ;
}
0
DisplayMetrics displayMetrics = contaxt.getResources()
            .getDisplayMetrics();

    int densityDpi = (int) (displayMetrics.density * 160f);
    int ratio = (densityDpi / DisplayMetrics.DENSITY_DEFAULT);
    int px;
    if (ratio == 0) {
        px = dp;
    } else {
        px = Math.round(dp * ratio);

    }
0

variation on ct_robs answer above, if you are using integers, that not only avoids divide by 0 it also produces a usable result on small devices:

in integer calculations involving division for greatest precision multiply first before dividing to reduce truncation effects.

px = dp * dpi / 160
dp = px * 160 / dpi

5 * 120 = 600 / 160 = 3

instead of

5 * (120 / 160 = 0) = 0

if you want rounded result do this

px = (10 * dp * dpi / 160 + 5) / 10
dp = (10 * px * 160 / dpi + 5) / 10

10 * 5 * 120 = 6000 / 160 = 37 + 5 = 42 / 10 = 4
-1

Here's a other way to do it using kotlin extensions:

val Int.dpToPx: Int
    get() = Math.round(this * Resources.getSystem().displayMetrics.density)

val Int.pxToDp: Int
    get() = Math.round(this / Resources.getSystem().displayMetrics.density)

and then it can be used like this from anywhere

12.dpToPx

244.pxToDp

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