Skip to content
forked from airbnb/paris

Define and apply styles to Android views programmatically

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

hoverdroids/paris

 
 

Repository files navigation

Paris

Paris lets you define and apply styles programmatically to Android views, including custom attributes.

  • Apply styles programmatically at any time.
  • Combine multiple styles together.
  • Create styles programmatically (as opposed to using XML).
  • Use annotations to easily support custom attributes (inspired by Barber).
  • Declare explicitly supported styles for your custom views.
  • And much more...

Installation

In your project's build.gradle:

dependencies {
    implementation 'com.airbnb.android:paris:1.7.3'
    // If you're using Paris annotations.
    kapt 'com.airbnb.android:paris-processor:1.7.3'
}

To use Paris in a library module see Library Modules.

Quick Start

Applying an XML-Defined Style

myView.style(R.style.MyStyle)
Click to see the example in Java.
Paris.style(myView).apply(R.style.MyStyle);

Where myView is an arbitrary view instance, MyStyle an XML-defined style, and style an extension function provided by Paris. Many but not all attributes are supported, for more see Supported View Types and Attributes.

Combining 2 or More Styles

myView.style {
    add(R.style.StyleA)
    add(R.style.StyleB)
    …
}
Click to see the example in Java.
Paris.styleBuilder(myView)
        .add(R.style.StyleA)
        .add(R.style.StyleB)
        …
        .apply();

In cases where there's some overlap the attribute value from the last style added prevails. For more see Combining Styles.

Defining Styles Programmatically

textView.style {
    // Using an actual value.
    textColor(Color.GREEN)
    // Or a resource.
    textSizeRes(R.dimen.my_text_size_small)
}
Click to see the example in Java.
Paris.styleBuilder(textView)
        // Using an actual value.
        .textColor(Color.GREEN)
        // Or a resource.
        .textSizeRes(R.dimen.my_text_size_small)
        .apply();

Can be combined with style resources as well:

textView.style {
    // Adds all the attributes defined in the MyGreenTextView style.
    add(R.style.MyGreenTextView)
    textSizeRes(R.dimen.my_text_size_small)
}
Click to see the example in Java.
Paris.styleBuilder(textView)
        // Adds all the attributes defined in the MyGreenTextView style.
        .add(R.style.MyGreenTextView)
        .textSizeRes(R.dimen.my_text_size_small)
        .apply();

For more see Defining Styles Programmatically.

Custom View Attributes

Attributes are declared as followed:

<declare-styleable name="MyView">
    <attr name="title" format="string" />
    <attr name="image" format="reference" />
    <attr name="imageSize" format="dimension" />
</declare-styleable>

The custom view is annotated with @Styleable and @Attr:

// The value here corresponds to the name chosen in declare-styleable.
@Styleable("MyView")
class MyView(…) : ViewGroup(…) {

    init {
        // This call enables the custom attributes when used in XML layouts. It
        // extracts styling information from AttributeSet like it would a StyleRes.
        style(attrs)
    }

    @Attr(R.styleable.MyView_title)
    fun setTitle(title: String) {
        // Automatically called with the title value (if any) when an AttributeSet
        // or StyleRes is applied to the MyView instance.
    }

    @Attr(R.styleable.MyView_image)
    fun setImage(image: Drawable?) {
        // Automatically called with the image value (if any) when an AttributeSet
        // or StyleRes is applied to the MyView instance.
    }

    @Attr(R.styleable.MyView_imageSize)
    fun setImageSize(@Px imageSize: Int) {
        // Automatically called with the imageSize value (if any) when an
        // AttributeSet or StyleRes is applied to the MyView instance.
    }
}
Click to see the example in Java.
// The value here corresponds to the name chosen in declare-styleable.
@Styleable("MyView")
public class MyView extends ViewGroup {

    public MyView(Context context) {
        super(context);
    }

    public MyView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
        this(context, attrs, 0);
    }

    public MyView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyle) {
        this(context, attrs, defStyle);
        // This call enables the custom attributes when used in XML layouts. It
        // extracts styling information from AttributeSet like it would a StyleRes.
        Paris.style(this).apply(attrs);
    }

    @Attr(R.styleable.MyView_title)
    public void setTitle(String title) {
        // Automatically called with the title value (if any) when an AttributeSet
        // or StyleRes is applied to the MyView instance.
    }

    @Attr(R.styleable.MyView_image)
    public void setImage(Drawable image) {
        // Automatically called with the image value (if any) when an AttributeSet
        // or StyleRes is applied to the MyView instance.
    }

    @Attr(R.styleable.MyView_imageSize)
    public void setImageSize(@Px int imageSize) {
        // Automatically called with the imageSize value (if any) when an
        // AttributeSet or StyleRes is applied to the MyView instance.
    }
}

The @Attr-annotated methods will be called by Paris when the view is inflated with an AttributeSet or when a style is applied.

For more see Custom View Attributes.

Styling Subviews

Attributes are declared as followed for the 2 subviews we'd like to be able to style:

<declare-styleable name="MyHeader">
    <attr name="titleStyle" format="reference" />
    <attr name="subtitleStyle" format="reference" />
    ...
</declare-styleable>

The subview fields are annotated with @StyleableChild:

@Styleable("MyHeader")
class MyHeader(…) : ViewGroup(…) {

    @StyleableChild(R.styleable.MyHeader_titleStyle)
    internal val title: TextView …
    
    @StyleableChild(R.styleable.MyHeader_subtitleStyle)
    internal val subtitle: TextViewinit {
        style(attrs)
    }
}
Click to see the example in Java.
@Styleable("MyHeader")
public class MyHeader extends ViewGroup {

    @StyleableChild(R.styleable.MyHeader_titleStyle)
    TextView title;
    
    @StyleableChild(R.styleable.MyHeader_subtitleStyle)
    TextView subtitle;
    
    …
    // Make sure to call Paris.style(this).apply(attrs) during initialization.
}

The title and subtitle styles can now be part of MyHeader styles:

<MyHeader
    ...
    app:titleStyle="@style/Title2"
    app:subtitleStyle="@style/Regular" />
myHeader.style {
    // Defined in XML.
    titleStyle(R.style.Title2)
    // Defined programmatically.
    subtitleStyle {
        textColorRes(R.color.text_color_regular)
        textSizeRes(R.dimen.text_size_regular)
    }
}
Click to see the example in Java.
Paris.styleBuilder(myHeader)
        // Defined in XML.
        .titleStyle(R.style.Title2)
        // Defined programmatically.
        .subtitleStyle((builder) -> builder
                .textColorRes(R.color.text_color_regular)
                .textSizeRes(R.dimen.text_size_regular))
        .apply();

Attention: Extension functions like titleStyle and subtitleStyle are generated during compilation by the Paris annotation processor. When new @StyleableChild annotations are added, the project must be (re)compiled once for the related functions to become available.

For more see Styling Subviews.

Linking Styles to Views

@Styleable
class MyView(…) : View(…) {

    companion object {
        // For styles defined in XML.
        @Style
        val RED_STYLE = R.style.MyView_Red

        // For styles defined programmatically.
        @Style
        val GREEN_STYLE = myViewStyle {
            background(R.color.green)
        }
    }
}
Click to see the example in Java.
@Styleable
public class MyView extends View {

    // For styles defined in XML.
    @Style
    static final int RED_STYLE = R.style.MyView_Red;

    // For styles defined programmatically.
    @Style
    static void greenStyle(MyViewStyleApplier.StyleBuilder builder) {
        builder.background(R.color.green);
    }
}

Helper methods are generated for each linked style:

myView.style { addRed() } // Equivalent to style(R.style.MyView_Red)
myView.style { addGreen() } // Equivalent to add(MyView.GREEN_STYLE)

myView.style {
    addRed() // Equivalent to add(R.style.MyView_Red)
    addGreen() // Equivalent to add(MyView.GREEN_STYLE)
    …
}
Click to see the example in Java.
Paris.style(myView).applyRed(); // Equivalent to apply(R.style.MyView_Red)
Paris.style(myView).applyGreen(); // No equivalent.

Paris.styleBuilder(myView)
        .addRed() // Equivalent to add(R.style.MyView_Red)
        .addGreen() // No equivalent.
        …
        .apply();

Attention: Extension functions like addRed and addGreen are generated during compilation by the Paris annotation processor. When new @Style annotations are added, the project must be (re)compiled once for the related functions to become available.

For more see Linking Styles to Custom Views.

Documentation

See examples and browse complete documentation at the Paris Wiki.

If you still have questions, feel free to create a new issue.

Contributing

We love contributions! Check out our contributing guidelines and be sure to follow our code of conduct.

License

Copyright 2018 Airbnb, Inc.

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at

   http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.

About

Define and apply styles to Android views programmatically

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Kotlin 79.1%
  • Java 20.4%
  • Ruby 0.5%