It was getting on my nerves, I admit it. I like the TextViews
to look like TextViews
in the code, and even if I'm using a WebView
as the means of achieving the text-align:justified formatting, I don't want to look at it that way.
I created a custom view (ugly, probably bad) that implements the methods that I commonly use from the TextView
and modifies the content of the WebView in order to reflect those changes.
Wether it's useful for someone else or a potential hazard I really don't know, for me it works, I've used it in several projects and haven't run into any issues. The only minor inconvenience is that I assume it as a bigger toll memory-wise but nothing to worry about if it's just one or two (correct me if I'm wrong).
The result is the following:
And the code for setting it programmatically is as simple as this:
JustifiedTextView J = new JustifiedTextView();
J.setText("insert your text here");
Of course it'd be stupid to leave it like that so I also added the methods for changing the font-size and the font-color which are basically all I use TextViews for. Meaning I can do something like this:
JustifiedTextView J = new JustifiedTextView();
J.setText("insert your text here");
J.setTextColor(Color.RED);
J.setTextSize(30);
And obtain the following result (images are cropped):
But, this is not to show us how it looks, it's to share how you've done it!
I know, I know.
Here's the full code. It also addresses Problems when setting transparent background and loading UTF-8 strings into the view. See the comments in reloadData() for details.
public class JustifiedTextView extends WebView{
private String core = "<html><body style='text-align:justify;color:rgba(%s);font-size:%dpx;margin: 0px 0px 0px 0px;'>%s</body></html>";
private String textColor = "0,0,0,255";
private String text = "";
private int textSize = 12;
private int backgroundColor=Color.TRANSPARENT;
public JustifiedTextView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
this.setWebChromeClient(new WebChromeClient(){});
}
public void setText(String s){
this.text = s;
reloadData();
}
@SuppressLint("NewApi")
private void reloadData(){
// loadData(...) has a bug showing utf-8 correctly. That's why we need to set it first.
this.getSettings().setDefaultTextEncodingName("utf-8");
this.loadData(String.format(core,textColor,textSize,text), "text/html","utf-8");
// set WebView's background color *after* data was loaded.
super.setBackgroundColor(backgroundColor);
// Hardware rendering breaks background color to work as expected.
// Need to use software renderer in that case.
if(android.os.Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= 11)
this.setLayerType(WebView.LAYER_TYPE_SOFTWARE, null);
}
public void setTextColor(int hex){
String h = Integer.toHexString(hex);
int a = Integer.parseInt(h.substring(0, 2),16);
int r = Integer.parseInt(h.substring(2, 4),16);
int g = Integer.parseInt(h.substring(4, 6),16);
int b = Integer.parseInt(h.substring(6, 8),16);
textColor = String.format("%d,%d,%d,%d", r, g, b, a);
reloadData();
}
public void setBackgroundColor(int hex){
backgroundColor = hex;
reloadData();
}
public void setTextSize(int textSize){
this.textSize = textSize;
reloadData();
}
}