FlexboxLayout is a library project which brings the similar capabilities of CSS Flexible Box Layout Module to Android.
Add the following dependency to your build.gradle
file:
dependencies {
compile 'com.google.android:flexbox:0.2.2'
}
FlexboxLayout extends the ViewGroup like LinearLayout and RelativeLayout. You can specify the attributes from a layout XML like:
<com.google.android.flexbox.FlexboxLayout
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
app:flexWrap="wrap"
app:alignItems="stretch"
app:alignContent="stretch" >
<TextView
android:id="@+id/textview1"
android:layout_width="120dp"
android:layout_height="80dp"
app:layout_flexBasisPercent="50%"
/>
<TextView
android:id="@+id/textview2"
android:layout_width="80dp"
android:layout_height="80dp"
app:layout_alignSelf="center"
/>
<TextView
android:id="@+id/textview3"
android:layout_width="160dp"
android:layout_height="80dp"
app:layout_alignSelf="flex_end"
/>
</com.google.android.flexbox.FlexboxLayout>
Or from code like:
FlexboxLayout flexboxLayout = (FlexboxLayout) findViewById(R.id.flexbox_layout);
flexboxLayout.setFlexDirection(FlexboxLayout.FLEX_DIRECTION_COLUMN);
View view = flexboxLayout.getChildAt(0);
FlexboxLayout.LayoutParams lp = (FlexboxLayout.LayoutParams) view.getLayoutParams();
lp.order = -1;
lp.flexGrow = 2;
view.setLayoutParams(lp);
-
flexDirection
-
flexWrap
-
justifyContent
-
alignItems
-
alignContent
-
layout_order (integer)
-
layout_flexGrow (float)
-
layout_flexShrink (float)
-
layout_alignSelf
-
This attribute determines the alignment along the cross axis (perpendicular to the main axis). The alignment in the same direction can be determined by the
alignItems
in the parent, but if this is set to other thanauto
, the cross axis alignment is overridden for this child. Possible values are:- auto (default)
- flex_start
- flex_end
- center
- baseline
- stretch
-
-
layout_flexBasisPercent (fraction)
-
The initial flex item length in a fraction format relative to its parent. The initial main size of this child view is trying to be expanded as the specified fraction against the parent main size. If this value is set, the length specified from
layout_width
(orlayout_height
) is overridden by the calculated value from this attribute. This attribute is only effective when the parent's length is definite (MeasureSpec mode isMeasureSpec.EXACTLY
). The default value is-1
, which means not set.
-
-
layout_minWidth / layout_minHeight (dimension)
-
These attributes impose minimum size constraints for the children of FlexboxLayout. A child view won't be shrank less than the value of these attributes (varies based on the
flexDirection
attribute as to which attribute imposes the size constraint along the main axis) regardless of thelayout_flexShrink
attribute.
-
-
layout_maxWidth / layout_maxHeight (dimension)
-
These attributes impose maximum size constraints for the children of FlexboxLayout. A child view won't be expanded more than the value of these attributes (varies based on the
flexDirection
attribute as to which attribute imposes the size constraint along the main axis) regardless of thelayout_flexGrow
attribute.
-
-
layout_wrapBefore (boolean)
-
This attribute forces a flex line wrapping, the default value is
false
. i.e. if this is set totrue
for a flex item, the item will become the first item of a flex line. (A wrapping happens regardless of the flex items being processed in the the previous flex line) This attribute is ignored if theflex_wrap
attribute is set tonowrap
. The equivalent attribute isn't defined in the original CSS Flexible Box Module specification, but having this attribute is useful for Android developers to flatten the layouts when building a grid like layout or for a situation where developers want to put a new flex line to make a semantic difference from the previous one, etc.
-
This library tries to achieve the same capabilities of the original Flexible Box specification as much as possible, but due to some reasons such as the way specifying attributes can't be the same between CSS and Android XML, there are some known differences from the original specification.
(1) There is no flex-flow equivalent attribute
- Because
flex-flow
is a shorthand for setting theflex-direction
andflex-wrap
properties, specifying two attributes from a single attribute is not practical in Android.
(2) There is no flex equivalent attribute
- Likewise
flex
is a shorthand for setting theflex-grow
,flex-shrink
andflex-basis
, specifying those attributes from a single attribute is not practical.
(3) layout_flexBasisPercent
is introduced instead of
flexBasis
- Both
layout_flexBasisPercent
in this library andflex-basis
property in the CSS are used to determine the initial length of an individual flex item. Theflex-basis
property accepts width values such as1em
,10px
, andcontent
as strings as well as percentage values such as10%
and30%
, whereaslayout_flexBasisPercent
only accepts percentage values. But specifying initial fixed width values can be done by specifying width (or height) values in layout_width (or layout_height, varies depending on theflexDirection
). Also, the same effect can be done by specifying "wrap_content" in layout_width (or layout_height) if developers want to achieve the same effect as 'content'. Thus,layout_flexBasisPercent
only accepts percentage values, which can't be done through layout_width (or layout_height) for simplicity.
(4) layout_wrapBefore
is introduced.
- The equivalent attribute doesn't exist in the CSS Flexible Box Module speicification, but as explained above, Android developers will benefit by having this attribute for having more control over when a wrapping happens.
The app
module works as a playground demo app for trying various values for the supported attributes.
You can install it by
./gradlew installDebug
Please read and follow the steps in CONTRIBUTING.md
Please see License