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Programming language: Java
Tags: Utility    

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README

vector-compat

A support library for VectorDrawable and AnimatedVectorDrawable introduced in Lollipop with fully backwards compatible tint support (api 14+ so far)

vector-compat provides the necessary tools to make animated icons similar to the new drawer hamburger icon that morphs to a back arrow when clicked. Any other morph animation between icons can be defined purely in xml (no java code required) and the library takes care of the transformation animation. Because they are in vector format, these drawables can be of any height and width with no resulting pixelation.

Example Example 1 Example 2

The library will transparently fall back to the lollipop implementation of VectorDrawable and AnimatedVectorDrawable on api 21+ devices

Commonly used animations

The library packs some ready-made morph animations developers can use in their code with MorphButton. More will be added soon as this is a work-in-progress. The library has the following morph animations :

  • Play-Pause morph animation (bi-directional morph)
  • Play-Stop morph animation (bi-directional morph)
  • Arrow-Hamburger menu morph animation (bi-directional morph)

The goal is to, with time, create a repo of commonly used morph animations that lots of developers find useful.

If you have requests for particular morph animations, please open a new issue and I'll work on adding them to the library. You are also welcome to create a pull request if you've created some of your own. Please contribute :)

Download

Add the vector-compat dependency to your build.gradle file and make sure to use buildToolsVersion 22 or higher:

Maven Central

android {
    // use version 22 or higher
    buildToolsVersion "22.0.1"
    ...
}
dependencies {
    compile 'com.wnafee:vector-compat:1.0.5'
    ...
}

Proguard

If you're using proguard for code shrinking and obfuscation, make sure to add the following:

   -keep class com.wnafee.vector.** { *; }

Usage

VectorDrawable and AnimatedVectorDrawable xml drawable syntax is exactly the same as the lollipop documentation (can be seen here and here respectively). With 2 caveats:

  • Some attributes under the <vector> nodes must be listed once for the android: namespace and once for the local namespace with a vc_ prefix (e.g. app:vc_fillColor). See example here. (For a complete list of vc_ prefixed attributes see attr.xml for )
  • Any pathType anim xml must have the android:valueType="pathType" in addition to app:vc_valueType="pathType" to allow for lollipop implementation fallback. See example here.

Inflation

VectorDrawable and AnimatedVectorDrawable in this support library can be inflated in one of 2 ways:

  • Calling static getDrawable() methods: ```java //This will only inflate a drawable with as the root element VectorDrawable.getDrawable(context, R.drawable.ic_arrow_vector);

//This will only inflate a drawable with as the root element AnimatedVectorDrawable.getDrawable(context, R.drawable.ic_arrow_to_menu_animated_vector);

// This will inflate any drawable and will auto-fallback to the lollipop implementation on api 21+ devices ResourcesCompat.getDrawable(context, R.drawable.any_drawable);

_If inflating the Drawable in java code, it is recommended to always use `ResourcesCompat.getDrawable()` as this handles Lollipop fallback when applicable. This allows the system to cache Drawable ConstantState and hence is more efficient_

* directly from the `MorphButton` view in xml:
```xml
<!-- Insert xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto" in your root layout element -->
<com.wnafee.vector.MorphButton
    android:id="@+id/playPauseBtn"
    android:layout_width="wrap_content"
    android:layout_height="wrap_content"
    app:vc_startDrawable="@drawable/ic_pause_to_play"
    app:vc_endDrawable="@drawable/ic_play_to_pause" /> 
```
#### MorphButton
`MorphButton` is a `CompoundButton` with 2 states: `MorphState.START` or `MorphState.END`. The attributes `vc_startDrawable` and `vc_endDrawable` define which foreground drawables to use for the button depending on the button's state. These can be any type of drawable (e.g. `BitmapDrawable`, `ColorDrawable`, `VectorDrawable`, `AnimatedVectorDrawable` etc.)

To use MorphButton in your app, make sure to include the `morphButtonStyle` item in your base app theme:
```xml
<style name="MyAppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.DarkActionBar">
    <item name="morphButtonStyle">@style/Widget.MorphButton</item>
</style>
```

`MorphButtons` allow you to tint your foreground drawables (i.e. `vc_startDrawable` and `vc_endDrawable`) and background drawable separately in both xml and java. See the following examples for defining `MorphButtons`:

**XML**:
```xml
<com.wnafee.vector.MorphButton
    android:id="@+id/drawerBtn"
    android:layout_width="wrap_content"
    android:layout_height="wrap_content"
    android:scaleType="fitCenter"
    app:vc_backgroundTint="#f50057"
    app:vc_foregroundTint="#3F51B5"
    app:vc_startDrawable="@drawable/ic_arrow_to_drawer"
    app:vc_endDrawable="@drawable/ic_drawer_to_arrow"/>
```

**Java**:
```java
    MorphButton mb = new MorphButton(this);
    mb.setBackgroundTintList(getResources().getColorStateList(R.color.background_tint_color));
    mb.setForegroundTintList(ColorStateList.valueOf(Color.RED));
    mb.setStartDrawable(R.drawable.ic_pause_to_play);
    mb.setEndDrawable(R.drawable.ic_play_to_pause);
    mb.setState(MorphState.END);
```
The `scaleType` attribute defines how to scale the foreground drawable to fill the button's background. This is the same as [`ImageView.ScaleType`][7] which you can take a look at [here][7].

Button clicks will toggle between the foreground drawables. If the drawables happen to implement the [`Animatable`][3] interface (e.g. `AnimatedVectorDrawable` or `AnimationDrawable`) then `start()` will be automatically called to animate between the start and end drawables defined in xml.

 MorphButton states can be set manually via `setState()` methods:
```java
// transition with no animation
myMorphButton.setState(MorphState.END) 

// ... or transition with animation if drawable is Animatable
myMorphButton.setState(MorphState.START, true) 

If you need to be informed of button state changes you need to add an OnStateChangedListener:

MyMorphButton.setOnStateChangedListener(new OnStateChangedListener() {
    @Override
    public void onStateChanged(MorphState changedTo, boolean isAnimating) {
        // changeTo is the new state
        // isAnimating = true if the state changed with animation
        // Do something here
    }
});

License

Copyright 2015 Wael Nafee

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.


*Note that all licence references and agreements mentioned in the vector-compat README section above are relevant to that project's source code only.