144
votes

I am using an activity with the dialog theme set, and I want it to be full screen. I tried all sorts of things, even going through the WindowManager to expand the window to full width and height manually, but nothing works.

Apparently, a dialog window (or an activity with the dialog theme) will only expand according to its contents, but even that doesn't always work. For instance, I show a progress bar circle which has width and height set to FILL_PARENT (so does its layout container), but still, the dialog wraps around the much smaller progress bar instead of filling the screen.

There must be a way of displaying something small inside a dialog window but have it expand to full screen size without its content resizing as well?

10
Interesting note: When setting the layout container's width and height to an actual value in pixels, then the dialog resizes accordingly. But when setting it to FILL_PARENT, then it doesn't...Matthias
Really? The layout the activity is instantiating, does it have a parent Relative or LinearLayout tag that is set to height and width of fill_parent? I've implemented a few activities with a dialog theme and never had a problem with it taking up the entire screen.MattC
Yes, the activity has a LinearLayout set to FILL_PARENT for both width and height.Matthias
I sort of solved the problem by using a workaround, but since this is not a good solution, I'll leave the question open. What I did was to subclass LinearLayout and override its onMeasure() method, which is responsible for determining the size of the view during a layouting cycle, and fix it to the screen width and height. This is not correct though, since this does not take into account the space occupied by the menu bars, so the container will actually be taller than it looks like on the screen (with all the weird side effects like children disappearing in non visible areas of the screen).Matthias
I found the correct solution, see my answer below.Matthias

10 Answers

320
votes

I found the solution:

In your activity which has the Theme.Dialog style set, do this:

@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);

    setContentView(R.layout.your_layout);

    getWindow().setLayout(ViewGroup.LayoutParams.MATCH_PARENT, ViewGroup.LayoutParams.MATCH_PARENT);
}

It's important that you call Window.setLayout() after you call setContentView(), otherwise it won't work.

71
votes

You may add this values to your style android:windowMinWidthMajor and android:windowMinWidthMinor

<style name="Theme_Dialog" parent="android:Theme.Holo.Dialog">
    ...
    <item name="android:windowMinWidthMajor">97%</item>
    <item name="android:windowMinWidthMinor">97%</item>
</style>
54
votes

I just want to fill only 80% of the screen for that I did like this below

        DisplayMetrics metrics = getResources().getDisplayMetrics();
        int screenWidth = (int) (metrics.widthPixels * 0.80);

        setContentView(R.layout.mylayout);

        getWindow().setLayout(screenWidth, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT); //set below the setContentview

it works only when I put the getwindow().setLayout... line below the setContentView(..)

thanks @Matthias

12
votes

Wrap your dialog_custom_layout.xml into RelativeLayout instead of any other layout.That worked for me.

8
votes

For Dialog This may helpful for someone. I want a dialog to take full width of screen. searched a lot but nothing found useful. Finally this worked for me:

mDialog.setContentView(R.layout.my_custom_dialog);
mDialog.getWindow().setBackgroundDrawable(null);

after adding this, my dialog appears in full width of screen.

7
votes

This answer is a workaround for those who use "Theme.AppCompat.Dialog" or any other "Theme.AppCompat.Dialog" descendants like "Theme.AppCompat.Light.Dialog", "Theme.AppCompat.DayNight.Dialog", etc. I myself has to use AppCompat dialog because i use AppCompatActivity as extends for all my activities. There will be a problem that make the dialog has padding on every sides(top, right, bottom and left) if we use the accepted answer.

@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);

    setContentView(R.layout.your_layout);

    getWindow().setLayout(ViewGroup.LayoutParams.MATCH_PARENT, ViewGroup.LayoutParams.MATCH_PARENT);
}

On your Activity's style, add these code

<style name="DialogActivityTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Dialog">
    <item name="windowNoTitle">true</item>
    <item name="android:windowBackground">@null</item>
</style>

As you may notice, the problem that generate padding to our dialog is "android:windowBackground", so here i make the window background to null.

2
votes

Set a minimum width at the top most layout.

android:minWidth="300dp"

For example:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<LinearLayout android:orientation="vertical" android:layout_width="fill_parent" android:layout_height="fill_parent"
  xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" android:minWidth="300dp">

<!-- Put remaining contents here -->

</LinearLayout>
2
votes

Matthias' answer is mostly right but it's still not filling the entire screen as it has a small padding on each side (pointed out by @Holmes). In addition to his code, we could fix this by extending Theme.Dialog style and add some attributes like this.

<style name="MyDialog" parent="@android:style/Theme.Dialog">
    <item name="android:windowBackground">@android:color/transparent</item>
    <item name="android:windowNoTitle">true</item>
</style>

Then we simply declare Activity with theme set to MyDialog:

<activity
    android:name=".FooActivity"
    android:theme="@style/MyDialog" />
2
votes

This would be helpful for someone like me. Create custom dialog style:

<style name="MyDialog" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.Dialog">
    <item name="windowNoTitle">true</item>
    <item name="android:windowFullscreen">true</item>
    <item name="android:windowIsFloating">false</item>
</style>

In AndroidManifest.xml file set theme for wanted activity:

<activity
        android:name=".CustomDialog"
        ...
        android:theme="@style/MyDialog"/>

That is all, no need to call methods programaticaly.

0
votes

In your manifest file where our activity is defined

<activity
        android:name=".YourPopUpActivity"
        android:theme="@android:style/Theme.Holo.Dialog" >
    </activity>

without action bar

<activity android:name=".YourPopUpActivity"
            android:theme="@android:style/Theme.Holo.Dialog.NoActionBar"/>