258
votes

I'm trying to use the TextView constructor with style like this:

TextView myText = new TextView(MyActivity.this, null, R.style.my_style);

However, when I do this, the text view does not appear to take the style (I verified the style by setting it on a static object).

I've also tried using myText.setTextAppearance(MyActivity.this, R.style.my_style) but it also doesn't work.

12

12 Answers

325
votes

I do not believe you can set the style programatically. To get around this you can create a template layout xml file with the style assigned, for example in res/layout create tvtemplate.xml as with the following content:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<TextView xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
        android:layout_width="fill_parent"
        android:layout_height="wrap_content"
        android:text="This is a template"
        style="@style/my_style" />

then inflate this to instantiate your new TextView:

TextView myText = (TextView)getLayoutInflater().inflate(R.layout.tvtemplate, null);

Hope this helps.

124
votes

You can create a generic style and re-use it on multiple textviews like the one below:

textView.setTextAppearance(this, R.style.MyTextStyle);

Edit: this refers to Context

101
votes

You can pass a ContextThemeWrapper to the constructor like this:

TextView myText = new TextView(new ContextThemeWrapper(MyActivity.this, R.style.my_style));
17
votes

You can set the style in the constructor (but styles can not be dynamically changed/set).

View(Context, AttributeSet, int) (the int is an attribute in the current theme that contains a reference to a style)

Answer from Romain Guy

reference

13
votes

Parameter int defStyleAttr does not specifies the style. From the Android documentation:

defStyleAttr - An attribute in the current theme that contains a reference to a style resource that supplies default values for the view. Can be 0 to not look for defaults.

To setup the style in View constructor we have 2 possible solutions:

  1. With use of ContextThemeWrapper:

    ContextThemeWrapper wrappedContext = new ContextThemeWrapper(yourContext, R.style.your_style);
    TextView textView = new TextView(wrappedContext, null, 0);
    
  2. With four-argument constructor (available starting from LOLLIPOP):

    TextView textView = new TextView(yourContext, null, 0, R.style.your_style);
    

Key thing for both solutions - defStyleAttr parameter should be 0 to apply our style to the view.

5
votes

Dynamically changing styles is not supported (yet). You have to set the style before the view gets created, via XML.

3
votes

The accepted answer was great solution for me. The only thing to add is about inflate() method.

In accepted answer all android:layout_* parameters will not be applied.

The reason is no way to adjust it, cause null was passed as ViewGroup parent.

You can use it like this:

View view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.view, parent, false);

and the parent is the ViewGroup, from where you like to adjust android:layout_*.

In this case, all relative properties will be set.

Hope it'll be useful for someone.

2
votes

When using custom views that may use style inheritance (or event styleable attributes), you have to modify the second constructor in order not to lose the style. This worked for me, without needing to use setTextAppearence():

public CustomView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
    this(context, attrs, attrs.getStyleAttribute());
}
2
votes

I met the problem too, and I found the way to set style programatically. Maybe you all need it, So I update there.

The third param of View constructor accepts a type of attr in your theme as the source code below:

public TextView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
    this(context, attrs, com.android.internal.R.attr.textViewStyle);
}

So you must pass a type of R.attr.** rather than R.style.**

In my codes, I did following steps:

First, customize a customized attr to be used by themes in attr.xml.

<attr name="radio_button_style" format="reference" />

Second, specific your style in your used theme in style.xml.

 <style name="AppTheme" parent="android:Theme.Translucent">
    <!-- All customizations that are NOT specific to a particular API-level can go here. -->
    <item name="radio_button_style">@style/radioButtonStyle</item>
</style>
<style name="radioButtonStyle" parent="@android:style/Widget.CompoundButton.RadioButton">
    <item name="android:layout_width">wrap_content</item>
    <item name="android:layout_height">64dp</item>
    <item name="android:background">#000</item>
    <item name="android:button">@null</item>
    <item name="android:gravity">center</item>
    <item name="android:saveEnabled">false</item>
    <item name="android:textColor">@drawable/option_text_color</item>
    <item name="android:textSize">9sp</item>
</style>

At the end, use it!

            RadioButton radioButton = new RadioButton(mContext, null, R.attr.radio_button_style);

the view created programatically will use the specified style in your theme.

You can have a try, and hope it can work for you perfectly.

1
votes

We can use TextViewCompact.setTextAppearance(textView, R.style.xyz).

Android doc for reference.

0
votes
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.M) 
    textView.setTextAppearance(R.style.yourStyle)
-1
votes

I have only tested with EditText but you can use the method

public void setBackgroundResource (int resid)

to apply a style defined in an XML file.

Sine this method belongs to View I believe it will work with any UI element.

regards.