Sorry, haven't been here in a while
This is how you can do it in a nutshell, ugly and all in java :)
LayoutParams wrapParams = new
LayoutParams(LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT);
final LinearLayout contentView = new LinearLayout(this);
contentView.
Sorry to highjack the post,
Just to say "Good job", the twitter app is one of the most polished
i've seen on the market.
Keep up the good work and thanks for sharing.
Yahel
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Can you put some code how you created PopupWindows?
On May 21, 10:53 pm, Nerdrow wrote:
> I used the layouts, graphics, and animation from the default Contacts
> app, which uses separate layouts for the header, body, and footer, but
> you can merge them all into one. Create a PopupWindow, set th
The twitter application will become rather soon open sourced, it has
been announced by Android officials.
I think Google wants this kind of widget to become standard in Android
applications.
Emmanuel / Alocaly
http://androidblogger.blogspot.com/
http://www.alocaly.com/
On May 21, 9:53 pm, Nerdrow
I used the layouts, graphics, and animation from the default Contacts
app, which uses separate layouts for the header, body, and footer, but
you can merge them all into one. Create a PopupWindow, set that
layout as the contentView, then use showAsDropDown(View anchor, int
xoff, int yoff) to show i
Is there a way to get that same popup layout like they have on twitter
or in the quick contacts popup? Do we just combine the top, middle,
bottom image resources as backgrounds in some sort of layout, or is
there a simpler way?
On May 10, 5:16 pm, skink wrote:
> Mark Murphy wrote:
> > westmeadboy
Mark Murphy wrote:
> westmeadboy wrote:
> > Anyone any ideas?
>
> Ummm...figure out where the item is positioned on screen, then use some
> margin tricks to position their popup to match, I suppose.
>
if you use PopupWindow you don't have to use margins at all - you can
position your popup in an
westmeadboy wrote:
> Anyone any ideas?
Ummm...figure out where the item is positioned on screen, then use some
margin tricks to position their popup to match, I suppose.
You can see a really crude equivalent of that here, just aiming for
putting something on the upper or lower half of the screen:
Anyone any ideas?
On May 9, 4:33 pm, westmeadboy wrote:
> In the official Twitter app, in the Tweets activity, if you click on
> the small down arrow (right side of each tweet entry), a really nice
> popup appears just above or below the entry.
>
> How did they do this (i.e. position the popup al
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