Auto-Sizing TextViews in Android

They have come in Android Oreo but are supported upto Android 4.0 or later!

This article is part of Today I Learned series and was originally posted at my TIL Github Repository and my website at wajahatkarim.com

Sometimes, we need our TextView change its text size according to the content put in it. But, Android didn't have much support of it until Android O. And then Android Support library got this feature. Let's see how it all works.

First, you have to add the support library v26 or more in your build.gradle file.

implementation 'com.android.support:appcompat-v7:26.1.0'

implementation 'com.android.support:support-v4:26.1.0'

Although, it has been introduced in Android Oreo, but through using support library, this feature is backward compatible upto the Android 4.0 and later. Now, add a TextView like you normally do.

<TextView

android:id="@+id/textView1"

android:layout_width="match_parent"

android:layout_height="100dp"

android:text="Hello Any Small Text Goes Here"/>

Now, add this app:autoSizeTextType="uniform" in your TextView .

<TextView

android:id="@+id/textView1"

android:layout_width="match_parent"

android:layout_height="100dp"

app:autoSizeTextType="uniform"

android:text="Hello Any Small Text Goes Here"/>

Now, your TextView will behave according to the content inside it like this:

Regular TextView vs. Auto Sizing TextView

You can also do this from Java/Kotlin using this line

TextViewCompat.setAutoSizeTextTypeWithDefaults(myTextView, TextViewCompat.AUTO_SIZE_TEXT_TYPE_UNIFORM);

Please note that if you set autosizing in an XML file, it is not recommended to use the value "wrap_content" for the layout_width or layout_height attributes of a TextView . It may produce unexpected results.

That’s not it. There are some more options as well. So far, we have only saw the default uniform auto size text type, but there are two more ways to adjust text size as per our needs:

Granularity Preset Sizes

Granularity

In Granularity, The TextView can uniformly scale, in a range between the given minimum and maximum size attributes. Each increment takes on the step size specified in the granularity attribute.

In XML, we can do it by adding these lines in our TextView :

app:autoSizeMaxTextSize=”100sp”

app:autoSizeMinTextSize=”12sp”

app:autoSizeStepGranularity=”2sp”

app:autoSizeText=”uniform”

Or, in Java/Kotlin, we can do it by calling this method:

TextViewCompat.setAutoSizeTextTypeUniformWithConfiguration(TextView textview, int autoSizeMinTextSize, int autoSizeMaxTextSize, int autoSizeStepGranularity, int unit);



// Example

TextViewCompat.setAutoSizeTextTypeUniformWithConfiguration(myTextView, 12, 100, 2, TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_SP);

Preset Sizes

By using preset sizes, you can autosize the TextView from a list of predefined sizes.

In XML, Use the autoSizePresetSizesautoSizePresetSizes attribute in the layout file.

android:autoSizeText=”uniform”

android:autoSizePresetSizes=”@array/autosize_text_sizes”

To access the array as a resource, define the array in the res/values/arrays.xml file.

<array name=”autosize_text_sizes”>

<item>10sp</item>

<item>12sp</item>

<item>20sp</item>

<item>40sp</item>

<item>100sp</item>

</array>

Or you can do in Java/Kotlin like this: