When an Activity receives focus, it will be requested to
draw its layout.
The Android framework will handle the procedure for drawing, but the
Activity must provide
the root node of its layout hierarchy.
Drawing begins with the root node of the layout. It is requested to measure and
draw the layout tree. Drawing is handled by walking the tree and rendering each
View that intersects the invalid region. In turn, each
ViewGroup is responsible for requesting
each of its children to be drawn
(with the draw() method)
and each View is responsible for drawing itself.
Because the tree is traversed in-order,
this means that parents will be drawn before (i.e., behind) their children, with
siblings drawn in the order they appear in the tree.
The framework will not draw View objects that are not
in the invalid region, and also
will take care of drawing the View background for you.
You can force a View to draw, by calling
invalidate().
Drawing the layout is a two pass process: a measure pass and a layout pass.
The measuring pass is implemented in measure(int, int)
and is a top-down traversal of the View tree. Each View
pushes dimension specifications down the tree
during the recursion. At the end of the measure pass, every
View has stored
its measurements. The second pass happens in
layout(int, int, int, int) and is also top-down. During
this pass each parent is responsible for positioning all of its children
using the sizes computed in the measure pass.
When a View object's
measure() method
returns, its getMeasuredWidth() and
getMeasuredHeight() values must be set, along
with those for all of that View object's descendants.
A View object's measured width and
measured height values must respect the constraints imposed by the
View object's parents. This guarantees
that at the end of the measure pass, all parents accept all of their
children's measurements. A parent View may call
measure() more than once on
its children. For example, the parent may measure each child once with
unspecified dimensions to find out how big they want to be, then call
measure() on them again with
actual numbers if the sum of all the children's
unconstrained sizes is too big or too small (that is, if the children
don't agree among themselves
as to how much space they each get, the parent will intervene and set
the rules on the second pass).
To initiate a layout, call requestLayout().
This method is typically
called by a View on itself
when it believes that is can no longer fit within
its current bounds.
The measure pass uses two classes to communicate dimensions. The
ViewGroup.LayoutParams class is used by
View objects to tell their parents how they
want to be measured and positioned. The base
ViewGroup.LayoutParams class just
describes how big the View wants to be for both
width and height. For each
dimension, it can specify one of:
- an exact number
MATCH_PARENT, which means theViewwants to be as big as its parent (minus padding)WRAP_CONTENT, which means that theViewwants to be just big enough to enclose its content (plus padding).
There are subclasses of ViewGroup.LayoutParams for
different subclasses of ViewGroup.
For example, RelativeLayout has its own subclass of
ViewGroup.LayoutParams, which includes
the ability to center child View objects
horizontally and vertically.
MeasureSpec objects are used to push
requirements down the tree from parent to
child. A MeasureSpec can be in one of
three modes:
UNSPECIFIED: This is used by a parent to determine the desired dimension of a childView. For example, aLinearLayoutmay callmeasure()on its child with the height set toUNSPECIFIEDand a width ofEXACTLY240 to find out how tall the childViewwants to be given a width of 240 pixels.EXACTLY: This is used by the parent to impose an exact size on the child. The child must use this size, and guarantee that all of its descendants will fit within this size.AT MOST: This is used by the parent to impose a maximum size on the child. The child must guarantee that it and all of its descendants will fit within this size.