Android 3D Touch - PeekView


Source link: https://github.com/klinker24/Android-3DTouch-PeekView

Android 3D Touch - PeekView

iOS uses 3D Touch as a way to "peek" into full content, such as emails, pictures, web searches, etc. While they have dedicated hardware for this functionality, it is still possible to get similar functionality out of Android, with a long click, rather than the dedicated hardware.

This library aims to create a simple and powerful API to enable 3D Touch style "Peeking" on Android.

Features

  1. Simple API
  2. Quick and easy to implement in any app
  3. Long clicking a view will overlay the PeekView until you stop touching the screen again
  4. The PeekView is smart. It will be displayed relative to the touch location, not on some random place on the screen. It will also move out of the way of your finger so that it isn't covered up when displayed.
  5. Customize the PeekView's window size (fullscreen or percent of screen size)
  6. Change the background dim amount
  7. Haptic feedback is optional
  8. Peek into ANY type of views. Example even uses a WebView
  9. Blur the background behind the PeekView for an extra "WOW" factor over the dim percentage

Installation

There are two ways to use this library:

As a Gradle dependency

This is the preferred way. Simply add:

dependencies {

  compile 'com.klinkerapps:peekview:1.2.3' 
}

to your project dependencies and run ./gradlew build or ./gradlew assemble.

As a library project

Download the source code and import it as a library project in Eclipse. The project is available in the folder library. For more information on how to do this, read here.

Example Usage

This library is extremely easy to use. There are two steps:

  • Any activities you want to implement the PeekView on, you must use PeekViewActivity as the superclass.

PeekViewActivity is a descendant of AppCompatActivity, so for almost every case, this will just be plug and play, a simple switch. PeekView requires this activity to montitor the touch events and determine when the user lifts their finger to remove the PeekView.

  • Use the Peek.into(... builder to start creating your PeekView on a UI element. There are examples of this in the MainActivity, but here is a very simple one that will display an image full screen.
Peek.into(R.layout.image_peek, new SimpleOnPeek() {

  @Override
  public void onInflated(View rootView) {

// rootView is the layout inflated from R.layout.image_peek

((ImageView) rootView.findViewById(R.id.image))

  .setImageDrawable(getResources().getDrawable(R.drawable.klinker_apps));

  
}
 
}
).applyTo(this, findViewById(R.id.image_peek));

More advanced usage

Here are a few of the more advanced things that you can do with PeekView

PeekViewOptions

This is how you customize your PeekView. After creating a PeekViewOptions object, simply add it with Peek.with(options)

Here is a list of all the possible options, along with the implementation:

PeekViewOptions options = new PeekViewOptions();
 options.setBackgroundDim(1f);

  // range: 0  - 1  (default is .6) options.setHapticFeedback(false);

 // default is true  // it may be a good idea to set set these through resources so that you can use different options based on screen size and orientation options.setWidthPercent(.4f);

  // range: .1 - .9 (default is .6) options.setHeightPercent(.4f);

 // range: .1 - .9 (default is .5)  // you can also set the size of the PeekView using absolute values, instead of percentages.  // Setting these will override the corresponding percentage value. // You should use this instead of setting the size of the view from the layout resources, as those get overridden. options.setAbsoluteWidth(200);

 // 200 DP options.setAbsoluteHeight(200);

// 200 DP  // default is false. If you change this to true, it will ignore the width and height percentages you set. options.setFullScreenPeek(true);
  // default is true. Unless you are going to animate things yourself, i recommend leaving this as true. options.setFadeAnimation(false);
  // PeekView has the ability to blur the background behind it, instead of just using a simple dark dim. // If you set a blurred view, then it will invalidate whatever you set as your background dim. // If you do this, please look at the installation steps for the blur effect, or the app will crash. options.setBlurBackground(true);

 // default is true options.setBlurOverlayColor(Color.parse("#99000000"));

// #99000000 default  Peek.into(...).with(options).applyTo(...);

Different lifecycle events

PeekView has a number of lifecycle events that you can choose to implement. In the above example, I just showed the use of SimpleOnPeek, which provides a callback so that you can initialize your layout after it has been inflated. Similar to what you would do after Activity.setContentView(...).

If you are doing any kind of custom animations, or network calls though, you may need something more powerful. SimpleOnPeek is just a wrapper of the OnPeek interface, which also contains callbacks for when the PeekView is displayed to the user on the screen (helpful if you wanted to do your own animations instead of use the default fade animation), as well as a callback for when the PeekView is dismissed from the screen (a good place to stop any networking activities).

Implementing these callbacks is straightforward and almost the same as you have done with the SimpleOnPeek:

Peek.into(..., new OnPeek() {

  @Override
  public void onInflated(View rootView) {

// the normal inflation callback
  
}

@Override
  public void shown() {

// the view is shown to the user

// Could be a nice place for custom animations on the inflated view
  
}

@Override
  public void dismissed() {

// the view is dismissed from the screen

// It is destroyed an never reused, so any cleanup would go here
  
}
 
}
).applyTo(...);

Clearing the Peek for a View

Sometimes it may be necessary to not allow "peeking" in a View where it was previously allowed. Some situations that come to mind would be in a RecyclerView or ListView where content could be different. Because of the way these lists work, when the view gets recycled, it will retain the "peeking" ability of the original View, unless you clear it. Clearing a "peek" is really easy:

Peek.clear(View);

Currently, all this method does is set the TouchListener to null for the provided View. In the future though, there may be more advanced changes that will be made to this method, so, it is probably safer to use the Peek#clear method instead of just nulling the TouchListener yourself.

Contributing

Please fork this repository and contribute back using pull requests. Features can be requested using issues. All code, comments, and critiques are greatly appreciated.

Changelog

The full changelog for the library can be found here.

License

Copyright 2016 Luke Klinker  Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
  http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0  Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. 

Resources

ADB Date changer is a small utility app for Android developers that allows to change quickly change date & time on the device.

The RangeBar is an enhanced SeekBar widget in vertical. It provides 2 thumbs between 0-N value.

Amazing Dynamic Time UI for Android.

Log4j with the ability to send the logs to HTTP GET request's.

This project goal is to create activity fragment and views, with less code to be more efficient on the view models.

CPN

This is a small library that wraps Google Cloud Messaging solution to make it easier to implement it. It also add the ability to consume notification if the app is running at the moment of receiving the notification without additional work.

Topics


2D Engines   3D Engines   9-Patch   Action Bars   Activities   ADB   Advertisements   Analytics   Animations   ANR   AOP   API   APK   APT   Architecture   Audio   Autocomplete   Background Processing   Backward Compatibility   Badges   Bar Codes   Benchmarking   Bitmaps   Bluetooth   Blur Effects   Bread Crumbs   BRMS   Browser Extensions   Build Systems   Bundles   Buttons   Caching   Camera   Canvas   Cards   Carousels   Changelog   Checkboxes   Cloud Storages   Color Analysis   Color Pickers   Colors   Comet/Push   Compass Sensors   Conferences   Content Providers   Continuous Integration   Crash Reports   Credit Cards   Credits   CSV   Curl/Flip   Data Binding   Data Generators   Data Structures   Database   Database Browsers   Date &   Debugging   Decompilers   Deep Links   Dependency Injections   Design   Design Patterns   Dex   Dialogs   Distributed Computing   Distribution Platforms   Download Managers   Drawables   Emoji   Emulators   EPUB   Equalizers &   Event Buses   Exception Handling   Face Recognition   Feedback &   File System   File/Directory   Fingerprint   Floating Action   Fonts   Forms   Fragments   FRP   FSM   Functional Programming   Gamepads   Games   Geocaching   Gestures   GIF   Glow Pad   Gradle Plugins   Graphics   Grid Views   Highlighting   HTML   HTTP Mocking   Icons   IDE   IDE Plugins   Image Croppers   Image Loaders   Image Pickers   Image Processing   Image Views   Instrumentation   Intents   Job Schedulers   JSON   Keyboard   Kotlin   Layouts   Library Demos   List View   List Views   Localization   Location   Lock Patterns   Logcat   Logging   Mails   Maps   Markdown   Mathematics   Maven Plugins   MBaaS   Media   Menus   Messaging   MIME   Mobile Web   Native Image   Navigation   NDK   Networking   NFC   NoSQL   Number Pickers   OAuth   Object Mocking   OCR Engines   OpenGL   ORM   Other Pickers   Parallax List   Parcelables   Particle Systems   Password Inputs   PDF   Permissions   Physics Engines   Platforms   Plugin Frameworks   Preferences   Progress Indicators   ProGuard   Properties   Protocol Buffer   Pull To   Purchases   Push/Pull   QR Codes   Quick Return   Radio Buttons   Range Bars   Ratings   Recycler Views   Resources   REST   Ripple Effects   RSS   Screenshots   Scripting   Scroll Views   SDK   Search Inputs   Security   Sensors   Services   Showcase Views   Signatures   Sliding Panels   Snackbars   SOAP   Social Networks   Spannable   Spinners   Splash Screens   SSH   Static Analysis   Status Bars   Styling   SVG   System   Tags   Task Managers   TDD &   Template Engines   Testing   Testing Tools   Text Formatting   Text Views   Text Watchers   Text-to   Toasts   Toolkits For   Tools   Tooltips   Trainings   TV   Twitter   Updaters   USB   User Stories   Utils   Validation   Video   View Adapters   View Pagers   Views   Watch Face   Wearable Data   Wearables   Weather   Web Tools   Web Views   WebRTC   WebSockets   Wheel Widgets   Wi-Fi   Widgets   Windows   Wizards   XML   XMPP   YAML   ZIP Codes