android-ago
This library provides RelativeTimeTextView
, a custom TextView
that takes a reference time and always displays the relative time with respect to the reference point, automatically refreshing the display text as needed. This is a common pattern seen in several apps like chat apps, social networking, email etc.
This library can be seen as a wrapper on top of the excellent android.text.format.DateUtils
class. Note that the library does not expose all the options provided by the DateUtils
class. I have left out many features because I couldn't decide what would be the best way to achieve the flexibility - dozens of XML attributes? Contributions in this regard are welcome.
Obtaining
Gradle
Add the following to your build.gradle
dependencies {
compile 'com.github.curioustechizen.android-ago:library:1.3.4'
}
Important: v1.3.4 Fixed a major bug (#47). If you are using an older version, please update to 1.3.4 now.
Eclipse+ADT
- Clone the repo
- In Eclipse, go to
File
->New
->Other
. ExpandAndroid
and selectAndroid Project from Existing Code
- Browse to the
android-ago
sub-folder of the cloned repo and hitFinish
Usage
- Include
RelativeTimeTextView
in your layouts. - Set the reference time either using
setReferenceTime
method or using the XML attributereference_time
. - Optionally, you can set a prefix using
relative_time_prefix
through XML orsetPrefix
from Java code. - Similarly, you can set a suffix using
relative_time_suffix
through XML orsetSuffix
from Java code.
In your layout:
<com.github.curioustechizen.ago.RelativeTimeTextView
android:id="@+id/timestamp"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
app:relative_time_prefix="Completed "
android:layout_marginTop="@dimen/margin_primary" />
In your Java code:
RelativeTimeTextView v = (RelativeTimeTextView)findViewById(R.id.timestamp);
//Or just use Butterknife! v.setReferenceTime(new Date().getTime());
See the sample project for a concrete example.
Why is this library even needed?
One might ask, why not just use DateUtils
directly? Well, the answer is that the custom TextView
provided by this library is responsible for keeping track of its own reference time and of updating the display text over regular periodic intervals. It is also responsible for scheduling (or cancelling a scheduled) update of the display text. All you have to do is set the reference time once.
Who's Using this Library?
See here. If you would like to add your app to this list, please edit the wiki.
Android version support statement
The library has been tested on API 11 and above. However, theoretically, it works on API 3 and above since all it uses is [DateUtils#getRelativeTimeSpanString]( http://developer.android.com/reference/android/text/format/DateUtils.html#getRelativeTimeSpanString(long, long, long, int)).
The minSdkVersion has been set to 8, however do not expect support from me for API version < 11.
Usage with Data Binding
See android-ago-sample-databinding
for an example of how to use this library with the Android data binding library. Thanks to @Dev-IL for providing this sample.
License
Copyright 2017 Kiran Rao 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.