I am able to get TextViews to transition perfectly between two activities using ActivityOptions.makeSceneTransitionAnimation
. However I want to make the text scale up as it transitions. I can see the material design example scaling up the text "Alphonso Engelking" in the contact card transition.
I've tried setting the scale attributes on the destination TextView and using the changeTransform shared element transitions, but it doesn't scale and the text ends up being truncated as it transitions.
How can I scale TextViews using shared element transition?
Edit:
As pointed out by Kiryl Tkach in the comments below, there is a better solution described in this Google I/O talk.
You can create a custom transition that animates a TextView
's text size as follows:
public class TextSizeTransition extends Transition {
private static final String PROPNAME_TEXT_SIZE = "alexjlockwood:transition:textsize";
private static final String[] TRANSITION_PROPERTIES = { PROPNAME_TEXT_SIZE };
private static final Property<TextView, Float> TEXT_SIZE_PROPERTY =
new Property<TextView, Float>(Float.class, "textSize") {
@Override
public Float get(TextView textView) {
return textView.getTextSize();
}
@Override
public void set(TextView textView, Float textSizePixels) {
textView.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_PX, textSizePixels);
}
};
public TextSizeTransition() {
}
public TextSizeTransition(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
}
@Override
public String[] getTransitionProperties() {
return TRANSITION_PROPERTIES;
}
@Override
public void captureStartValues(TransitionValues transitionValues) {
captureValues(transitionValues);
}
@Override
public void captureEndValues(TransitionValues transitionValues) {
captureValues(transitionValues);
}
private void captureValues(TransitionValues transitionValues) {
if (transitionValues.view instanceof TextView) {
TextView textView = (TextView) transitionValues.view;
transitionValues.values.put(PROPNAME_TEXT_SIZE, textView.getTextSize());
}
}
@Override
public Animator createAnimator(ViewGroup sceneRoot, TransitionValues startValues,
TransitionValues endValues) {
if (startValues == null || endValues == null) {
return null;
}
Float startSize = (Float) startValues.values.get(PROPNAME_TEXT_SIZE);
Float endSize = (Float) endValues.values.get(PROPNAME_TEXT_SIZE);
if (startSize == null || endSize == null ||
startSize.floatValue() == endSize.floatValue()) {
return null;
}
TextView view = (TextView) endValues.view;
view.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_PX, startSize);
return ObjectAnimator.ofFloat(view, TEXT_SIZE_PROPERTY, startSize, endSize);
}
}
Since changing the TextView
's text size will cause its layout bounds to change during the course of the animation, getting the transition to work properly will take a little more effort than simply throwing a ChangeBounds
transition into the same TransitionSet
. What you will need to do instead is manually measure/layout the view in its end state in a SharedElementCallback
.
I've published an example project on GitHub that illustrates the concept (note that the project defines two Gradle product flavors... one uses Activity Transitions and the other uses Fragment Transitions).
I used solution from Alex Lockwood and simplified the use (it's only for TextSize of a TextView), I hope this will help:
public class Activity2 extends AppCompatActivity {
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity2);
EnterSharedElementTextSizeHandler handler = new EnterSharedElementTextSizeHandler(this);
handler.addTextViewSizeResource((TextView) findViewById(R.id.timer),
R.dimen.small_text_size, R.dimen.large_text_size);
}
}
and the class EnterSharedElementTextSizeHandler:
public class EnterSharedElementTextSizeHandler extends SharedElementCallback {
private final TransitionSet mTransitionSet;
private final Activity mActivity;
public Map<TextView, Pair<Integer, Integer>> textViewList = new HashMap<>();
public EnterSharedElementTextSizeHandler(Activity activity) {
mActivity = activity;
Transition transitionWindow = activity.getWindow().getSharedElementEnterTransition();
if (!(transitionWindow instanceof TransitionSet)) {
mTransitionSet = new TransitionSet();
mTransitionSet.addTransition(transitionWindow);
} else {
mTransitionSet = (TransitionSet) transitionWindow;
}
activity.setEnterSharedElementCallback(this);
}
public void addTextViewSizeResource(TextView tv, int sizeBegin, int sizeEnd) {
Resources res = mActivity.getResources();
addTextView(tv,
res.getDimensionPixelSize(sizeBegin),
res.getDimensionPixelSize(sizeEnd));
}
public void addTextView(TextView tv, int sizeBegin, int sizeEnd) {
Transition textSize = new TextSizeTransition();
textSize.addTarget(tv.getId());
textSize.addTarget(tv.getText().toString());
mTransitionSet.addTransition(textSize);
textViewList.put(tv, new Pair<>(sizeBegin, sizeEnd));
}
@Override
public void onSharedElementStart(List<String> sharedElementNames, List<View> sharedElements, List<View> sharedElementSnapshots) {
for (View v : sharedElements) {
if (!textViewList.containsKey(v)) {
continue;
}
((TextView) v).setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_PX, textViewList.get(v).first);
}
}
@Override
public void onSharedElementEnd(List<String> sharedElementNames, List<View> sharedElements, List<View> sharedElementSnapshots) {
for (View v : sharedElements) {
if (!textViewList.containsKey(v)) {
continue;
}
TextView textView = (TextView) v;
// Record the TextView's old width/height.
int oldWidth = textView.getMeasuredWidth();
int oldHeight = textView.getMeasuredHeight();
// Setup the TextView's end values.
textView.setTextSize(TypedValue.COMPLEX_UNIT_PX, textViewList.get(v).second);
// Re-measure the TextView (since the text size has changed).
int widthSpec = View.MeasureSpec.makeMeasureSpec(0, View.MeasureSpec.UNSPECIFIED);
int heightSpec = View.MeasureSpec.makeMeasureSpec(0, View.MeasureSpec.UNSPECIFIED);
textView.measure(widthSpec, heightSpec);
// Record the TextView's new width/height.
int newWidth = textView.getMeasuredWidth();
int newHeight = textView.getMeasuredHeight();
// Layout the TextView in the center of its container, accounting for its new width/height.
int widthDiff = newWidth - oldWidth;
int heightDiff = newHeight - oldHeight;
textView.layout(textView.getLeft() - widthDiff / 2, textView.getTop() - heightDiff / 2,
textView.getRight() + widthDiff / 2, textView.getBottom() + heightDiff / 2);
}
}
}
This was covered in one of the Google I/O 2016 talks. The source for the transition which you can copy into your code is found here. If your IDE complains the addTarget(TextView.class);
requires API 21, just remove the constructor and add the target either dynamically or in your xml.
i.e. (note this is in Kotlin)
val textResizeTransition = TextResize().addTarget(view.findViewById(R.id.text_view))
If you look at how ChangeBounds
works, it operates on the left/right/top/bottom properties of the view.
What I expect is that you'll need to use the same text size across the two activities, and use the scaleX
and scaleY
properties in your launched activity to modify the text size as needed. Then, use a combination of ChangeBounds
and ChangeTransform
in your TransitionSet
.