I did some digging in Android code, and saw the use of in the indeterminate progress bar. after trying to create my own drawable with this tag:
<animated-rotate xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:drawable="@drawable/spinner_pia"
android:pivotX="50%"
android:pivotY="50%"
android:framesCount="12"
android:frameDuration="100" />
I get an error: "No resource identifier found for attribute 'frameDuration' in package 'android'" - which means that frameDuration is a private attribute. Is there a way to use this "animate-rotate" feature?
My task is to replace the system's default indeterminate progress bar. I'd like to do it with as little code as possible (just change few attributes if possible). Using the ProgressBar view, setting:
android:indeterminateOnly="true"
android:indeterminateBehavior="cycle"
android:indeterminateDuration="3500"
android:indeterminateDrawable="@drawable/pia_sivuvator"
and point "@drawable/pia_sivuvator" to that object would've make my task as elegant as they come but I'm stuck on those private attributes.
help?
Here is the Simple Explanation of the Rotation Animation try this this will help you
http://androidtutorials60.blogspot.in/2013/09/simple-rotate-animation-in-android.html
I solved this by using this drawable xml. Although it only seems to be smooth on newer versions of Android:
I ran into the exact same issue. You can exclude those parameters (framesCount and frameDuration), and it may work for you. I tried just excluding them and it animated fine, but the width/height I was setting were not being respected, so I ended up creating a simple rotation animation and an ImageView to apply it to. Here's the animation file (res/anim/clockwise_rotation.xml):
Then you just inflate your Animation, set repeat count, and start it from the View
I don't know how to work around the private attributes, I have the same problem.
By the way if you want to change those attributes of the ProgressBar:
you can do it easily with the Styles framework defining in the
values/styles.xml
file a ProgressBar style extending the standard android one:and then applying it to the progress bar in the xml layout file.
Instead of creating an animation (more code required, not only XML configuration), use
layer-list
as drawable resource. It is quite interesting thatlayer-list
is way more fluid thananimated-rotate
.Then of course use it in the styles as Mario Lenci wrote: