Android 9 Patch tool: What is the new layout bounds feature?
Asked Answered
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I've updated r20 of the Android SDK and started the 9 Patch tool.

There seems to be a new feature - Holding Control and clicking adds layout bounds which are referred to as red pixels.

I've taken a look at the documentation but it seems out of date.

My question is, what are layout bounds used for and what is the best way to use them?

Thanks.

Lamaism answered 10/7, 2012 at 4:15 Comment(0)
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Edit: Supported in Android 4.3 (API level 18). See more recent answer by wayne.

Original: It's not documented because it's not part of the OS yet, only the tools. The red pixels for setting layout bounds are not used by the Android framework (as of Jellybean 4.1.1), so don't set them at this time. You may speculate about what it means to declare where on your image the layout bounds of the control should be. And watch http://android-developers.blogspot.com/ for announcements.

Flute answered 7/8, 2012 at 22:15 Comment(4)
The Android developers blog is a great resource! Thanks for pointing it out.Lamaism
what does it mean "layout bounds" for 9 patch images ?Raynell
Optical bounds was added in API level 18. See developer.android.com/reference/android/view/…Mosira
Any support for previews API versions?Aerostation
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It's for "Optical bounds layout". More details can be found in the Android 4.3 API description. Excerpt:

For views that contain nine-patch background images, you can now specify that they should be aligned with neighboring views based on the "optical" bounds of the background image rather than the "clip" bounds of the view.

For example, figures 1 and 2 each show the same layout, but the version in figure 1 is using clip bounds (the default behavior), while figure 2 is using optical bounds. Because the nine-patch images used for the button and the photo frame include padding around the edges, they don’t appear to align with each other or the text when using clip bounds.

Carincarina answered 28/8, 2013 at 4:26 Comment(0)

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