Programmatically change the value of a color resource obtained from API response

AndroidAndroid ResourcesAapt

Android Problem Overview


Let's say, on my API call I have a parameter that's called color. Is it possible to edit or modify an existent R.colors.color to assign the color from the API result?

As an example:

I make a call to my API and it returns green, now I want to load my app with i.e (green Toolbar, green TextView color, etc.), is that possible?

My first thought was:

Create a item on colors.xml called demo then assign it a default color, then use this demo color wherever I want (Button, TextView, etc.) Then I thought it could be possible to change this value programmatically with the result from the API so I wouldn't need to create a SharedPreferences or something like that and for avoiding more code.

As @Y.S. said to me

> Unfortunately, you WILL have to set the color of the text or view manually everywhere ... :(

I would like if there is other way to do it, since I don't know how many Activities my project will contain, so if is there other way to do it I'm glad to hear other guesses.

EDIT

I'm trying the @Jared Rummler answer and maybe i'm doing something wrong... I've created a simple Json and I put on my Assets I parse the Json and I put it on a GlobalConstant then I made a "simple app".

First of all I have a TextView and a Button which contains the "your_special_color", and the return of it I put the GlobalConstant int as follows :

case "your_special_color":                
            return GlobalConstant.color; 

Then what I tried is my first Activity has 1 TextView and 1 Button as I said before and they have the color "your_special_color" that I don't want to change it, BUT I have an Intent on my Button to open the other Activity that contains the same but with the GlobalConstant.color and it doesn't change.

I tried it doing this (my second Activity):

public class Main2Activity extends AppCompatActivity {
private Res res;
@Override public Resources getResources() {
    if (res == null) {
        res = new Res(super.getResources());
    }
    return res;
}
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
    setContentView(R.layout.activity_main2);
    Toolbar toolbar = (Toolbar) findViewById(R.id.toolbar);
    setSupportActionBar(toolbar);
}

Did I miss something?

Oh.. I figured it out I guess is doing this on my MainActivity2 ?

 Button btn = (Button)findViewById(R.id.button2);
 btn.setBackgroundColor(res.getColor(R.color.your_special_color));

Android Solutions


Solution 1 - Android

You can create a class which extends Resources and override the methods getColor(int) and getColor(int, Theme).

Example:

colors.xml

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<resources>
    <color name="your_special_color">#FF0099CC</color>
</resources>

Res.java

public class Res extends Resources {

    public Res(Resources original) {
        super(original.getAssets(), original.getDisplayMetrics(), original.getConfiguration());
    }

    @Override public int getColor(int id) throws NotFoundException {
        return getColor(id, null);
    }

    @Override public int getColor(int id, Theme theme) throws NotFoundException {
        switch (getResourceEntryName(id)) {
            case "your_special_color":
                // You can change the return value to an instance field that loads from SharedPreferences.
                return Color.RED; // used as an example. Change as needed.
            default:
                if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.M) {
                    return super.getColor(id, theme);
                }
                return super.getColor(id);
        }
    }
}

BaseActivity.java

public class BaseActivity extends AppCompatActivity {

    ...

    private Res res;

    @Override public Resources getResources() {
        if (res == null) {
            res = new Res(super.getResources());
        }
        return res;
    }

    ...

}

This is the approach I have used in one of my apps, Root Check. If you override getResources in your activities and main application class you can change the theme programmatically (even though themes are immutable). If you want, download the app and see how you can set the primary, accent, and background colors from preferences.

Solution 2 - Android

If you take a look at the Accessing Resources document, what it says is that ...

> Once you provide a resource in your application, you can apply it by referencing its resource ID. All resource IDs are defined in your project's R class, which the aapt tool automatically generates.

Furthermore,

> When your application is compiled, aapt generates the R class, > which contains resource IDs for all the resources in your res/ > directory. For each type of resource, there is an R subclass (for > example, R.drawable for all drawable resources), and for each > resource of that type, there is a static integer (for example, > R.drawable.icon). This integer is the resource ID that you can use > to retrieve your resource.

What this is saying, essentially, is that pretty much everything held as a resource in the res/ directory is compiled and referenced as an unchangeable constant. It is for this reason that the values of resource elements cannot be changed programmatically/at runtime, because they are compiled. As opposed to local/global variables & SharedPreferences, resource elements are represented in program memory as fixed, unchangeable objects. They are held in a special read-only region of program memory. In this regard, see also Changing value of R.String Programmatically.

What you can do is, to avoid using the same code at a thousand places in your project, create a common function that changes the value of the color in the SharedPreferences and use this method everywhere. I'm sure you knew this already, of course.

To reduce the amount of code you need to add to the project, there is an alternative. I have previously used the calligraphy library which allowed me to fix the font style & color throughout the app. This may be of some good use to you, check it out ...

Solution 3 - Android

R class is not supposed to be edited. It merely contains references to your resources.

You will need to set it manually. However, to reduce the burden of setting it manually you can try to use special libraries for preference saving, for instance:

(full list of similar libraries https://android-arsenal.com/tag/75)


Also, you might want to think about another way of applying styles and passing parameters - consider you would want to add some other parameters like height, width etc. For that purpose, you can define custom attribute in themes.xml/styles.xml:

<attr name="demoColor" format="reference|color" />

then define styles:

<style name="BaseActivity">
</style>
<style name="GreenActivity" parent="@style/BaseActivity">
    <item name="demoColor">#00cd00</item>
</style>
<style name="RedActivity" parent="@style/BaseActivity">
    <item name="demoColor">#ff0000</item>
</style>

then use that color in your xml like this:

... android:background="?demoColor" ...

and switch between GreenActivity and RedActivity styles in Activity.onCreate:

setTheme(isGreenStyle() ? R.style.GreenActivity : R.style.RedActivity)
setContentView(...)

With the above approach, you will be able to easily configure your styles in xml and it should be less code and easier to refactor in future. (You will still need to have one variable in preference to save whether you have green or red style)


Another way, if you want to show demos of your app with different colors is to use build variants / flavors for loading your app with different colors and styles (it is for build time - not runtime):

app/src/main/res/colors.xml

<resources>
    <color name="demoColor">#00cd00</color>
</resources>

app/src/buildVariant/res/colors.xml

<resources>
    <color name="demoColor">#ff0000</color>
</resources>

Now you can quickly switch between "main" and "buildVariant" in Build Variants menu and launch your app with different "demo" colors. The same way you can customize a lot of other attributes.

Search for "Build Variants" here http://developer.android.com/tools/building/configuring-gradle.html

Solution 4 - Android

You can't change an app's resources, they are all constants. Instead you can save your color in SharedPrefences and use the color from there.

See How to use SharedPreferences in Android to store, fetch and edit values.

If your app already has a R.color.green defined and you just want to access it based on what API returned you use:

int resourceID = getResources().getIdentifier("green", "color", getPackageName());

Solution 5 - Android

store hex color codes into sharedpreferences and then use parsecolor function store your all hexcodes of colors into sessions as a string and whenever you want to change color of perticular button ,textview..just retrive that color code from session and use it as
for ex.
session.setString("white","#FFFFFF"); String colorname=session.getString("white");yourtextview.setBackgroundColor(Color.parseColor(colorname);

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionSkizo-ozᴉʞSView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - AndroidJared RummlerView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - AndroidY.SView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - AndroidGregoryKView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - AndroidSourabhView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - AndroidMayuresh GawandeView Answer on Stackoverflow