Shijilal
Shijilal

Reputation: 2169

Android: Showing wrong screen resolution

I was trying to get the screen resolution of android phones,using this code

    DisplayMetrics dm = new DisplayMetrics();
    getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay().getMetrics(dm);
    str_ScreenSize = dm.widthPixels + " x " + dm.heightPixels;
    str_ScreenSize = "dd" + " x " + dm.heightPixels;

When i tried this code in my Galaxy S phone i got the screen resolution as 320x533 px, but in reality the Galaxy S got a screen resolution of 480x800 px. So what's wrong with the code??

How can i get the actual screen resolution of a particular device??

Upvotes: 11

Views: 16899

Answers (6)

Codev
Codev

Reputation: 1150

Disable pre-scaling by adding this line to your manifest file:

<supports-screens android:anyDensity="true" />

Position:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>

<manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
  package="...."
  android:versionCode="1"
  android:versionName="1.0">

<supports-screens android:anyDensity="true" />

<application android:label="@string/app_name" >
...

After that your display will not be scaled anymore, and you also get the correct display resolution.

Upvotes: 1

Remi
Remi

Reputation: 1299

Here is how i did it:

Display dis = getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay();
Point point= new Point();
dis.getSize(point);
int width = point.x;
int height = point.y;

When not in an Activity:

WindowManager wm = (WindowManager) ctx.getSystemService(Context.WINDOW_SERVICE);
Display display = wm.getDefaultDisplay();

Before getSize was introduced (in API level 13), you could use the getWidth and getHeight methods that are now deprecated:

Display display = getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay(); 
int width = display.getWidth();  // deprecated
int height = display.getHeight();  // deprecated

Upvotes: 0

Shijilal
Shijilal

Reputation: 2169

Finally after 2 days of searching and testing, i finally managed to find out what's the real issue here.. All those above coding will give correct resolution. But the most important this is that we need to mention the target SDK in the manifest file.. Otherwise it will give wrong result if the density is more than 1.

<uses-sdk android:minSdkVersion="3" android:targetSdkVersion="8" />

need to set the targetSDK version from anything between 4-9.. Hope this will help some one in future facing the same issue.

Upvotes: 23

Shijilal
Shijilal

Reputation: 2169

This seems to be working..though i dont know if its a right method..

DisplayMetrics dm = new DisplayMetrics(); 
getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay().getMetrics(dm);

density=dm.densityDpi; 
width=(density/160)*dm.widthPixels; 
height=(density/160)*dm.heightPixels;

Upvotes: 0

Tushar Vengurlekar
Tushar Vengurlekar

Reputation: 7679

try this..

 Display display = getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay();
int ScreenHeight = display.getHeight();
int ScreenWidth = display.getWidth();

Upvotes: 0

SteD
SteD

Reputation: 14027

Try to use this:

width = getResources().getDisplayMetrics().widthPixels;
height = getResources().getDisplayMetrics().heightPixels;

Seems like you're getting the pixel after division of the density ( 1.5 ) of Galaxy S.

480 / 1.5 = 320
799.5 / 1.5 = 533

Edit:

density = getResources().getDisplayMetrics().density;

Upvotes: 4

Related Questions