Fraggle
Fraggle

Reputation: 8727

Set width of TextView in terms of characters

Really looking for an answer to this.

Want to set the width of a TextView based on a number or characters. So if I want it to always be 3 characters wide, I could set that and it will adjust based on the textSize setting. Without this, I have to set a width to 50dip or something, which may or may not be right depending on the font size.

Upvotes: 100

Views: 43188

Answers (4)

Andrei Stakov
Andrei Stakov

Reputation: 197

ems, contrary to popular beliefs (or at least from most thread about ems here), is not based from the width of a single 'M'.

It was originally like that in typography, but in digital medium, including Android, its meaning was shifted to the size of the typeface used, or in other word, its height (excluding any padding for accents/diacritics).

So that means when you specify the ems for a TextView, it will used its textSize as a base and multiply it by the ems specified.

As a sample, if you set a 16sp TextView's ems to 4, its width will be 64sp wide. You can easily test it by using two TextView (with includeFontPadding set to false) side-by-side inside a ConstraintLayout (to leverage its layout_constraintDimensionRatio).

Upvotes: 5

KyleM
KyleM

Reputation: 628

Try using: android:maxLength="3"

This will limit your text to a specific number of characters.

Upvotes: -3

Fraggle
Fraggle

Reputation: 8727

Answering my own question...

And the winner is: set the minEms attribute (android:minEms) !!!

So "ems" it turns out refers to the size of the widest character, typically an "M", get it? So setting minEms to an integer value say 3, on an EditText or TextView should ensure it's at least 3 characters wide. You can set the maxEms as well.

So Kyle's answer on this thread, although wrong, caused me to find the answer, so thanks Kyle.

Upvotes: 193

mah
mah

Reputation: 39807

Most fonts do not set all character widths to be identical. Courier is perhaps the most used exception to this, but generally look at the difference between an i and an A, for example. This makes what your asking to do a bit of a problem.

Upvotes: 0

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