1page.title=Building Layouts for TV 2page.tags=tv 3helpoutsWidget=true 4 5trainingnavtop=true 6 7@jd:body 8 9<div id="tb-wrapper"> 10<div id="tb"> 11 <h2>This lesson teaches you how to</h2> 12 <ol> 13 <li><a href="#themes">Use Layout Themes for TV</a></li> 14 <li><a href="#structure">Build Basic TV Layouts</a></li> 15 <li><a href="#visibility">Build Useable Text and Controls</a></li> 16 <li><a href="#density-resources">Manage Layout Resources for TV</a></li> 17 <li><a href="#anti-patterns">Avoid Layout Anti-Patterns</a></li> 18 <li><a href="#large-bitmaps">Handle Large Bitmaps</a></li> 19 <li><a href="#advertising">Provide Effective Advertising</a></li> 20 </ol> 21 <h2>You should also read</h2> 22 <ol> 23 <li><a href="{@docRoot}design/tv/index.html">Android TV Design</a></li> 24 </ol> 25</div> 26</div> 27 28<p> 29 A TV screen is typically viewed from about 10 feet away, and while it is much larger than most 30 other Android device displays, this type of screen does not provide the same level of precise 31 detail and color as a smaller device. These factors require you to create app layouts with TV 32 devices in mind in order to create a useful and enjoyable user experience. 33</p> 34 35<p> 36 This lesson describes the minimum requirements and implementation details for building effective 37 layouts in TV apps. 38</p> 39 40<h2 id="themes">Use Layout Themes for TV</h2> 41 42<p> 43 Android <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/themes.html">Themes</a> can provide a basis for 44 layouts in your TV apps. You should use a theme to modify the display of your app activities that 45 are meant to run on a TV device. This section explains which themes you should use. 46</p> 47 48<h3 id="leanback-theme">Leanback theme</h3> 49 50<p> 51 A support library for TV user interfaces called the <a href= 52 "{@docRoot}tools/support-library/features.html#v17-leanback">v17 leanback library</a> provides a 53 standard theme for TV activities, called {@code Theme.Leanback}. This theme establishes a 54 consistent visual style for TV apps. Use of this theme is recommended for most TV apps. This 55 theme is strongly recommended for any TV app that uses v17 leanback classes. The following code 56 sample shows how to apply this theme to a given activity within an app: 57</p> 58 59<pre> 60<activity 61 android:name="com.example.android.TvActivity" 62 android:label="@string/app_name" 63 <strong>android:theme="@style/Theme.Leanback"</strong>> 64</pre> 65 66 67<h3 id="notitle-theme">NoTitleBar theme</h3> 68 69<p> 70 The title bar is a standard user interface element for Android apps on phones and tablets, but it 71 is not appropriate for TV apps. If you are not using v17 leanback classes, you should apply this 72 theme to your TV activities to suppress the display of a title bar. The following code example 73 from a TV app manifest demonstrates how to apply this theme to remove the display of a title bar: 74</p> 75 76<pre> 77<application> 78 ... 79 80 <activity 81 android:name="com.example.android.TvActivity" 82 android:label="@string/app_name" 83 <strong>android:theme="@android:style/Theme.NoTitleBar"</strong>> 84 ... 85 86 </activity> 87</application> 88</pre> 89 90 91<h2 id="structure">Build Basic TV Layouts</h2> 92 93<p>Layouts for TV devices should follow some basic guidelines to ensure they are usable and 94 effective on large screens. Follow these tips to build landscape layouts optimized for TV screens: 95</p> 96 97<ul> 98 <li>Build layouts with a landscape orientation. TV screens always display in landscape mode.</li> 99 <li>Put on-screen navigation controls on the left or right side of the screen and save the 100 vertical space for content.</li> 101 <li>Create UIs that are divided into sections, using <a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/fragments.html" 102 >Fragments</a>, and use view groups like {@link android.widget.GridView} instead of {@link 103 android.widget.ListView} to make better use of the horizontal screen space. 104 </li> 105 <li>Use view groups such as {@link android.widget.RelativeLayout} or {@link 106 android.widget.LinearLayout} to arrange views. This approach allows the system to adjust the 107 position of the views to the size, alignment, aspect ratio, and pixel density of a TV screen.</li> 108 <li>Add sufficient margins between layout controls to avoid a cluttered UI.</li> 109</ul> 110 111 112<h3 id="overscan">Overscan</h3> 113 114<p>Layouts for TV have some unique requirements due to the evolution of TV standards and the 115 desire to always present a full screen picture to viewers. For this reason, TV devices may 116 clip the outside edge of an app layout in order to ensure that the entire display is filled. 117 This behavior is generally referred to as <em>overscan</em>. 118</p> 119 120<p> 121 Avoid screen elements being clipped due to overscan and by incorporating a 10% margin 122 on all sides of your layout. This translates into a 48dp margin on the left and right edges and 123 a 27dp margin on the top and bottom of your base layouts for activities. The following 124 example layout demonstrates how to set these margins in the root layout for a TV app: 125</p> 126 127<pre> 128<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> 129<LinearLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" 130 android:id="@+id/base_layout" 131 android:layout_width="match_parent" 132 android:layout_height="match_parent" 133 android:orientation="vertical" 134 android:layout_marginTop="27dp" 135 android:layout_marginLeft="48dp" 136 android:layout_marginRight="48dp" 137 android:layout_marginBottom="27dp" > 138</LinearLayout> 139</pre> 140 141<p class="caution"> 142 <strong>Caution:</strong> Do not apply overscan margins to your layout if you are using the 143 v17 leanback classes, such as {@link android.support.v17.leanback.app.BrowseFragment} or related 144 widgets, as those layouts already incorporate overscan-safe margins. 145</p> 146 147<h2 id="visibility">Build Useable Text and Controls</h2> 148 149<p> 150 The text and controls in a TV app layout should be easily visible and navigable from a distance. 151 Follow these tips to make your user interface elements easier to see from a distance: 152</p> 153 154<ul> 155 <li>Break text into small chunks that users can quickly scan.</li> 156 <li>Use light text on a dark background. This style is easier to read on a TV.</li> 157 <li>Avoid lightweight fonts or fonts that have both very narrow and very broad strokes. 158 Use simple sans-serif fonts and anti-aliasing to increase readability.</li> 159 <li>Use Android's standard font sizes: 160<pre> 161<TextView 162 android:id="@+id/atext" 163 android:layout_width="wrap_content" 164 android:layout_height="wrap_content" 165 android:gravity="center_vertical" 166 android:singleLine="true" 167 <strong>android:textAppearance="?android:attr/textAppearanceMedium"/></strong> 168</pre> 169 </li> 170 <li>Ensure that all your view widgets are large enough to be clearly visible to someone 171 sitting 10 feet away from the screen (this distance is greater for very large screens). The 172 best way to do this is to use layout-relative sizing rather than absolute sizing, and 173 density-independent pixel (dip) units instead of absolute pixel units. For example, to set the 174 width of a widget, use {@code wrap_content} instead of a pixel measurement, and to set the 175 margin for a widget, use dip values instead of px values.</li> 176</ul> 177 178<p> 179 For more information about density-independent pixels and building layouts to handle larger 180 screen sizes, see <a href="{@docRoot}guide/practices/screens_support.html">Supporting Multiple 181 Screens</a>. 182</p> 183 184<h2 id="density-resources">Manage Layout Resources for TV</h2> 185 186<p>The common high-definition TV display resolutions are 720p, 1080i, and 1080p. 187 Your TV layout should target a screen size of 1920 x 1080 pixels, and then allow the Android 188 system to downscale your layout elements to 720p if necessary. In general, downscaling 189 (removing pixels) does not degrade your layout presentation quality. However, upscaling can 190 cause display artifacts that degrade the quality of your layout and have a negative impact on 191 the user experience of your app.</p> 192 193<p> 194 To get the best scaling results for images, provide them as 195 <a href="{@docRoot}tools/help/draw9patch.html">9-patch image</a> elements if possible. If you 196 provide low quality or small images in your layouts, they will appear pixelated, fuzzy, or 197 grainy, which is not a good experience for the user. Use high-quality images instead. 198</p> 199 200<p> 201 For more information on optimizing layouts and resources for large screens see 202 <a href="{@docRoot}training/multiscreen/index.html">Designing for multiple screens</a>. 203</p> 204 205 206<h2 id="anti-patterns">Avoid Layout Anti-Patterns</h2> 207 208<p> 209 There are a few approaches to building layouts that you should avoid because they do not work 210 well on TV devices and lead to bad user experiences. Here are some user interface approaches you 211 should specifically <em>not</em> use when developing a layout for TV. 212</p> 213 214<ul> 215 <li><strong>Re-using phone or tablet layouts</strong> - Do not reuse layouts from a phone or 216 tablet app without modification. Layouts built for other Android device form factors are not 217 well suited for TV devices and should be simplified for operation on a TV.</li> 218 <li><strong>ActionBar</strong> - While this user interface convention is recommended for use 219 on phones and tablets, it is not appropriate for a TV interface. In particular, using an 220 action bar options menu (or any pull-down menu for that matter) is strongly discouraged, due 221 to the difficulty in navigating such a menu with a remote control.</li> 222 <li><strong>ViewPager</strong> - Sliding between screens can work great on a phone or tablet, 223 but don't try this on a TV!</li> 224</ul> 225 226<p>For more information on designing layouts that are appropriate to TV, see the 227 <a href="{@docRoot}design/tv/index.html">TV Design</a> guide.</p> 228 229 230<h2 id="large-bitmaps">Handle Large Bitmaps</h2> 231 232<p>TV devices, like any other Android device, have a limited amount of memory. If you build your 233 app layout with very high-resolution images or use many high-resolution images in the operation 234 of your app, it can quickly run into memory limits and cause out of memory errors. 235 To avoid these types of problems, follow these tips:</p> 236 237<ul> 238 <li>Load images only when they are displayed on the screen. For example, when displaying multiple 239 images in a {@link android.widget.GridView} or {@link android.widget.Gallery}, only load an image 240 when {@link android.widget.Adapter#getView getView()} is called on the 241 view's {@link android.widget.Adapter}. 242 </li> 243 <li>Call {@link android.graphics.Bitmap#recycle()} on {@link android.graphics.Bitmap} views that 244 are no longer needed. 245 </li> 246 <li>Use {@link java.lang.ref.WeakReference} for storing references to {@link 247 android.graphics.Bitmap} objects in an in-memory {@link java.util.Collection}. 248 </li> 249 <li>If you fetch images from the network, use {@link android.os.AsyncTask} to fetch and store 250 them on the device for faster access. Never do network transactions on the application's main 251 user interface thread. 252 </li> 253 <li>Scale down large images to a more appropriate size as you download them; otherwise, 254 downloading the image itself may cause an out of memory exception. 255 </li> 256</ul> 257 258<p> 259 For more information on getting the best performance when working with images, see 260 <a href="{@docRoot}training/displaying-bitmaps/index.html">Displaying Bitmaps Efficiently</a>. 261</p> 262 263<h2 id="advertising">Provide Effective Advertising</h2> 264 265<p>Advertising on Android TV must always be full-screen. Ads must not appear alongside or over 266content. The user must be able to dismiss an advertisement with the D-pad controller. Video ads must 267be dismissible within 30 seconds of their start time.</p> 268 269<p>Android TV does not provide a web browser. Your ads must not attempt to launch a web browser or 270redirect to the Google Play Store.</p> 271 272<p class="note"> 273 <strong>Note:</strong> You can use the {@link android.webkit.WebView} class for logins to 274 services like Google+ and Facebook. 275</p>