1page.title=Creating Custom Layouts 2page.tags=wear 3helpoutsWidget=true 4 5@jd:body 6 7<div id="tb-wrapper"> 8<div id="tb"> 9 10<h2>This lesson teaches you to</h2> 11<ol> 12 <li><a href="#CustomNotifications">Create custom notifications</a></li> 13 <li><a href="#UiLibrary">Create Layouts with the Wearable UI Library</li> 14</ol> 15 16<h2>You should also read</h2> 17<ul> 18 <li><a href="{@docRoot}design/wear/index.html">Android Wear Design Principles</a></li> 19</ul> 20 21</div> 22</div> 23 24<p>Creating layouts for wearables is the same as handheld devices, except you have to design 25for the screen size and for glanceability. Do not port functionality 26and the UI from a handheld app and expect a good experience. You should create custom layouts 27only when necessary. Read the <a href="{@docRoot}design/wear/index.html">design guidelines</a> 28for information on how to design great wearable apps.</p> 29 30<h2 id="CustomNotifications">Create Custom Notifications</h2> 31 32<p> 33In general, you should create notifications on the handheld and let them 34automatically sync to the wearable. This lets you build your notifications 35once and have them appear on many types of devices (not just wearables, but 36eventually Auto and TV) without having to design them for different 37form factors.</p> 38 39<p>If the standard notification styles don't work for you (such as 40{@link android.support.v4.app.NotificationCompat.BigTextStyle} or 41{@link android.support.v4.app.NotificationCompat.InboxStyle}), you can display an activity with 42a custom layout. You can only create and issue custom notifications on the wearable, and the 43system does not sync these notifications to the handheld.</p> 44 45<p clas="note"><b>Note:</b> When creating custom notifications on the wearable, you can use the 46standard notification APIs (API Level 20) instead of the Support Library. 47</p> 48 49<p>To create a custom notification:</p> 50<ol> 51 <li>Create a layout and set it as the content view for the activity 52 that you want to display. 53<pre> 54public void onCreate(Bundle bundle){ 55 ... 56 setContentView(R.layout.notification_activity); 57} 58</pre> 59 </li> 60 <li>Define necessary properties for the activity in the Android manifest to allow 61 the activity to be displayed in the wearable's context stream process. You need to declare the 62 activity to be exportable, be embeddable, and have an empty task affinity. We also recommend 63 setting the theme to <code>Theme.DeviceDefault.Light</code>. For example:</li> 64<pre> 65<activity android:name="com.example.MyDisplayActivity" 66 android:exported="true" 67 android:allowEmbedded="true" 68 android:taskAffinity="" 69 android:theme="@android:style/Theme.DeviceDefault.Light" /> 70</pre> 71 </li> 72 <li>Create a {@link android.app.PendingIntent} for the activity that you want to display. 73 For example: 74<pre> 75Intent notificationIntent = new Intent(this, NotificationActivity.class); 76PendingIntent notificationPendingIntent = PendingIntent.getActivity(this, 0, notificationIntent, 77 PendingIntent.FLAG_UPDATE_CURRENT); 78</pre> 79 </li> 80 <li>Build a {@link android.app.Notification} and call 81 {@link android.app.Notification.WearableExtender#setDisplayIntent setDisplayIntent()} 82 providing the {@link android.app.PendingIntent}. The system uses this 83 {@link android.app.PendingIntent} to launch the activity when 84 users view your notification. 85 </li> 86 <li>Issue the notification using the 87 <a href="{@docRoot}reference/android/app/NotificationManager.html#notify(int, android.app.Notification)"><code>notify()</code></a> method. 88 <p class="note"><b>Note:</b> When the notification is peeking on the homescreen, the system 89 displays it with a standard template that it generates from the notification's semantic data. This template works well on all watchfaces. When users swipe the notification up, they'll then see the 90 custom activity for the notification.</p> 91 </li> 92</ol> 93<h2 id="UiLibrary">Create Layouts with the Wearable UI Library</h2> 94<p> 95The Wearable UI Library is automatically included when you create your wearable 96app with the Android Studio Project Wizard. You can also add this library to your <code>build.gradle</code> 97file with the following dependency declaration: 98</p> 99 100<pre> 101dependencies { 102 compile fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar']) 103 <b>compile 'com.google.android.support:wearable:+'</b> 104 compile 'com.google.android.gms:play-services-wearable:+' 105} 106</pre> 107 108<p>This library helps you build UIs that are designed for wearables. For more information, see 109<a href="{@docRoot}training/wearables/ui/index.html">Creating Custom UIs for Wear Devices</a>.</p> 110 111<p>Here are some of the major classes in the Wearable UI Library:</p> 112 113<ul> 114 <li><code>BoxInsetLayout</code> - A FrameLayout that's aware of screen shape and can box its 115 children in the center square of a round screen.</li> 116 <li><code>CardFragment</code> - A fragment that presents content within an expandable, 117 vertically scrollable card.</li> 118 <li><code>CircledImageView</code> - An image view surrounded by a circle.</li> 119 <li><code>ConfirmationActivity</code> - An activity that displays confirmation animations after the user 120 completes an action.</li> 121 <li><code>CrossFadeDrawable</code> - A drawable that contains two child drawables and provides 122 methods to directly adjust the blend between the two.</li> 123 <li><code>DelayedConfirmationView</code> - A view that provides a circular countdown timer, 124 typically used to automatically confirm an operation after a short delay has elapsed.</li> 125 <li><code>DismissOverlayView</code> - A view for implementing long-press-to-dismiss.</li> 126 <li><code>DotsPageIndicator</code> - A page indicator for GridViewPager that identifies the 127 current page in relation to all available pages on the current row.</li> 128 <li><code>GridViewPager</code> - A layout manager that allows the user to both vertically and 129 horizontally through pages of data. You supply an implementation of a GridPagerAdapter to 130 generate the pages that the view shows.</li> 131 <li><code>GridPagerAdapter</code> - An adapter that supplies pages to a GridViewPager.</li> 132 <li><code>FragmentGridPagerAdapter</code> - An implementation of GridPagerAdapter that 133 represents each page as a fragment.</li> 134 </li> 135 <li><code>WatchViewStub</code> - A class that can inflate a specific layout, 136 depending on the shape of the device's screen.</li> 137 <li><code>WearableListView</code> - An alternative version of ListView that is optimized for 138 ease of use on small screen wearable devices. It displays a vertically scrollable list of items, 139 and automatically snaps to the nearest item when the user stops scrolling. 140 </li> 141</ul> 142 143<h3 id="UiLibReference">Wear UI library API reference</h3> 144 145<p>The reference documentation explains how to use each UI widget in detail. Browse the 146<a href="{@docRoot}reference/android/support/wearable/view/package-summary.html">Wear API 147reference documentation</a> for the classes above.</p> 148 149<h3 id="UiLibEclipse">Download the Wearable UI library for Eclipse ADT</h3> 150 151<p>If you are using the ADT plugin for Eclipse, download the 152<a href="{@docRoot}shareables/training/wearable-support-lib.zip">Wearable UI library</a> to 153include the Wearable UI library as a dependency in your project.</p> 154 155<p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> We recommend 156<a href="{@docRoot}sdk/index.html">Android Studio</a> for Android Wear app 157development.</p> 158