Calligraphy

Additional

Language
Java
Version
v2.2.0 (Apr 29, 2016)
Created
Dec 20, 2013
Updated
Jun 18, 2019 (Retired)
Owner
Christopher Jenkins (chrisjenx)
Contributors
Manuel Peinado Gallego (ManuelPeinado)
Daichi Furiya (wasabeef)
Benoit 'BoD' Lubek (BoD)
Shaun (shaunidiot)
Matt Luedke (mluedke2)
Greg Loesch (loeschg)
Boris Korogvich (VEINHORN)
Scott Alexander-Bown (scottyab)
Eric Butler (codebutler)
Sebastian Roth (ened)
Matthew Michihara (matthewmichihara)
Daniel Lew (dlew)
Christopher Jenkins (chrisjenx)
Gustavo Barbosa (barbosa)
Alexey Danilov (danikula)
Steven Mulder (smuldr)
Manish Singh Bisht (manish05)
Logan Johnson (loganj)
Show all (33)33
Activity
Badge
Generate
Download
Source code

This version of Calligraphy has reached its end-of-life and is no longer maintained. Please migrate to Calligraphy 3!

Calligraphy

Custom fonts in Android an OK way.

Are you fed up of Custom Views to set fonts? Or traversing the ViewTree to find TextViews? Yeah me too.

Getting started

Dependency

Include the dependency Download (.aar) :

dependencies {
    compile 'uk.co.chrisjenx:calligraphy:2.3.0'
}

Add Fonts

Add your custom fonts to assets/. All font definitions are relative to this path.

Assuming that you are using Gradle you should create the assets directory under src/main/ in your project directory if it does not already exist. As it's popular to use multi-project build with Gradle the path is usually app/src/main/assets/, where app is the project name.

You might consider creating a fonts/ subdirectory in the assets directory (as in examples).

Usage

<TextView fontPath="fonts/MyFont.ttf"/>

Note: The missing namespace, this IS intentional.

Installation

Define your default font using CalligraphyConfig, in your Application class in the #onCreate() method.

@Override
public void onCreate() {
    super.onCreate();
    CalligraphyConfig.initDefault(new CalligraphyConfig.Builder()
                            .setDefaultFontPath("fonts/Roboto-RobotoRegular.ttf")
                            .setFontAttrId(R.attr.fontPath)
                            .build()
            );
    //....
}

Note: You don't need to define CalligraphyConfig but the library will apply no default font and use the default attribute of R.attr.fontPath.

Inject into Context

Wrap the Activity Context:

@Override
protected void attachBaseContext(Context newBase) {
    super.attachBaseContext(CalligraphyContextWrapper.wrap(newBase));
}

You're good to go!

Usage

Custom font per TextView

<TextView
    android:text="@string/hello_world"
    android:layout_width="wrap_content"
    android:layout_height="wrap_content"
    fontPath="fonts/Roboto-Bold.ttf"/>

Note: Popular IDE's (Android Studio, IntelliJ) will likely mark this as an error despite being correct. You may want to add tools:ignore="MissingPrefix" to either the View itself or its parent ViewGroup to avoid this. You'll need to add the tools namespace to have access to this "ignore" attribute. xmlns:tools=" http://schemas.android.com/tools". See https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=65176.

Custom font in TextAppearance

<style name="TextAppearance.FontPath" parent="android:TextAppearance">
    <!-- Custom Attr-->
    <item name="fontPath">fonts/RobotoCondensed-Regular.ttf</item>
</style>
<TextView
    android:text="@string/hello_world"
    android:layout_width="wrap_content"
    android:layout_height="wrap_content"
    android:textAppearance="@style/TextAppearance.FontPath"/>

Custom font in Styles

<style name="TextViewCustomFont">
    <item name="fontPath">fonts/RobotoCondensed-Regular.ttf</item>
</style>

Custom font defined in Theme

<style name="AppTheme" parent="android:Theme.Holo.Light.DarkActionBar">
    <item name="android:textViewStyle">@style/AppTheme.Widget.TextView</item>
</style>

<style name="AppTheme.Widget"/>

<style name="AppTheme.Widget.TextView" parent="android:Widget.Holo.Light.TextView">
    <item name="fontPath">fonts/Roboto-ThinItalic.ttf</item>
</style>

FAQ

Font Resolution

The CalligraphyFactory looks for the font in a pretty specific order, for the most part it's very similar to how the Android framework resolves attributes.

  1. View xml - attr defined here will always take priority.
  2. Style xml - attr defined here is checked next.
  3. TextAppearance xml - attr is checked next, the only caveat to this is IF you have a font defined in the Style and a TextAttribute defined in the View the Style attribute is picked first!
  4. Theme - if defined this is used.
  5. Default - if defined in the CalligraphyConfig this is used of none of the above are found OR if one of the above returns an invalid font.

Why not piggyback off of fontFamily attribute?

We originally did, but it conflicted with users wanting to actually use that attribute, you now have to define a custom attribute.

Why no jar?

We needed to ship a custom ID with Calligraphy to improve the Font Injection flow. This unfortunately means that it has to be an aar. But you're using Gradle now anyway right?

Multiple Typeface's per TextView / Spannables

It is possible to use multiple Typefaces inside a TextView, this isn't new concept to Android.

This could be achieved using something like the following code.

SpannableStringBuilder sBuilder = new SpannableStringBuilder();
sBuilder.append("Hello!") // Bold this
        .append("I use Calligraphy"); // Default TextView font.
// Create the Typeface you want to apply to certain text
CalligraphyTypefaceSpan typefaceSpan = new CalligraphyTypefaceSpan(TypefaceUtils.load(getAssets(), "fonts/Roboto-Bold.ttf"));
// Apply typeface to the Spannable 0 - 6 "Hello!" This can of course by dynamic.
sBuilder.setSpan(typefaceSpan, 0, 6, Spanned.SPAN_EXCLUSIVE_EXCLUSIVE);
setText(sBuilder, TextView.BufferType.SPANNABLE);

Of course this is just an example. Your mileage may vary.

Exceptions / Pitfalls

To our knowledge (try: grep -r -e "void set[^(]*(Typeface " <android source dir>) there are two standard Android widgets that have multiple methods to set typefaces. They are:

  • android.support.v7.widget.SwitchCompat
  • android.widget.Switch

Both have a method called setSwitchTypeface that sets the typeface within the switch (e.g. on/off, yes/no). SetTypeface sets the typeface of the label. You will need to create your own subclass that overrides setTypeface and calls both super.setTypeface and super.setSwitchTypeface.

Collaborators

Note

This library was created because it is currently not possible to declare a custom font in XML files in Android.

If you feel this should be possible to do, please star this issue on the official Android bug tracker.

Licence

Copyright 2013 Christopher Jenkins

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at

    http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.