A layout defines the visual structure for a user interface, such as the UI for an activity or app widget. You can declare a layout in two ways:
Declare UI elements in XML. Android provides a straightforward XML
vocabulary that corresponds to the View classes and subclasses, such
as those for widgets and layouts.
Instantiate layout elements at runtime. Your application can create
View and ViewGroup objects (and manipulate their properties)
programmatically.
The Android framework gives you the flexibility to use either or both of these methods for declaring and managing your application's UI. For example, you could declare your application's default layouts in XML, including the screen elements that will appear in them and their properties. You could then add code in your application that would modify the state of the screen objects, including those declared in XML, at run time.
The ADT Plugin for Eclipse offers a layout preview of your XML — with the XML file opened, select the Layout tab.
You should also try the Hierarchy Viewer tool, for debugging layouts — it reveals layout property values, draws wireframes with padding/margin indicators, and full rendered views while you debug on the emulator or device.
The layoutopt tool lets you quickly analyze your layouts and hierarchies for inefficiencies or other problems.
The advantage to declaring your UI in XML is that it enables you to better separate the presentation of your application from the code
that controls its behavior. Your UI descriptions are external to your
application code, which means that you can modify or adapt it without
having to modify your source code and recompile. For example, you can
create XML layouts for different screen orientations, different device
screen sizes, and different languages. Additionally, declaring the
layout in XML makes it easier to visualize the structure of your UI,
so it's easier to debug problems.
When you compile your application, each XML layout file is compiled into a View resource. You should load the layout resource from your application code, in your Activity.onCreate()
callback implementation. Do so by calling setContentView()
, passing it the reference to your layout resource in the form of:
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