Floating Action Button with Speed-Dial Menu
This library provides a clickable floating action button (FAB) with an optional speed-dial menu. The FAB can trigger a standard click listener or a open the speed-dial menu with further options. All aspects of the FAB and speed-dial menu are customisable.
Demo
You can try the demo in one of two ways:
-
Clone this repository and install the demo app from the
app/
folder (you can do this with Gradle, usinggradle clean installDebug
). -
Download the sample app from the Google Play Store: Floating Action Button Demo.
Installation
Gradle
implementation 'uk.co.markormesher:android-fab:2.5.0'
Maven
<dependency>
<groupId>uk.co.markormesher</groupId>
<artifactId>android-fab</artifactId>
<version>2.5.0</version>
<type>pom</type>
</dependency>
Note: depending on your app's configuration, you may need to add the following to your ProGuard rules:
-dontwarn java.lang.invoke.*
See app/proguard-rules.pro for an example.
Usage & Customisation
Note: all of the instructions below assume that the FAB is referenced by the variable fab
, i.e.
// Java
FloatingActionButton fab = (FloatingActionButton) findViewById(R.id.fab);
// Kotlin (without Android extensions)
val fab = findViewById(R.id.fab) as FloatingActionButton
Placing the FAB in Your Layout
The FloatingActionButton
view must be placed at the root of your layout, above all other views, and with maximum width and height. This allows the semi-transparent layer to expand and cover the entire layout when the speed-dial menu is opened.
<uk.co.markormesher.android_fab.FloatingActionButton
android:id="@+id/fab"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
/>
FAB Position
The FAB can be positioned in any of the four corners of the activity via XML or with fab.setButtonPosition(...)
. The default position is the bottom-end corner.
// Java
fab.setButtonPosition(POSITION_BOTTOM | POSITION_END);
// Kotlin
fab.setButtonPosition(POSITION_BOTTOM.or(POSITION_END))
// XML
<uk.co.markormesher.android_fab.FloatingActionButton
xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
...
app:buttonPosition="bottom|end"
/>
The FAB is aware of text-direction (right-to-left or left-to-right) and adjusts the meaning of "start" and "end" positions accordingly. This functionality can be overridden using the named constants for left and right.
The FAB can be offset from any of the four edges to precisely control its location, although this is not needed in most applications. The offset can be added to the top, bottom, start, end, left or right of the view. Where left and/or right offsets are specified they will both take precedence over start/end offsets.
// Java
fab.setInternalOffsetBottom(40.0f); // pixels
// Kotlin
fab.setInternalOffsetBottom(40.0f) // pixels
// XML
<uk.co.markormesher.android_fab.FloatingActionButton
xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
...
app:internalOffsetBottom="20dp"
app:internalOffsetEnd="@dimen/some_dimen"
/>
Note: any offset is applied in addition to the default spacing around the FAB. If you need to counter this, subtract the default spacing (fab.getOriginalInternalOffset()
in Java or fab.originalInternalOffset
in Kotlin) from the value you want to use.
FAB Icon
The icon displayed in the centre of the FAB can be set via XML using a Drawable
reference or with fab.setButtonIconResource(...)
using a Drawable
resource ID. The icon will be centred in a 24dp x 24dp view group, as per the Android Material Design specs.
// Java
fab.setButtonIconResource(R.drawable.ic_add);
// Kotlin
fab.setButtonIconResource(R.drawable.ic_add)
// XML
<uk.co.markormesher.android_fab.FloatingActionButton
xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
...
app:buttonIcon="@drawable/ic_add"
/>
FAB Background Colour
The background colour of the FAB can be set via XML using a colour reference or programmatically with fab.setButtonBackgroundColour(...)
using an aRGB colour value (e.g. 0xffff9900
for dark orange). Note that the second method does not take a colour resource ID, so passing in R.color.some_colour_name
will not work.
// Java
fab.setButtonBackgroundColour(0xffff9900);
// Kotlin
fab.setButtonBackgroundColour(0xffff9900.toInt())
// XML
<uk.co.markormesher.android_fab.FloatingActionButton
xmlns:app="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
...
app:buttonBackgroundColour="@color/fab_colour"
/>
FAB Click Listener
A click listener can be added to the FAB in the same way as any other button. The view passed to the listener can be safely cast to a FloatingActionButton
.
// Java
fab.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
@Override
public void onClick(View v) {
// ...
}
});
// Kotlin
fab.setOnClickListener { v ->
// ...
}
Speed-Dial Menu
The speed-dial menu is enabled by creating a class that extends SpeedDialMenuAdapter
and passing it to fab.setSpeedDialMenuAdapter(...)
. The adapter class methods are documented in-situ.
Speed-Dial Menu Content Cover
The content cover expands from the FAB when the speed-dial menu is opened to obscure the rest of the app content and emphasise the menu. It also prevents controls in the rest of the app from being clicked on while the speed-dial menu is open; tapping outside the menu while it is open and the cover is displayed will cause the menu to close.
The colour of the content cover can be set programmatically with fab.setContentCoverColour(...)
using an aRGB colour value (e.g. 0x99ff9900
for a semi-transparent dark orange). Note that this method does not take a colour resource ID, so passing in R.color.some_colour_name
will not work.
// Java
fab.setContentCoverColour(0xffff9900);
// Kotlin
fab.setContentCoverColour(0xffff9900.toInt())
The cover can be enabled/disabled programmatically with fab.setContentCoverEnabled(...)
.
// Java
fab.setContentCoverEnabled(true);
fab.setContentCoverEnabled(false);
// Kotlin
fab.setContentCoverEnabled(true)
fab.setContentCoverEnabled(false)
Speed-Dial Menu State Change Listeners
State change events are fired when the speed-dial menu opens or closes, which can be received with fab.setOnSpeedDialMenuOpenListener(...)
and fab.setOnSpeedDialMenuCloseListener(...)
.
// Java
fab.setOnSpeedDialMenuOpenListener(new SpeedDialMenuOpenListener() {
@Override
public void onOpen(FloatingActionButton floatingActionButton) {
// ...
}
});
// Kotlin
fab.setOnSpeedDialMenuOpenListener { floatingActionButton ->
// ...
}
Show/Hide Controls
The FAB can be hidden and shown with the fab.hide()
and fab.show()
methods, and the method fab.isShown()
will return a boolean indicating the current state. These methods animate the FAB in and out of visibility and set the entire view container's visibility to GONE
. If the speed-dial menu is open when .hide()
is called it will be closed.
If the FAB is hidden in the XML layout (i.e. with android:visibility="gone"
) when initialise the FAB will start in the correct hidden state and can still be shown/hidden with the fab.hide()
and fab.show()
methods.
The speed-dial menu can be manually opened and closed with fab.openSpeedDialMenu()
and fab.closeSpeedDialMenu()
. These methods will do nothing if no speed-dial menu adapter is set, if an adapter is set but disabled, if the FAB is hidden, or if they are called when the menu is already in the indicated state (i.e. fab.openSpeedDialMenu()
will do nothing if the menu is already open).
Access to Underlying Views
The FAB's key underlying views can be accessed using the three properties/methods detailed below:
// Java
fab.getCardView() // the card behind the button itself
fab.getContentCoverView() // the view that obscures content behind the speed-dial menu
fab.getIconWrapper() // the wrapper used to place icons in the button
// Kotlin
fab.cardView
fab.contentCoverView
fab.iconWrapper
The card view is implemented as a CardView
on SDK 21+ and a LinearLayout
on SDK 20 and below.
The content cover view and icon wrapper are implemented as a View
and LinearLayout
respectively on all SDKs.
Note: Known Compatibility Issues
In Android 4.x there is an issue with Vector Drawable icons. If you want to use Vector Drawables as icons (e.g app:buttonIcon="@drawable/ic_add"
) you will need to add the following snippet in your Activity classes.
// Java
static {
AppCompatDelegate.setCompatVectorFromResourcesEnabled(true);
}
// Kotlin
companion object {
init() {
AppCompatDelegate.setCompatVectorFromResourcesEnabled(true);
}
}
Source: Stack Overflow
Note: Click Action Priority
As per Material Design specs, the FAB functions as a regular button or a trigger for the speed-dial menu, but not both. For this reason, the click listener and the speed-dial menu are never invoked at the same time.
The speed-dial menu is given priority: when the FAB is clicked the speed-dial menu will be shown if the speed-dial menu adapter is non-null, the adapter's isEnabled()
function returns true
and the adapter's getCount()
returns a number greater than zero. Otherwise, the FAB's click listener will be called (if it has been set).
Setting a speed-dial menu adapter does not remove the click listener, and setting a click listener does not remove the speed-dial menu adapter. For an example of how the two operation modes interact, check the demo app's source code.
To receive state change updates when the speed-dial menu is opened or closed, use the open/close listeners described above.
Note: State Preservation
The following properties are preserved when a configuration change (like a screen orientation change) happens:
- FAB hidden/shown
- FAB position
- FAB background colour
- FAB icon
- Speed-dial menu content cover colour
- Speed-dial menu content cover enabled/disabled
The following properties are not preserved and will need to be restored by the parent activity/fragment:
- FAB click listener
- Speed-dial menu adapter
- Speed-dial menu open/close listeners