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Material Design Primer

Slava Panasenko edited this page Aug 30, 2019 · 52 revisions

With the release of Android 5.0, there are updated guidelines for modern Android UI design. These guidelines are called "material design". This page is dedicated to living in the "material world".

screen 1 screen 2 screen 3

What is Material Design?

What exactly is "Material Design"? This can be difficult to answer because of the broad scope of the updates. The concrete highlights of a material-designed app would include the following elements:

  1. Vibrant Color Schemes
  2. Updated Iconography
  3. RecyclerView for Lists with items as CardViews
  4. Leveraging the new App Toolbar
  5. Dynamic Scrolling Behavior with CoordinatorLayout
  6. Floating Action Buttons for important actions
  7. Ripple Animations for Touch Feedback
  8. Shared Element Morph Transitions during navigation
  9. View Elevation and Shadows
  10. Updated Dialog Themes

This represents just a few of the highlights that represent the implementation of Material design. Watch this Material Design Primer by Yash Prabhu or Living in a Material World by Nidhi Shah for an in-depth look.

Design Guidelines

This new framework encompasses several changes to the interface of Android apps and Google strongly encourages the adoption of these new principles outlined below:

Using these materials, you can understand and begin adhering to these guidelines for your own apps.

Material Code Samples

There are a wide variety of sample apps to check out related to material design best practices including:

  • Plaid - Showcase of material design and animations from Google
  • Topeka - Sample app from Google that showcases material design
  • Google IO Schedule - Google sample app showcasing modern Android UI
  • Timber - Modern music player showcasing beautiful material patterns
  • Opengur - Android imgur viewer illustrating modern UI patterns
  • Slide - Reddit Android app with material design
  • Awesome-MaterialDesign - List of popular material libraries and sample apps.

Hopefully these samples give you a solid starting point to explore material design.

Material Design Setup

When switching a fresh material design theme, you can’t leave behind all older devices since the vast majority of current Android devices can't upgrade to lollipop. This is where the Material Support Library comes in to save the day.

Google has released a handy Material Design Checklist to help ensure you've applied the necessary steps to adhere to the material look and feel.

Include Support Library

By default, new generated apps are automatically material design support enabled within Android Studio. However, what about our old apps? How do we change them to support material design? Take a look at this migration guide.

Design Support Library

As of June 2015, Google released the Design Support Library which helps simplify the use of a lot of material design components including a navigation drawer view, floating labels, floating action buttons, snackbars, and a new framework to tie motion and scroll events. Follow the setup guide to take advantage of these new UI components.

Change the Application Theme

Change your application theme to extend from a Theme.AppCompat theme in the values/styles.xml file and apply the material color properties to your application:

<style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.DarkActionBar">
  <!-- colorPrimary is used for the default action bar background -->
  <item name="colorPrimary">@color/primary</item>
  <!-- colorPrimaryDark is used for the status bar -->
  <item name="colorPrimaryDark">@color/primary_dark</item>
  <!-- colorAccent is used as the default value for widgets -->
  <item name="colorAccent">@color/accent</item>
  <!-- Default color of the text in your views  -->
  <item name="android:textColorPrimary">@color/textPrimary</item>
</style>

These colors correspond to the following diagram:

You can also override the following properties as needed for further customization:

<style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.DarkActionBar">
  <!-- ... styles above ... -->
  <!-- Applies to views in their activated state (i.e checked or switches) -->   
  <item name="colorControlActivated">@color/colorActivated</item>      
  <!-- Applied to framework control highlights (i.e ripples or list selectors) -->
  <item name="colorControlHighlight">@color/colorHighlight</item>  
  <!-- Default color of the status bar at the top of your device  -->
  <item name="android:statusBarColor">@color/primaryDark</item>
  <!-- Default color of the navigation bar at the bottom of your device  -->
  <item name="android:navigationBarColor">@color/primary</item>
</style>

The available Theme.Appcompat which support material design include the following: Theme.AppCompat, Theme.AppCompat.Light, Theme.AppCompat.Light.DarkActionBar, Theme.AppCompat.DeviceDefault, Theme.AppCompat.DeviceDefault.Light, Theme.AppCompat.DeviceDefault.Light.DarkActionBar.

Extend Activities from AppCompatActivity

AppCompatActivity is a subclass of FragmentActivity, so there should be no issues if you were using FragmentActivity from the older support library:

public class HomeActivity extends AppCompatActivity {
    // Implementation
}

Use Support ActionBar

See our ActionBar Guide for more details on how to setup the compatibility ActionBar using AppCompatActivity including updating all of your menu files to use app:showAsAction instead of android:showAsAction.

Once you've switched to the AppCompatActivity, your code needs to access the ActionBar using getSupportActionBar instead of getActionBar:

getSupportActionBar.show(); // RIGHT
getActionBar.hide(); // WRONG

In addition, styling the ActionBar needs to be done updated to use the material support styles rather than the traditional ActionBar styles.

Material Design Icons

With the Lollipop release comes an improved visual design style for icons used throughout modern Android apps. Google has provided a set of material design icons for developers to use within their apps. You should download the repo and grab the relevant files.

icons

Be sure to check out the community-source materialdesignicons icon site as well for an even larger selection of material icons. Thanks to recent updates in the support design library, you can import these icons as scalable vector graphics (.svg) files, which eliminates the need to import different image files for different resolutions.

Make sure to add vector drawable support for pre-Lollipop devices by following the setup instructions. The Material Design icons should already be available in Vector Drawable XML format, which is a different format from .SVG files. Alternatively, you can download the .SVG file, right click on the res/drawable folder, and click the new Vector Asset option to import these .svg files into a Vector Drawable XML, which can be used the same as any other drawable.

Material Navigation Drawer

Take a look at the Material Design Checklist and you will notice that you need to change your existing drawer layout to be over the toolbar and under the status bar. There’s a handy StackOverflow post explaining how to implement this.

drawer

Check out our Material Navigation Drawer guide for a step-by-step tutorial for setting up the updated material navigation drawer behavior. Note that to do this properly, you'll need to replace your ActionBar with a Toolbar.

Material Views

RecyclerView

With our material theme, there comes a much more flexible way to display lists of items called the RecyclerView, the spiritual successor to the ListView.

RecyclerView

In theory, we can still use either of these but Google recommends using the RecyclerView going forward. Check out the differences in our RecyclerView vs. ListView section.

CardView

Android 5.0 introduces a new widget called CardView which is an easy way to decorate items in a list with a modern style.

CardView can be thought of as a FrameLayout with rounded corners and shadow based on its elevation. This is best used as part of a ListView or RecyclerView when displaying homogeneous content.

Toolbar

With our material themes, there is now a spiritual successor to the ActionBar called the Toolbar.

Toolbar

The toolbar operates as a replacement for the original ActionBar but is added directly to the layout XML file and can be placed and styled like any other view in the layout.

Floating Action Buttons

Floating action buttons (or FAB) are a special "promoted action" within an activity or fragment that is moved from the ActionBar to a round icon floating above the UI in the bottom right corner.

FAB1  FAB2

The floating action button should represent the primary action within a screen. More info and use cases of the FAB button can be found in Google’s official design specs found here.

Material Animations

Note that material animations are not compatible with Android versions prior to Lollipop API 21. See this compatibility guide for more details.

Ripple Animations

Ripple provides an instantaneous visual confirmation at the point of contact when users interact with UI elements. Note that the ripples will only show up on devices running Lollipop, and will fall back to a static highlight on previous versions.

Ripple

See our detailed ripple animations guide for an overview of how to enable this effect on views and buttons.

Shared Element Transitions

In many situations when navigating from a list of items to a detail view, there are elements common to both activities. With the new shared element transitions system, we can transition these shared elements from one activity or fragment to another creating a much more contiguous navigation effect.

Shared Element Transition

See our detailed shared element transition guide for an overview of how to enable these beautiful transitions.

Circular Reveal

Circular Reveal is a new animation introduced in Android 5 that animates the view's clipping boundaries. Reveal animations provide users visual continuity when you show or hide a group of UI elements.

reveal

This animation is often times used in conjunction with a floating action button that will grow onto the screen using this transition.

Scrolling Animations

Scroll effects can also be created to shrink or expand the Toolbar or Header to make room for the main content area as a user scrolls.

scrolling effects

Material Styles

Elevation and Shadows

Material design introduces elevation for UI elements. Elevation (controlling the Z-axis) determines the shadow cast by each view. You can set the elevation declaratively in your layouts, defined in dp for any view:

<ImageViewandroid:elevation="8dp" />

with this as the result:

Example

You can also set this from code using getElevation() or setElevation(). To customize the shadows or outlines of elevated views, check out the official guide on shadows.

Dynamic Color Palettes

Material Design encourages dynamic use of color, especially when you have rich images to work with. The new Palette support library lets you extract a small set of colors from an image to style your UI controls to match; creating an immersive experience.

Palette

The extracted swatches will include vibrant and muted tones as well as foreground text colors for optimal legibility. This allows us to use these dynamically selected colors to apply better color selections to our layouts.

Dialog Styles

If you want your Dialogs to have a Material look and feel across all Android versions, you can take advantage of the AppCompat library and use the alert dialogs.

References

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