If @{android.R.attr.textColorPrimary}
resolves to the value of android.R.attr.textColorPrimary
in Java, all you need to do is resolve that to a color.
There’s a bit of a setup going into this.
ContextUtils.java
The following method resolves supplied attr
of context
‘s theme and optional style
to a color. Falls back to fallback
color if there’s an error.
@ColorInt
public static int resolveColor(final Context context, @StyleRes final int style, @AttrRes final int attr, @ColorInt final int fallback) {
final TypedArray ta = obtainTypedArray(context, style, attr);
try {
return ta.getColor(0, fallback);
} finally {
ta.recycle()
}
}
@ColorInt
public static int resolveColor(final Context context, @AttrRes final int attr, @ColorInt final int fallback) {
return resolveColor(context, 0, attr, fallback);
}
Utility methods helping to achieve the above goal efficiently.
private static TypedArray obtainTypedArray(final Context context, @StyleRes final int style, @AttrRes final int attr): TypedArray {
final int[] tempArray = getTempArray();
tempArray[0] = attr;
return context.obtainStyledAttributes(style, tempArray);
}
private static final ThreadLocal<int[]> TEMP_ARRAY = new ThreadLocal<>();
private static final int[] getTempArray() {
int[] tempArray = TEMP_ARRAY.get();
if (tempArray == null) {
tempArray = int[1];
TEMP_ARRAY.set(tempArray);
}
return tempArray;
}
More complex code available in my android-commons
library (here and here).
Bindings.java
Here’s how to use it:
@BindingAdapter({"bind:htmlTextColor"})
public static void setHtml(final WebView webView, @AttrRes final int textColorAttr) {
final Context context = webView.getContext();
final int textColor = ContextUtils.resolveColor(context, textColorAttr, Color.BLACK);
// binding logic
}