Property Types
AnimationOptions
Options of the animate()
method. They have following properties:
- delay: number, default:
0
Time until the animation starts in ms. - duration: number Animation duration in ms.
- easing: string
One of
linear
,ease-in
,ease-out
,ease-in-out
. - repeat: number, default:
0
Number of times to repeat the animation. - reverse: boolean
true
to alternate the direction of the animation on every repeat. - name: string No effect, but will be given in animation events.
Bounds
Widget bounds are represented as an object with the following properties:
- left: number The horizontal offset from the parent’s left edge in dip
- top: number The vertical offset from the parent’s top edge in dip
- width: number The width of the widget in dip
- height: number The height of the widget in dip
Example:
let buttonWidth = button.bounds.width;
See also Layout.
ChangeEvent
An event fired when an object property changes. It has following properties:
- target: Widget The widget the event was fired on.
- value: any The new value of the changed property.
Color
Colors are specified as strings using one of the following formats:
#xxxxxx
Hexadecimal rgb#xxx
Hexadecimal rgb#xxxxxxxx
Hexadecimal rgba#xxxx
Hexadecimal rgbargb(r, g, b)
withr
,g
andb
being numbers in the range 0..255.rgba(r, g, b, a)
witha
being a number in the range 0..1.- a color name from the CSS3 specification.
transparent
sets a fully transparent color. This is a shortcut forrgba(0, 0, 0, 0)
.initial
resets the color to its (platform-dependent) default.
Examples:
"#f00"
"#ff0000"
"#ff000080" // 50% opacity red
"#ff06" // 40% opacity yellow
"rgb(255, 0, 0)"
"rgba(255, 0, 0, 0.8)"
"red"
"initial"
Dimension
A positive float, or 0, representing device independent pixels.
See also Layout.
Margin
Distance to a parent’s or sibling’s opposing edge in one of these formats:
offset
percentage
Widget
"selector"
"prev()"
"percentage offset"
"selector offset"
"prev() offset"
[Widget, offset]
[percentage, offset]
[selector, offset]
["prev()", offset]
See also Layout.
Font
Fonts are specified as strings using the shorthand syntax known from CSS, specifically "[font-style] [font-weight] font-size [font-family[, font-family]*]"
. The font family may be omitted, in this case the default system font will be used. Generic font families supported across all platforms are "serif"
, "sans-serif"
, "condensed"
and "monospace"
. Supported font weights are "light"
, "thin"
, "normal"
, "medium"
, "bold"
and "black"
. The value "initial"
represents the platform default.
Examples:
"bold 24px"
"12px sans-serif"
"thin italic 12px sans-serif"
"initial"
Image
Images are specified as objects with the following properties:
- src: string
File system path, relative path or URL. Android and iOS also support data URI. Relative paths are resolved relative to ‘package.json’. On Android the name of a bundled drawable resource can be provided with the url scheme
android-drawable
, e.g.android-drawable://ic_info_black
. - width: number (optional) Image width in dip, extracted from the image file when missing.
- height: number (optional) Image height in dip, extracted from the image file when missing.
- scale: number (optional) Image scale factor - the image will be scaled down by this factor. Ignored when width or height are set.
A plain string can be used as a shorthand, e.g. "image.jpg"
equals {src: "image.jpg"}
.
Examples:
"images/catseye.jpg"
{src: "images/catseye.jpg", width: 300, height: 200}
{src: "http://example.com/catseye.jpg", scale: 2}
LayoutData
Used to define how a widget should be arranged within its parent. See “Layouts”.
Offset
A positive or negative float, or 0, representing device independent pixels.
See also Layout.
Percentage
A string starting with a number (int) followed directly by %
. May be negative.
See also Layout.
Transformation
Transformations are specified as an object with the following properties:
- rotation: number, default:
0
Clock-wise rotation in radians. - scaleX: number, default:
1
Horizontal scale factor. - scaleY: number, default:
1
Vertical scale factor. - translationX: number, default:
0
Horizontal translation (shift) in dip. - translationY: number, default:
0
Vertical translation (shift) in dip. - translationZ: number, default:
0
Z-axis translation (shift) in dip. Android 5.0+ only.
Example:
{scaleX: 2, scaleY: 2, rotation: Math.PI * 0.75}
This transformation will make the widget twice as big and rotate it by 135°.
Selector
Selectors are used to filter a given list of widgets. A selector can be a string, a widget constructor, or a filter function.
- When it is a string, it may either reference a widget type (e.g.
'Button'
,'TextView'
), its id ('#myButton'
,'#myTextView'
), or its class property ('.myButtons'
). A'*'
matches all widgets. - When it is a widget constructor, a widget matches if it is an instance of that class/type. This is different from giving the type as a string, as subclasses are also matched. For example,
Composite
would match also match an instance ofTab
orPage
. - When it is a filter function, the function must accept a widget as the first parameter and return a boolean to indicate a match.
ImageData
Represents the underlying pixel data of an area of a canvas element. It is created using the creator methods on the CanvasContext: createImageData() and getImageData(). It can also be used to set a part of the canvas by using putImageData(). An ImageData object has the following read-only properties:
- data: Uint8ClampedArray one-dimensional array containing the data in the RGBA order, with integer values between
0
and255
- width: number width in pixels of the ImageData
- height: number height in pixels of the ImageData