How to justify the Binding Text ?
My code is shown below but it didn't help me
<StackLayout HorizontalOptions="Fill" Padding="20,20,20,20" Spacing="2">
<Label Text="{Binding MainText}" HorizontalOptions="Fill"
VerticalOptions="Center" XAlign="Start" LineBreakMode="WordWrap"
x:Name="aboutUs" TextColor="Black"/>
</StackLayout>
Short answer: Xamarin.Forms doesn't gives you a way to do it directly.
Longer answer:
The only valid values for HorizontalTextAlignment (which you should use instead of the deprecated XAlign) are Start, Center and End and doesn't provide any way to justify the text. So you can't justify a label.
If you really want to have justified text, you could:
implement your own LabelRenderer that supports it;
or, simpler, as it's an About Us box, use a WebView and rely on the HTML engine to justify the text for you.
Related
is it possible to round the corners of the XCT popup?
I tried to set the BackgroundColor to transparent, and to set the body in a frame with the option CornerRadius - but this does not work as desired.
Does anyone have a tip on how to round the corners?
<xct:Popup xmlns="http://xamarin.com/schemas/2014/forms"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2009/xaml"
x:Class="CashTracker.Views.ImagePopup"
xmlns:viewmodels="clr-namespace:CashTracker.ViewModels"
xmlns:xct="clr-namespace:Xamarin.CommunityToolkit.UI.Views;assembly=Xamarin.CommunityToolkit"
Size="300,400"
BackgroundColor="Transparent">
<Frame CornerRadius="20" HasShadow="True">
<StackLayout>
<Label Text="Aufgenommenes Foto" FontSize="Medium" HorizontalOptions="Center"/>
<Image x:Name="PopupImageSource"/>
</StackLayout>
</Frame>
</xct:Popup>
Xamarin XCT Popup
The popup should look like this - only without the white corners.
Xamarin Popup Frame
Somehow BackgroundColor was not working for Popup. Hence use the Color propperty for setting color of the Popup.
If you are using Frame in your layout, you can use Frame's CornerRadius for rounded corners (only if you are using Frame).
If you are not using Frame then you can use Xamarin Community Toolkit's CornerRadiusEffect.CornerRadius to set CornerRadius for any Layout, View or Control.
Hence for your question, it can be done by setting Popup's color as Transparent and your content's parent element must have property for corner radius and must have BackgroundColor set to White or any other Color as your Popup`s color is Transparent.
Here's the XAML
<xct:Popup ...
xmlns:xct="clr-namespace:Xamarin.CommunityToolkit.UI.Views;assembly=Xamarin.CommunityToolkit"
Size="300,400"
Color="Transparent">
<Frame CornerRadius="20" HasShadow="True">
<StackLayout>
<Label Text="Aufgenommenes Foto" FontSize="Medium" HorizontalOptions="Center"/>
</StackLayout>
</Frame>
//OR, if you don't need Frame then,
<StackLayout BackgroundColor="White" xct:CornerRadiusEffect.CornerRadius="10">
<Label Text="Aufgenommenes Foto" FontSize="Medium" HorizontalOptions="Center"/>
</StackLayout>
</xct:Popup>
There are lot of bugs in Xamarin Community Toolkit controls and views, we need to have some work-around for every control. Be it XCT's Popup, TabView, or extensions such as CornerRadius, ShadowEffect, TouchEffects, NativeAnimations, etc. The Community can't provide a single control without any bugs. But still, there are lots of useful features in XCT, hence we can only hope that the bugs are fixed, although the focus of fixing bugs if moved on to MAUI's Community Toolkit, until then we can use some work-arounds till stable and useful version of MAUI is released (considering its current status while writing this answer).
I am building this view currently:
This is a snapshot of the ios render, the code simply is:
<StackLayout>
<Image Source="img_logo"/>
</StackLayout>
But Android is not quite the same:
I tried everything, giving it verticaloptions, horizontaloptions, changing the aspect to everything, the image is never displayed as it is in ios. It is either clipped, or loses its original aspect ratio. I dont know what else to try here and why I have to do anything in the first place. Please tell me the atributes I need to use...
This code is expected to be rendered differently in some cases.
It is very important what is the target screen density of the image in your platform project. If it is different then obviously it will be rendered at a different size with the code above.
If you want to achieve the same look set the Width or Height property or both. Assuming that the container allows those values (that it is big enough) it will look exactly the same then.
If you want to adjust adjust the size of the image according to the space ratio of different views on the page, you can use Grid to achieve this.
You can set the width to Star or a special value.
For more about this, you can check rows-and-columns.
You can refer to the following code:
<ContentPage.Content>
<Grid>
<Grid.RowDefinitions>
<RowDefinition Height="*" />
<RowDefinition Height="200" />
</Grid.RowDefinitions>
<!-- Logo -->
<Image Grid.Row="0"
Source="test.png"
HorizontalOptions="FillAndExpand"
VerticalOptions="FillAndExpand"
/>
<!-- Sign In Button -->
<StackLayout Grid.Row="1" Padding="10,0,10,0" VerticalOptions="Center">
<Button VerticalOptions="Center" Text="Sign In " />
</StackLayout>
</Grid>
</ContentPage.Content>
I'm using trial version of syncfusion for testing.
I'm tring to use comboBox in an stackLayout but it won't show. as long as it fill the whole line it works but when i try to use it in an stacklayout it stop showing.
what should i do to use comboBox within an horizontal stacklayout?
this is my xaml code
<StackLayout Orientation="Horizontal">
<Button Text="T"/>
<comboBox:SfComboBox />
</StackLayout>
You need to specify a height request, so it will "reserve space" for displaying the ComboBox.
Check this example, you can change the value of HeightRequest according to your needs.
<combobox:SfComboBox HeightRequest="40" x:Name="comboBox"/>
I am trying to resize an ActivityIndicator (in Xamarin.Forms), but the Scale property does not work and the HeightRequest just crops the ActivityIndicator.
<StackLayout>
<ActivityIndicator HorizontalOptions="Center" VerticalOptions="StartAndExpand" HeightRequest="20" IsRunning="True" />
</StackLayout>
This is the result.
Any suggestions on what I might be doing wrong?
It seems sizing itself is not supported on the ActivityIndicator. In this case, scaling is your friend.
The cutting-off you see happening is because the ActivityIndicator is inside a StackLayout. Because of how a StackLayout works, it will only take up the space it needs. Since scaling doesn't necessarily make your ActivityIndicator bigger, you have two options:
Replace your StackLayout with a Grid
Give your ActivityIndicator a WidthRequest and HeightRequest that is big enough to keep your scaled ActivityIndicator
Note: Talking about iOS here. Width and height seem to work on Android
Remove HeightRequest="20", it blocks your scale property.
Code should look like this
<ActivityIndicator HorizontalOptions="Center" VerticalOptions="StartAndExpand" Scale="2" IsRunning="True" />
Now, you can scale to whatever size you want.
i have a issues with default margin of a button on xamarin forms. i need to take off the margin. some thought how i can make this ?? i need to use custom renderer?
I really need this to join two elements without leaving space, a label and a button.
i already try with
<Button
BackgroundColor="Fuchsia"
BorderRadius="0"
BorderWidth="0"
Text="Test"
HeightRequest="50"
WidthRequest="60"
TextColor="#333333"
x:Name="btnBack"
Margin="0"
VerticalOptions="Start"
HorizontalOptions="Start" />
but this not work for me, nothing happened.
other guys says that making a custom renderer maybe will work.
What are you using to lay out the label and the button? If StackLayout you may need to set the StackLayout Spacing property to 0 to remove the gap between the label and the button. If Grid look at RowSpacing and ColumnSpacing properties.
If you want to change margins dynamically, you would write something like this in C#
button.margin = new thickness(0,0,0,0);
This would make the margins of the button 0.
You would potentially do this for all elements with a thickness to change that issue.