Before the library will work, make sure you have Silk
referenced as a dependency in both this library and your app. For best results, build Silk as a AAR file and install it to your local maven repository (see below).
Otherwise, you will need to copy the assets
folder from Silk
to your app due to the fact that this library uses font resources.
This process was written with the assumption that you are using Android Studio 0.2.11, gradle 1.8+, and you have recent Android Build Tools 18.0.1. Other versions may work with some adaptations.
You do not need to open this library in Android Studio to build and include it in your project.
Steps:
- Clone a copy of this repository.
- Determine the location of your copy of the Android SDK. (See Installing Android Studio to learn where the SDK might be installed.)
- Create a file at the root of the repository called
local.properties
. Add the following line, replacing "/path/to/sdk" with the actual path as determined above:
sdk.dir=/path/to/sdk
- At the root of the repository, run
./gradlew install
. You should see some ":library:..." lines in the output, and at the end something like this:
Uploading: com/afollestad/cardsui/library/1.0-SNAPSHOT/library-1.0-20131007.010822-2.aar to repository remote at file:///home/<username>/.m2/repository
Transferring 24K from remote
Uploaded 24K
:library:install
BUILD SUCCESSFUL
If you are including Silk directly in your app:
- Find the
build.gradle
file used for your project application, which is usually either in the project root or in a subdirectory in the project root. - Add
mavenLocal()
to therepositories
block andcompile 'com.afollestad.cardsui:library:1.0-SNAPSHOT
to thedependencies
block. Your file will look something like this:
buildscript {
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
classpath 'com.android.tools.build:gradle:0.5.+'
}
}
apply plugin: 'android'
repositories {
mavenLocal()
mavenCentral()
}
android {
compileSdkVersion 18
buildToolsVersion "17.0.0"
defaultConfig {
minSdkVersion 15
targetSdkVersion 18
}
}
dependencies {
compile 'com.afollestad.cardsui:library:1.0-SNAPSHOT'
}
- At the root of your project directory, run
./gradlew build
. You should see:<ProjectName>:prepareComAfollestadSilkLibrary10SNAPSHOTLibrary
or something like it in the output andBUILD SUCCESSFUL
at the end. - You're done. You can now use Cards UI in your app.
Implementing this library in your own apps is pretty simple. First, you need an XML layout that will contain the ListView
that displays your cards; it's recommended that you use the CardListView
class instead of a stock ListView
, as it
automates many things (such as notifying card headers that they were clicked and disabling the ListView divider and selector).
See the sample application for code details on how to start implementing the library into your own code.