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An Android library that allows you to easily create applications with slide-in menus like in the Facebook and Spotify applications (including sliding with a user's touches). You may use it in your Android apps provided that you cite this project and include the license in your app. Thanks!

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SlidingMenu

A sample Android project to explore creating slide-in menus like in the Spotify and Facebook applications. You can use it all you want in your Android apps provided that you cite this project and include the license in your app.

Here's a recent video of the example application in this repository : http://youtu.be/8vNaANLHw-c

Also, you can follow the project on Twitter : @SlidingMenu

Setup

  • In Eclipse, just import the library as an Android library project. Project > Clean to generate the binaries you need, like R.java, etc.
  • Then, just add SlidingMenu as a dependency to your existing project and you're good to go!

Setup with ActionBarSherlock

  • Setup as above.
  • Checkout a clean copy of ActionBarSherlock and import into your Eclipse workspace.
  • Add ActionBarSherlock as a dependency to SlidingMenu
  • Go into the SlidingActivities that you plan on using make them extend Sherlock___Activity instead of ___Activity.

How to Integrate this Library into Your Projects

In order to integrate SlidingMenu into your own projects you can do one of two things.

1. You can embed the SlidingMenu at the Activity level by making your Activity extend SlidingActivity.

  • In your Activity's onCreate method, you will have to call setContentView, as usual, and also setBehindContentView, which has the same syntax as setContentView. setBehindContentView will place the view in the "behind" portion of the SlidingMenu. You will have access to the getSlidingMenu method so you can customize the SlidingMenu to your liking.
  • If you want to use another library such as ActionBarSherlock, you can just change the SlidingActivities to extend the SherlockActivities instead of the regular Activities.

2. You can use the SlidingMenu view directly in your xml layouts or programmatically in you Java code.

  • This way, you can treat SlidingMenu as you would any other view type and put it in crazy awesome places like in the rows of a ListView.
  • So. Many. Possibilities.

Usage

If you decide to use SlidingMenu as a view, you can define it in your xml layouts like this:

<com.slidingmenu.lib.SlidingMenu
    xmlns:sliding="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
    android:id="@+id/slidingmenulayout"
    android:layout_width="fill_parent"
    android:layout_height="fill_parent"
    sliding:viewAbove="@layout/YOUR_ABOVE_VIEW"
    sliding:viewBehind="@layout/YOUR_BEHIND_BEHIND"
    sliding:touchModeAbove="margin|fullscreen"
    sliding:touchModeBehind="margin|fullscreen"
    sliding:behindOffset="@dimen/YOUR_OFFSET"
    sliding:behindWidth="@dimen/YOUR_WIDTH"
    sliding:behindScrollScale="@dimen/YOUR_SCALE"
    sliding:shadowDrawable="@drawable/YOUR_SHADOW"
    sliding:shadowWidth="@dimen/YOUR_SHADOW_WIDTH" />

NOTE : you cannot use both behindOffset and behindWidth. You will get an exception if you try.

  • viewAbove - a reference to the layout that you want to use as the above view of the SlidingMenu
  • viewBehind - a reference to the layout that you want to use as the behind view of the SlidingMenu
  • touchModeAbove - an enum that designates what part of the screen is touchable when the above view is showing. Margin means only the left margin. Fullscreen means the entire screen. Default is margin.
  • touchModeBehind - an enum that designates what part of the screen is touchable when the behind view is showing. Margin means only what is showing of the above view. Fullscreen means the entire screen. Default is margin.
  • behindOffset - a dimension representing the number of pixels that you want the above view to show when the behind view is showing. Default is 0.
  • behindWidth - a dimension representing the width of the behind view. Default is the width of the screen (equivalent to behindOffset = 0).
  • behindScrollScale - a float representing the relationship between the above view scrolling and the behind behind view scrolling. If set to 0.5f, the behind view will scroll 1px for every 2px that the above view scrolls. If set to 1.0f, the behind view will scroll 1px for every 1px that the above view scrolls. And if set to 0.0f, the behind view will never scroll; it will be static. This one is fun to play around with. Default is 0.25f.
  • shadowDrawable - a reference to a drawable to be used as a drop shadow from the above view onto the below view. Default is no shadow for now.
  • shadowWidth - a dimension representing the width of the shadow drawable. Default is 0.

Caveats

  • Your layouts have to be based on a viewgroup, unfortunatly this negates the <merge> optimisations.

Developed By

  • Jeremy Feinstein

License

Copyright 2012 Jeremy Feinstein

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.

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An Android library that allows you to easily create applications with slide-in menus like in the Facebook and Spotify applications (including sliding with a user's touches). You may use it in your Android apps provided that you cite this project and include the license in your app. Thanks!

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