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How can I get color-int from color resource?

Is there any way to get a color-int from a color resource?

I am trying to get the individual red, blue and green components of a color defined in the resource (R.color.myColor) so that I can set the values of three seekbars to a specific level.


Q
Quantum_VC

You can use:

getResources().getColor(R.color.idname);

Check here on how to define custom colors:

http://sree.cc/google/android/defining-custom-colors-using-xml-in-android

EDIT(1): Since getColor(int id) is deprecated now, this must be used :

ContextCompat.getColor(context, R.color.your_color);

(added in support library 23)

EDIT(2):

Below code can be used for both pre and post Marshmallow (API 23)

ResourcesCompat.getColor(getResources(), R.color.your_color, null); //without theme

ResourcesCompat.getColor(getResources(), R.color.your_color, your_theme); //with theme

what about android.R.color.some_color :-(
@Blundell uhh, dunno if you need it now but this works for android.R.color.some_color too e.g.: getResources().getColor(android.R.color.holo_blue_bright) (at least, on API 17)
getColor() is now deprecated, you can use: ContextCompat.getColor(context, R.color.your_color);
Why does Google feel the need to deprecate a perfectly good function for that awful app compact library. It sucks, have both.
I am perpetually in awe of the atrociousness of this platform... at a loss for words.
U
Ultimo_m

Based on the new Android Support Library (and this update), now you should call:

ContextCompat.getColor(context, R.color.name.color);

According to the documentation:

public int getColor (int id)

This method was deprecated in API level 23. Use getColor(int, Theme) instead

It is the same solution for getResources().getColorStateList(id):

You have to change it like this:

ContextCompat.getColorStateList(getContext(),id);

EDIT 2019

Regarding ThemeOverlay use the context of the closest view:

val color = ContextCompat.getColor(
  closestView.context,
  R.color.name.color
)

So this way you get the right color based on your ThemeOverlay.

Specially needed when in same activity you use different themes, like dark/light theme. If you would like to understand more about Themes and Styles this talk is suggested: Developing Themes with Style

https://i.stack.imgur.com/se7Wr.png


For those wondering what to fill in as the theme in the new method, Theme can be passed as null, so just call getColor(R.color.my_color, null) if you're unsure what theme to pass in.
hmm... this is what everyone says but i can't get it to work. Do i have to initialize context? Currently I get "cannot resolve symbol 'context'"
To make sure that you are doing it right, try calling it inside the onCreate of the activity, than to get context you need to call getContext() or just "this"
S
Suragch

Define your color

values/color.xml

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<resources>

    <!-- color int as #AARRGGBB (alpha, red, green, blue) -->
    <color name="orange">#fff3632b</color>
    ...
    <color name="my_view_color">@color/orange</color>

</resources>

Get the color int and set it

int backgroundColor = ContextCompat.getColor(context, R.color.my_view_color);
// Color backgroundColor = ... (Don't do this. The color is just an int.)

myView.setBackgroundColor(backgroundColor);

See also

How to set background color of a View

Color docs

Color Style Design docs


can you only use getResources() in an Activity or Fragment ?
@Zapnologica, see the answers to this question for thoughts on using getResources() outside of an Activity or Fragment.
@Zapnologica no. getResources() is also available as a public API on anything implementing Context and also on Views.
K
Khemraj Sharma

Best Approach

As @sat answer, good approach for getting color is

ResourcesCompat.getColor(getResources(), R.color.your_color, null);

or use below way when you don't have access to getResources() method.

Context context  = getContext(); // like Dialog class
ResourcesCompat.getColor(context.getResources(), R.color.your_color, null);

What i do is

public void someMethod(){
    ...
    ResourcesCompat.getColor(App.getRes(), R.color.your_color, null);
}

It is most simple to use anywhere in your app! Even in Util class or any class where you don't have Context or getResource()

Problem (When you don't have Context)

When you don't have Context access, like a method in your Util class.

Assume below method without Context.

public void someMethod(){
    ...
    // can't use getResource() without Context.
}

Now you will pass Context as a parameter in this method and use getResources().

public void someMethod(Context context){
    ...
    context.getResources...
}

So here is a Bonus unique solution by which you can access resources from anywhere like Util class . Add Resources to your Application class or Create one if does not exist.

import android.app.Application;
import android.content.res.Resources;

public class App extends Application {
    private static App mInstance;
    private static Resources res;


    @Override
    public void onCreate() {
        super.onCreate();
        mInstance = this;
        res = getResources();
    }

    public static App getInstance() {
        return mInstance;
    }

    public static Resources getResourses() {
        return res;
    }

}

Add name field to your manifest.xml <application tag. (If not added already)

<application
        android:name=".App"
        ...
        >
        ...
    </application>

Now you are good to go. Use ResourcesCompat.getColor(App.getRes(), R.color.your_color, null); anywhere in app.


B
Blasanka

If your current min. API level is 23, you can simply use getColor() like we are using for getString():

//example
textView.setTextColor(getColor(R.color.green));
// if context is not available(ex: not in activity) use with context.getColor()

If you want below API level 23, just use this:

textView.setTextColor(getResources().getColor(R.color.green));

But note that getResources().getColor() is deprecated in API Level 23. In that case replace above with:

textView.setTextColor(ContextCompat.getColor(this /*context*/, R.color.green)) //Im in an activity, so I can use `this`

ContextCompat: Helper for accessing features in Context

If You want, you can constraint with SDK_INT like below:

if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.M) {
    textView.setTextColor(getColor(R.color.green));
} else {
    textView.setTextColor(getResources().getColor(R.color.green));
}

g
geckoflume

Found an easier way that works as well:

Color.parseColor(getString(R.color.idname);

Interesting, didn't realise you could get the color as a string in this way. I don't think it's easier, but it's interesting 😅
n
ninjachippie

I updated to use ContextCompat.getColor(context, R.color.your_color); but sometimes (On some devices/Android versions. I'm not sure) that causes a NullPointerExcepiton.

So to make it work on all devices/versions, I fall back on the old way of doing it, in the case of a null pointer.

try {
    textView.setTextColor(ContextCompat.getColor(getActivity(), R.color.text_grey_dark));
}
catch(NullPointerException e) {
    if(Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.M) {
        textView.setTextColor(getContext().getColor(R.color.text_grey_dark));
    }
    else {
        textView.setTextColor(getResources().getColor(R.color.text_grey_dark));
    }
}

why not use the old version in all cases, or if you are checking the version anyway, use the new API Resources.getColor(int, Theme) if you can? You should not catch runtime exceptions.
Just OCD I suppose. ContextCompat, to me seems to be the future proof way of doing it, and therefore the right way. So my approach is, do it the right way. And if that fails (on old devices or whatever), do it the old way. Why should I not catch exceptions at runtime?
a
ataulm

For more information on another use-case that may help surface this question in search results, I wanted to apply alpha to a color defined in my resources.

Using @sat's correct answer:

int alpha = ... // 0-255, calculated based on some business logic
int actionBarBackground = getResources().getColor(R.color.actionBarBackground);
int actionBarBackgroundWithAlpha = Color.argb(
        alpha,
        Color.red(actionbarBackground),
        Color.green(actionbarBackground),
        Color.blue(actionbarBackground)
);

C
Confuse

Accessing colors from a non-activity class can be difficult. One of the alternatives that I found was using enum. enum offers a lot of flexibility.

public enum Colors
{
  COLOR0(0x26, 0x32, 0x38),    // R, G, B
  COLOR1(0xD8, 0x1B, 0x60),
  COLOR2(0xFF, 0xFF, 0x72),
  COLOR3(0x64, 0xDD, 0x17);


  private final int R;
  private final int G;
  private final int B;

  Colors(final int R, final int G, final int B)
  {
    this.R = R;
    this.G = G;
    this.B = B;
  }

  public int getColor()
  {
    return (R & 0xff) << 16 | (G & 0xff) << 8 | (B & 0xff);
  }

  public int getR()
  {
    return R;
  }

  public int getG()
  {
    return G;
  }

  public int getB()
  {
    return B;
  }
}

z
zedlabs

Most Recent working method:

getColor(R.color.snackBarAction)

l
lue
ContextCompat.getColor(context, R.color.your_color);

in activity

ContextCompat.getColor(actvityname.this, R.color.your_color);

in fragment

ContextCompat.getColor(getActivity(), R.color.your_color);

for example:

tvsun.settextcolour(ContextCompat.getColor(getActivity(), R.color.your_color))

A
APP Bird

In kotlin just use this in your activity

R.color.color_name

ex-

mytextView.setTextColor(R.color.red_900)

This doesn't answer the question.
Get a warning Should pass resolved color instead of resource id here: getResources().getColor(R.color.Black)
B
Bruno Bieri

or if you have a function(string text,string color) and you need to pass the Resource Color String you can do as follow

String.valueOf(getResources().getColor(R.color.enurse_link_color))