Textview并不支持所有的html标签。如果更复杂的,可以直接使用webview组件。
Android TextView 支持的HTML标签
There is a lovely method on the android.text.Html
class, fromHtml()
, that converts HTML into a Spannable
for use with a TextView
.
However, the documentation does not stipulate what HTML tags are supported, which makes this method a bit hit-or-miss. More importantly, it means that you cannot rely on what it will support from release to release.
I have filed an issue requesting that Google formally document what it intends to support. In the interim, from a quick look at the source code, here’s what seems to be supported as of Android 2.1:
<a href="..."> 定义链接内容
<b>
定义粗体文字 b 是blod的缩写<big>
定义大字体的文字<blockquote>
引用块标签<br>
定义换行<cite>
表示引用的URI<dfn>
定义标签 dfn 是defining instance的缩写<div align="...">
<em>
强调标签 em 是emphasis的缩写<font size="..." color="..." face="...">
<h1>
<h2>
<h3>
<h4>
<h5>
<h6>
<i>
定义斜体文字<img src="...">
<p>
段落标签,里面可以加入文字,列表,表格等<small>
定义小字体的文字<strike>
定义删除线样式的文字 不符合标准网页设计的理念,不赞成使用. strike是strikethrough的缩写<strong>
重点强调标签<sub>
下标标签 sub 是subscript的缩写<sup>
上标标签 sup 是superscript的缩写<tt>
定义monospaced字体的文字 不赞成使用. 此标签对中文没意义 tt是teletype or monospaced text style的意思<u>
定义带有下划线的文字 u是underlined text style的意思
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You can highlight or style the formatting of strings or substrings of text in a TextView object. There are two ways to do this:
If you use a string resource, you can add some simple styling, such as bold or italic using HTML notation. The currently supported tags are: B (bold), I (italic), U (underline), TT (monospace), BIG, SMALL, SUP (superscript), SUB (subscript), and STRIKE (strikethrough). So, for example, in res/values/strings.xml you could declare this:
<resource>
<string>id="@+id/styled_welcome_message">We are <b><i>so</i></b> glad to see you.</string>
</resources>
To style text on the fly, or to add highlighting or more complex styling, you must use the Spannable object as described next.
To style text on the fly, you must make sure the TextView is using Spannable storage for the text (this will always be true if the TextView is an EditText), retrieve its text with getText(), and call setSpan(Object, int, int, int), passing in a new style class from the android.text.style package and the selection range.
The following code snippet demonstrates creating a string with a highlighted section, italic section, and bold section, and adding it to an EditText object.
// Get our EditText object.
EditText vw = (EditText)findViewById(R.id.text);
// Set the EditText's text.
vw.setText("Italic, highlighted, bold.");
// If this were just a TextView, we could do:
// vw.setText("Italic, highlighted, bold.", TextView.BufferType.SPANNABLE);
// to force it to use Spannable storage so styles can be attached.
// Or we could specify that in the XML.
// Get the EditText's internal text storage
Spannable str = vw.getText();
// Create our span sections, and assign a format to each.
str.setSpan(new StyleSpan(android.graphics.Typeface.ITALIC), 0, 7, Spannable.SPAN_EXCLUSIVE_EXCLUSIVE);
str.setSpan(new BackgroundColorSpan(0xFFFFFF00), 8, 19, Spannable.SPAN_EXCLUSIVE_EXCLUSIVE);
str.setSpan(new StyleSpan(android.graphics.Typeface.BOLD), 21, str.length() - 1, Spannable.SPAN_EXCLUSIVE_EXCLUSIVE);
I sometimes have the case to arrange the image next to the characters.
We can do it by putting TextView and ImageView into Layout.
But today I introduce the other way using only TextView.
The following sample code is how to show the image next to text.
(show four image(left, top, right, bottom of text))
final TextView textView = (TextView)findViewById(R.id.diet_log_label);
final Drawable iconDrawable = getResources().getDrawable(R.drawable.icon);
textView.setCompoundDrawablesWithIntrinsicBounds(iconDrawable, iconDrawable, iconDrawable, iconDrawable);
// or
textView.setCompoundDrawablesWithIntrinsicBounds(R.drawable.icon, R.drawable.icon, R.drawable.icon, R.drawable.icon);
To show only left image, write "setCompoundDrawablesWithIntrinsicBounds(iconDrawable, null, null, null)"