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You're reading from  Hands-On Android UI Development

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2017
Reading LevelExpert
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781788475051
Edition1st Edition
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Jason Morris
Jason Morris
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Jason Morris

Jason Morris has been developing software for as long as he can remember. He's written software for the desktop, the server, for feature phones and for smart phones. He's written in many languages, and deployed in a variety of countries. Jason loves a good programming challenge, and when he's not writing code, or spending time with his family, taking photo's or camping: he's probably thinking about programming. In 2010 / 2011 he wrote Android User Interface Development: A Beginners Guide, which helped many beginner Android developers take their first steps into the realm of User Interface design and development for mobile devices.
Read more about Jason Morris

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Exploring form screens


While not the most glamorous component of an application's user experience, form screens are a long-time staple of software. A form screen can be defined as any screen where the user is expected to explicitly enter or change data, as opposed to viewing or navigating it. Good examples of form screens are login screens, edit profile screens, or the add contact screen from a phonebook app. Over the years, the idea of what constitutes a good form screen has changed, with some people going as far as to shun them completely. However, you can't capture the user's data out of thin air.

The Android standard toolkit provides an excellent and diverse collection of widgets and layout structures to facilitate building excellent forms, and in Material Design applications, form screens can often double as a view screen (what will usually be a read-only version of the form screen) thanks to the placement of labels. A good way to understand this principle is to consider the evolution...

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Hands-On Android UI Development
Published in: Nov 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781788475051

Author (1)

author image
Jason Morris

Jason Morris has been developing software for as long as he can remember. He's written software for the desktop, the server, for feature phones and for smart phones. He's written in many languages, and deployed in a variety of countries. Jason loves a good programming challenge, and when he's not writing code, or spending time with his family, taking photo's or camping: he's probably thinking about programming. In 2010 / 2011 he wrote Android User Interface Development: A Beginners Guide, which helped many beginner Android developers take their first steps into the realm of User Interface design and development for mobile devices.
Read more about Jason Morris