Android.Widget.ImageButton Class

xml Example

 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
 <selector xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
     <item android:state_pressed="true"
           android:drawable="@drawable/button_pressed" /> <!-- pressed -->
     <item android:state_focused="true"
           android:drawable="@drawable/button_focused" /> <!-- focused -->
     <item android:drawable="@drawable/button_normal" /> <!-- default -->
 </selector>

See Also: ImageButton Members

Syntax

[Android.Runtime.Register("android/widget/ImageButton", DoNotGenerateAcw=true)]
public class ImageButton : ImageView

Remarks

xml Example

 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
 <selector xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
     <item android:state_pressed="true"
           android:drawable="@drawable/button_pressed" /> <!-- pressed -->
     <item android:state_focused="true"
           android:drawable="@drawable/button_focused" /> <!-- focused -->
     <item android:drawable="@drawable/button_normal" /> <!-- default -->
 </selector>

Displays a button with an image (instead of text) that can be pressed or clicked by the user. By default, an ImageButton looks like a regular Android.Widget.Button, with the standard button background that changes color during different button states. The image on the surface of the button is defined either by the android:src attribute in the XML element or by the ImageView.SetImageResource(int) method.

To remove the standard button background image, define your own background image or set the background color to be transparent.

To indicate the different button states (focused, selected, etc.), you can define a different image for each state. E.g., a blue image by default, an orange one for when focused, and a yellow one for when pressed. An easy way to do this is with an XML drawable "selector." For example:

Save the XML file in your project res/drawable/ folder and then reference it as a drawable for the source of your ImageButton (in the android:src attribute). Android will automatically change the image based on the state of the button and the corresponding images defined in the XML.

The order of the elements is important because they are evaluated in order. This is why the "normal" button image comes last, because it will only be applied after android:state_pressed and android:state_focused have both evaluated false.

See the Buttons guide.

XML attributes

See NoType:android/R$styleable;Href=../../../reference/android/R.styleable.html#ImageView, NoType:android/R$styleable;Href=../../../reference/android/R.styleable.html#View

[Android Documentation]

Requirements

Namespace: Android.Widget
Assembly: Mono.Android (in Mono.Android.dll)
Assembly Versions: 0.0.0.0
Since: Added in API level 1