The reason why Neil's suggestion results in a fullscreen DatePicker
is the choice of parent theme:
<!-- Theme.AppCompat.Light is not a dialog theme -->
<style name="DialogTheme" parent="**Theme.AppCompat.Light**">
<item name="colorAccent">@color/blue_500</item>
</style>
Moreover, if you go this route, you have to specify the theme while creating the DatePickerDialog
:
// R.style.DialogTheme
new DatePickerDialog(MainActivity.this, R.style.DialogTheme, new DatePickerDialog.OnDateSetListener() {
@Override
public void onDateSet(DatePicker view, int year, int monthOfYear, int dayOfMonth) {
//DO SOMETHING
}
}, 2015, 02, 26).show();
This, in my opinion, is not good. One should try to keep the styling out of java and inside styles.xml/themes.xml.
I do agree that Neil's suggestion, with a bit of change (changing the parent theme to say, Theme.Material.Light.Dialog
) will get you the desired result. But, here's the other way:
On first inspection, we come across datePickerStyle
which defines things such as: headerBackground
(what you are trying to change), dayOfWeekBackground
, and a few other text-colors and text-styles.
Overriding this attribute in your app's theme will not work. DatePickerDialog
uses a separate theme assignable by the attribute datePickerDialogTheme
. So, for our changes to take affect, we must override datePickerStyle
inside an overriden datePickerDialogTheme
.
Here we go:
Override datePickerDialogTheme
inside your app's base theme:
<style name="AppBaseTheme" parent="android:Theme.Material.Light">
....
<item name="android:datePickerDialogTheme">@style/MyDatePickerDialogTheme</item>
</style>
Define MyDatePickerDialogTheme
. The choice of parent theme will depend on what your app's base theme is: it could be either Theme.Material.Dialog
or Theme.Material.Light.Dialog
:
<style name="MyDatePickerDialogTheme" parent="android:Theme.Material.Light.Dialog">
<item name="android:datePickerStyle">@style/MyDatePickerStyle</item>
</style>
We have overridden datePickerStyle
with the style MyDatePickerStyle
. The choice of parent will once again depend on what your app's base theme is: either Widget.Material.DatePicker
or Widget.Material.Light.DatePicker
. Define it as per your requirements:
<style name="MyDatePickerStyle" parent="@android:style/Widget.Material.Light.DatePicker">
<item name="android:headerBackground">@color/chosen_header_bg_color</item>
</style>
Currently, we are only overriding headerBackground
which by default is set to ?attr/colorAccent
(this is also why Neil suggestion works in changing the background). But there's quite a lot of customization possible:
dayOfWeekBackground
dayOfWeekTextAppearance
headerMonthTextAppearance
headerDayOfMonthTextAppearance
headerYearTextAppearance
headerSelectedTextColor
yearListItemTextAppearance
yearListSelectorColor
calendarTextColor
calendarSelectedTextColor
If you don't want this much control (customization), you don't need to override datePickerStyle
. colorAccent
controls most of the DatePicker's
colors. So, overriding just colorAccent
inside MyDatePickerDialogTheme
should work:
<style name="MyDatePickerDialogTheme" parent="android:Theme.Material.Light.Dialog">
<item name="android:colorAccent">@color/date_picker_accent</item>
<!-- No need to override 'datePickerStyle' -->
<!-- <item name="android:datePickerStyle">@style/MyDatePickerStyle</item> -->
</style>
Overriding colorAccent
gives you the added benefit of changing OK
& CANCEL
text colors as well. Not bad.
This way you don't have to provide any styling information to DatePickerDialog's
constructor. Everything has been wired properly:
DatePickerDialog dpd = new DatePickerDialog(this, new DatePickerDialog.OnDateSetListener() {
@Override
public void onDateSet(DatePicker view, int year, int monthOfYear, int dayOfMonth) {
}
}, 2015, 5, 22);
dpd.show();