• Introduction
  • Dev Environment Setup
  • Developing Apps
  • Data Handling
  • Device Capabilities
  • Testing & Debugging
  • Extending
Warning Older Docs! - You are viewing documentation for a previous released version of RhoMobile Suite.

Application Name, Icons and Splash Screen

Application Name

In the build.yml in your application folder there is an entry “name”. This is the display name that the user will see on the device. Example:

name: My Own App

Application Icons

The work with icons and splashes were changed for iOS ans Android since Rhodes 7.0.
Drawable resources for these platforms are located in `resourse/` path now. See Android, iOS sections for details.
The Rhodes framework continues to support the old way of working with icons and splashes for other platforms.

If you created an app called testapp then the folder would be testapp/icon.

  • Windows Mobile, Windows: You can add an icon in two formats: icon.png and icon.ico.

      testapp/
          build.yml
          Rakefile
          rhoconfig.txt
          app/
          public/
          icon/
              icon.png
              icon.ico
    

iOS

  • Target->info->General->Name
  • Target->info->Build->Product Name (for all configurations)
  • rhodes\platform\iphone\icon.png, icon57.png, icon72.png, icon114.png - change to your icons
  • check rhodes\platform\iphone\Info.plist it should contain BundleName=${PRODUCT_NAME}

Splash Screen Images on Different Devices

Apple has released a lot of devices with varying sizes and you must account for this in building your app by using the following files for their respective devices.

  • loading-568h@2x.png - size 640x1136 - for iPhone 5/5S/5C
  • loading-667h@2x.png - size 750x1334 - for iPhone 6
  • loading-736h@3x.png - size 1242x2208 - for iPhone 6-Plus

In XCode, these files will be converted to the following file names. also just add the files into the XCode project.

  • Default-568h@2x.png - size 640x1136 - for iPhone 5/5S/5C
  • Default-667h@2x.png - size 750x1334 - for iPhone 6
  • Default-736h@3x.png - size 1242x2208 - for iPone 6 Plus

If you choose to manually add the files into your XCode project, you’ll need to also edit your info.plist as such:

<key>UILaunchImages</key>
<array>
    <dict>
        <key>UILaunchImageMinimumOSVersion</key>
        <string>8.0</string>
        <key>UILaunchImageName</key>
        <string>Default-568h</string>
        <key>UILaunchImageOrientation</key>
        <string>Portrait</string>
        <key>UILaunchImageSize</key>
        <string>{320, 568}</string>
    </dict>
    <dict>
        <key>UILaunchImageMinimumOSVersion</key>
        <string>8.0</string>
        <key>UILaunchImageName</key>
        <string>Default-667h</string>
        <key>UILaunchImageOrientation</key>
        <string>Portrait</string>
        <key>UILaunchImageSize</key>
        <string>{375, 667}</string>
    </dict>
    <dict>
        <key>UILaunchImageMinimumOSVersion</key>
        <string>8.0</string>
        <key>UILaunchImageName</key>
        <string>Default-736h</string>
        <key>UILaunchImageOrientation</key>
        <string>Portrait</string>
        <key>UILaunchImageSize</key>
        <string>{414, 736}</string>
    </dict>
</array>

Android

The application icons and splashes are located in /resources/android/res/drawable[-resolution].
For example , the image /resources/android/res/drawable/icon.png will be used as the application icon.
You can add icon with apppriate resolution to drawable-[resultion] folders.

Windows Mobile

Windows Mobile Shell program caches program icons. This cache is cleared only when the device or the simulator is restarted. If you change the icon of your application, you have to restart the device or simulator: uninstall/install is not enough.

Loading screen

The work with icons and splashes were changed for iOS ans Android since Rhodes 7.0.
Drawable resources for these platforms are located in `resourse/` path now. See Android, iOS sections for details.
The Rhodes framework continues to support the old way of working with icons and splashes for other platforms.

Rhodes supports the display of a custom “Loading” screen while your application is launching.

iOS and Android

  • Android: The application splashes are located in /resources/android/res/drawable[-resolution]/loading.png.
  • iOS: The application splash are located in /resources/ios/Default[-resolution].png.

Windows, Sailfish and deprecated way for iOS and Android

This screen’s source is the file loading.html, located at /app/loading.html.

Alternatively, you can replace loading.html with an image named loading.png if you just want a simple image to be displayed.

You can control how image presented by modifying splash_screen options in rhoconfig.txt:

  • delay - how long splash screen should be displayed (in seconds)
  • center,vcenter,hcenter - picture alignment
  • zoom,vzoom,hzoom - scaling options

Examples:

Place the splash screen in the center and show it for 5 seconds: :::ruby splash_screen=‘delay=5;center’

Center the splash screen horizontally, scale it vertically to file all available space, and show it for 5 seconds: :::ruby splash_screen=‘delay=5;hcenter;vzoom’

You can customize you loading image (showed on start of application) for each platform by platform suffix:

  • Android loading.android.png
  • iPhone loading.iPhone.png
  • WM loading.wm.png

If application doesn’t have platform specific loading.png, then Rhodes will try to load default loading.png.

For iPhone you may define a set of loading images. See Apple documentation about these images, section Application Launch Images in Build-Time Configuration Details.

If you are building for iPhone using rake commands, place loading.png to your applications “app” folder. If you created an app called testapp then the folder would be testapp/app. Also you can add some additional images for so loading screen look better on different devices:

  • loading.png - size 320x480 - size 320x480 – for iPhone/iPod/iPad and other non iOS devices.
  • loading@2x.png - size 640x960 – for from iPhone4/iPod4/Iphone4S (retina).
  • loading-Portrait.png - size 768x1024 – for iPad in Portrait orientation.
  • loading-Portrait@2x.png - size 1536x2048 - for iPad retina in Portrait orientation.
  • loading-PortraitUpsideDown.png - size 768x1024 – for iPad in Portrait Upside Down orientation.
  • loading-PortraitUpsideDown@2x.png - size 1536x2048 – for iPad retina in Portrait Upside Down orientation.
  • loading-Landscape.png - size 1024x768 – for iPad in Landscape orientation.
  • loading-Landscape@2x.png - size 2048x1536 – for iPad retina in Landscape orientation.
  • loading-LandscapeLeft.png - size 1024x768 – for iPad in Landscape Left orientation.
  • loading-LandscapeLeft@2x.png - size 2048x1536 – for iPad retina in Landscape Left orientation.
  • loading-LandscapeRight.png - size 1024x768 - size 1024x768 – for iPad in Landscape Right orientation.
  • loading-LandscapeRight@2x.png - size 2048x1536 – for iPad retina in Landscape Right orientation.

If you are using xCode to build for iPhone, you should add to your project Default.png image. You can also add some additional images for better work on different devices:

  • Default.png - size 320x480 - for iPhone/iPod/iPhone4/iPad
  • Default@2x.png - size 640x960 - for iPhone4/iPod4, if not defined then use Default.png
  • Default-Portrait.png - size 768x1024 - for iPad in Portrait orientation on start, if not defined then Default@2x.png will be used
  • Default-PortraitUpsideDown.png - size 768x1024 - for iPad in Portrait orientation on start, if not defined then Default-Portrait.png will be used
  • Default-Landscape.png - size 1024x768 - for iPad in Landscape orientation on start, if not defined then Default@2x.png will be used
  • Default-LandscapeLeft.png - size 1024x768 - for iPad in LandscapeLeft orientation on start, if not defined then Default-Landscape.png will be used
  • Default-LandscapeRight.png - size 1024x768 - for iPad in LandscapeRight orientation on start, if not defined then Default-Landscape.png will be used

Note: Use rake command “rake build:iphone:setup_xcode_project” to setup the XCode project for changes in the current application (include loading images, icons, etc.)

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