page.title=Hiding the Navigation Bar trainingnavtop=true @jd:body
This lesson describes how to hide the navigation bar, which was introduced in Android 4.0 (API level 14).
Even though this lesson focuses on hiding the navigation bar, you should design your app to hide the status bar at the same time, as described in Hiding the Status Bar. Hiding the navigation and status bars (while still keeping them readily accessible) lets the content use the entire display space, thereby providing a more immersive user experience.
You can hide the navigation bar using the {@link android.view.View#SYSTEM_UI_FLAG_HIDE_NAVIGATION} flag. This snippet hides both the navigation bar and the status bar:
View decorView = getWindow().getDecorView(); // Hide both the navigation bar and the status bar. // SYSTEM_UI_FLAG_FULLSCREEN is only available on Android 4.1 and higher, but as // a general rule, you should design your app to hide the status bar whenever you // hide the navigation bar. int uiOptions = View.SYSTEM_UI_FLAG_HIDE_NAVIGATION | View.SYSTEM_UI_FLAG_FULLSCREEN; decorView.setSystemUiVisibility(uiOptions);
Note the following:
On Android 4.1 and higher, you can set your application's content to appear behind the navigation bar, so that the content doesn't resize as the navigation bar hides and shows. To do this, use {@link android.view.View#SYSTEM_UI_FLAG_LAYOUT_HIDE_NAVIGATION}. You may also need to use {@link android.view.View#SYSTEM_UI_FLAG_LAYOUT_STABLE} to help your app maintain a stable layout.
When you use this approach, it becomes your responsibility to ensure that critical parts of your app's UI don't end up getting covered by system bars. For more discussion of this topic, see the Hiding the Status Bar lesson.