APL Style Definition and Evaluation


A style is a named entity that defines a set of visual properties. You can use the style to consistently set those properties on a component. Styles can include conditional logic and can use component state. For example, a style could change text color depending on whether the component's state is checked.

Style definitions

A style definition specifies the name of the style, a list of one or more parent styles to inherit from, and an ordered list of conditionally-applied property definitions. The following example shows a style definition title suitable for use by the Text component. It sets the size of the font and the color. The color changes based on the state of the Text component and current theme.

  "styles": {
    "baseText": {
      "values": [
        {
          "fontFamily": "Amazon Ember",
          "color": "${viewport.theme == 'dark' ? 'white' : 'black' }"
        },
        {
          "when": "${state.karaoke}",
          "color": "blue"
        }
      ]
    },
    "title": {
      "extends": "baseText",
      "values": [
        {
          "fontWeight": 700,
          "fontSize": "${viewport.height > 400 ? 30 : 25}"
        }
      ]
    }
  }

For example, the title style on a device with a large viewport, dark theme, and focused state evaluates to:

{
    "fontFamily": "Amazon Ember Display",
    "color": "blue",
    "fontWeight": 700,
    "fontSize": 30
}
Which properties can you set in a style?

Not all component properties can be set with styles. See Styled Properties for a reference to all styled properties across all components. For an individual component, note the table of available component properties. Properties that you can set in a style for that component are indicated with "Yes" in the "Styled" column of the table. For example, see the Text properties table and note that all properties except text are styled.

Definition properties

Each style definition has the following properties.

Property Type Required Description
description String No A description of this style
extend, extends Array of style names No List the styles that this style inherits from. Order is important; later items override earlier.
value, values Array of VALUE objects No An array of objects 

The extend array contains an ordered list of styles that this style inherits from. The access property controls whether or not this style is available outside of the defining package.

The values array contains an ordered list of value objects to apply. Each value object has the form:

{
  "when": EXPRESSION,
  NAME: VALUE,
  NAME: VALUE,
  :
}

The when property is optional and defaults to true when not defined. The defined properties must be the names of valid styled properties. Invalid property names are ignored.. The data-binding context for the when clause contains the viewport, environment, resource definitions, and styles that appear earlier in the document or in imported packages.

Component state

Each component has a state. A state is a collection of defined Boolean properties that can change as the user interacts with the APL document. The following table lists all state properties:

Property Definition
checked The component has been checked or toggled on
disabled Component has been disabled (many components have a "disabled" property) 
focused Component has the keyboard input focus
karaoke The component is being spoken by a speech command
karaokeTarget An element within the component is the specific target for a current speech command.
pressed Mouse or touch input is active
hover The component has a cursor (mouse pointer) over the active input region.

Each component state is a Boolean property. All component states are applicable to all components. For example, a Container has a checked and disabled state even though those states might not have any visual effect on the Container.

When a style is evaluated, the component states are exposed in the data-binding context as a map of Boolean values under the state keyword. For example, you can access the checked state as ${state.checked}.

The component states are set during component creation and might change based on user interaction, such as by touching the screen or using a keyboard, or with commands. For example, a touchable component such as a TouchWrapper responds to touch or keyboard events by setting the pressed state. The combination of component states and styles changes the visual appearance of a component.

Changing the state of a component doesn't change the state of the children in a component unless you set the inheritParentState property. The following example shows a Text component that changes color when the user presses the component. The Text component is wrapped in TouchWrapper and is set to inherit the state of the TouchWrapper:

Definition of a style:

{
  "textStylePressable": {
    "values": [
      {
        "color": "white"
      },
      {
        "when": "${state.pressed}",
        "color": "green"
      }
    ]
  }
}

Use of the style in a layout:

{
   "type": "TouchWrapper",
   "item": {
     "type": "Text",
     "inheritParentState": true,
     "style": "textStylePressable",
     "text": "Push Me!"
   }
}

The following example shows the textStylePressable. The text color changes to green when you press and hold the "Push Me" text.


Note the following rules around component state:

  1. Use the SetValue command to change to change the checked and disabled states.
  2. A disabled component can't have the hover, pressed, or focused states set to true. Setting the disabled state to true on a component automatically sets the hover, pressed, and focused states to false.

Component State Control

The following table summarizes state values and changes:

Concept checked disabled focused karaoke karaokeTarget pressed hover
Initialized by property Yes Yes -- -- -- -- --
Controlled by SetValue Yes Yes -- -- -- -- --
Controlled by SetFocus -- -- Yes -- -- -- --
Controlled by ClearFocus -- -- Yes -- -- -- --
Changed by touch -- -- -- -- -- Yes --
Changed by keyboard events -- -- Yes -- -- Yes --
Changed by cursor enter/exit events -- -- -- -- -- -- Yes
Controlled by SpeakItem/List -- -- -- Yes Yes -- --
Appears in event.source.value Yes -- -- -- -- -- --
Appears in visual context Yes Yes Yes -- -- -- --

The following example shows the checked, disabled, and pressed states.


The following sections detail state behavior.

checked

Components use the checked state to behave like a check box or radio button. You can control the checked state for a component. It has the following characteristics:

  • You can initialize the checked state in the component definition.
  • You can change checked dynamically with the SetValue command.
  • The visual context reports the checked state.

When pressed, the TouchWrapper component reports the checked state of the component in the event.source.value property. Use the checked state to toggle check boxes as shown in the following example.

{
  "onPress": {
    "type": "SetValue",
    "property": "checked",
    "value": "${!event.source.checked}"
  }
}

Touching a component on the screen doesn't automatically set or clear the checked state. You must change the state with the SetValue command.

disabled

The disabled state indicates that a component which normally responds to touch or keyboard events isn't available.

  • You can initialize the disabled state in the component definition.
  • You can change the disabled state dynamically with the SetValue command.
  • The visual context reports the disabled state.

A disabled component can't receive focus, doesn't respond to cursor change events, and can't be pressed. Setting the disabled state to true on a component sets the hover, focused and pressed states to false.

A disabled component can't receive focus and can't be pressed. Setting the disabled state on a component to true clears the pressed and focused states.

Disabling a component that contains children has no effect on the children of the disabled component unless they inherit their parent's state. For example, an enabled TouchWrapper placed inside of a disabled Container displays normally and responds to touch events.

focused

The focused state reflects if the component currently has active focus in the runtime. The focused state only applies to actionable components which can be controlled by a keyboard. The actionable components are: TouchWrapper, Pager, ScrollView, and Sequence.

  • The focused state defaults to false when the component is initialized.
  • You can change the focused dynamically with the SetFocus and ClearFocus commands.
  • The visual context reports the focused state.

The focused state is controlled only by user navigation with keyboard events, OR through use of the SetFocus and ClearFocus commands. The SetValue command can't change the focused state.

One parent component at a time has focused state set to true. Child components with the inheritParentState property set are assigned the focused state for visual display, but don't receive keyboard events.

See the actionable component onFocus and onBlur properties for details on the event handlers associated with changes in the focused state.

karaoke/karaokeTarget

The karaoke state highlights a component when Alexa speaks or describes that component. The karaokeTarget state highlights a subsection of the component being spoken or described by Alexa.

The karaoke state is controlled by the SpeakList and SpeakItem commands. The SetValue command can't change the karaoke state.

For more about how to define karaoke styling, see Karaoke style calculations.

pressed

The pressed state highlights a component when the user touches it or presses the "enter" key on a keyboard. The pressed state applies to touchable components.

The TouchWrapper component sets the pressed state when the user touches the component and releases the pressed state when the user either releases the touch or drags outside of the component bounds. The pressed state is re-entered if the user drags out and then drags back in.

The onPress event handler for TouchWrapper only fires if the user presses and releases in the same component. The onPress command fires after the pressed state has been released.

hover

The hover state reflects if the component currently has a cursor (mouse pointer) over its active region. This state is only relevant on devices that have a cursor (mouse pointer) input controller. The hover state is set with the following algorithm. The system finds the top component under the cursor. Components that have the "display" property set to anything other than "visible" are ignored. If that component is disabled, no hover state is set. If that component has "inheritParentState" true, the first ancestor of that component with "inheritParentState" false has the hover state set. Otherwise, the component has the hover state set.

Not all devices have a cursor. On a device without a cursor, the hover state of all components is fixed to false.

Disabled components don't respond to changes in cursor events or change hover states, but they do consume the cursor behavior over their active region as if they were enabled. A disabled child component of an enabled parent doesn't pass-through the cursor position within its active region to its parent, but rather consumes all cursor activity over its active region. See the component display property for a more detailed breakdown of disabled component pass-through behavior.

See onCursorEnter and onCursorExit for details on the event handler associated with changes in the hover state.

Evaluation of a style

Each component references a named style either explicitly or implicitly (device runtimes have default styles for each component). The style evaluation occurs in a restricted data-binding context with just the viewport,state, and resource definitions.

The calculated style is a function of the viewport, resources, and state. The calculation algorithm can be approximated with this pseudo-code:

function _calcInternal(style, context):
  result = {};

  // Walk the extend array
  foreach style.extend as name:
    result += _calcInternal( getStyleByName(name), context)

  // Walk the values array
  foreach values as value:
    if evaluate(value.when):
      result += evaluateEach(value)

  return result

function calculateStyle(style, context, state):
  workingContext = extendContext(context, { state: state })
  return _calcInternal(style, workingContext)

The extend array is calculated first, followed by the values blocks (in order).

Karaoke style calculations

The karaoke state property is set by the commands SpeakItem and SpeakList commands. In most cases the karaoke state behaves just like any other state where all styled properties can be modified freely. There are two points for karaoke mode that should be kept in mind.

First, the SpeakItem and SpeakList commands scroll content into view before karaoke styling is applied. If the karaoke styling makes dramatic visual changes to the screen, the content might move unexpectedly after the scrolling has finished. Therefore, minimize changes that alter the position of components on the screen. This includes changing the size of components, text, fonts, and borders.

Second, the SpeakItem property might be set to "highlight" individual lines of text during karaoke. When this highlighting mode is selected, the block of text is assigned the karaoke state and the active line of text being spoken is assigned both the karaoke state and the karaokeTarget state. The karaokeTarget state can only change the color of the highlighted text.

For example:

{
  "styles": {
    "karaokeText": {
      "values": [
        {
          "color": "#fafafa",
          "fontWeight": 300
        },
        {
          "when": "${state.karaoke}",
          "color": "blue",
          "fontWeight": 700
        },
        {
          "when": "${state.karaokeTarget}",
          "color": "white",
          "fontWeight": 100
        }
      ]
    }
  }
}

In this example, the normal text color is #FAFAFA (a light grey) with a fontWeight of 300. During a SpeakItem command with line-by-line highlighting, the fontWeight of the entire text block is 700. The highlighted line is white (it has karaokeTarget=True); the other lines are blue. Note that the fontWeight setting for the karaoke target line was ignored because APL supports changing the color of the highlighted line only.

Line-by-line highlighting doesn't mean that there is always at least one visible highlighted line of text. If the minimumDwellTime on the SpeakList command property is set to longer than the speech duration, there might be a period where no lines are highlighted but the component still has the karaoke state set. Following the earlier example, during this "extra" time all of the lines of text are blue with a fontWeight of 700.

Finally, if block highlighting mode is selected instead of line-by-line highlighting, all of the text is blue. The karaokeTarget state isn't activated in block highlighting mode.


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Last updated: Nov 28, 2023