Resolved color instead of a resource id

Methods that take a color in the form of an integer should be passed an RGB triple, not the actual color resource id. You must call getResources.getColor(resource).

The function you are calling is expecting an integer that is an RGB triple, not just the id of a color resource. The color resource id is still an integer, but would not produce the color that you are expecting if it was used as the RGB triple. In order to pass it the correct RGB triple for your color, you must resolve it with the getResources().getColor(R.color.example_color) call.


Since I'm still finding this on Google and it is deprecated, I thought I'd might as well share the current method of doing this.

check getResources().getColor() is deprecated

ContextCompat.getColor(getApplicationContext(), R.color.color_name)

Use annotation @ColorInt to confirm that this is color not a color reference id.

See: android.support.annotation.ColorInt


Since getResources().getColor() is deprecated, you need to do this to get the color:

int color = ContextCompat.getColor(getContext(),your_color_id);

Now you have the color with respect to the current context Set the color using:

your_view.setBackgroundColor(color);