I am new to android and my code has got a bit messy. I have successfully created a list view extended from item_layout.xml. When I click on the list view It works exactly how I want it. However in each item of the list view I have a button that when clicked I want the item of the list to delete.
When researching I have come across that you need to create a customer adapter to do this however I have come so far in the project that I wouldn't even know where to start.
This code it used successfully to when the list items are clicked it works. This is just put in the Main Activity class
mylist.setOnItemClickListener(
new AdapterView.OnItemClickListener(){
#Override
public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> parent, View view, final int position, long id) {
}
}
);
I populate the list using this function just outside the main activity class. It is needed to be written like this as It gets the items from a database and has to be called depending on different circumstances
private void populatelistView() {
Cursor res = userDb.getAllRows();
String[] fromFeildnames = new String[]{ DatabaseUser.KEY_1, DatabaseUser.KEY_2};
int[] toViewIds = new int[]{R.id.textViewNum, R.id.textViewItem};
SimpleCursorAdapter myCursorAdaptor;
myCursorAdaptor = new SimpleCursorAdapter(getBaseContext(), R.layout.item_layout, res, fromFeildnames, toViewIds, 0);
//ListView mylist = (ListView) findViewById(R.id.listViewID);
mylist.setAdapter(myCursorAdaptor);
}
I would like to be able to get the button on each items to work by not changing much of what I have already written. I have tried just using the following code. But because it is in a different xml layout it display an error of null reference towards the item button
delete.setOnClickListener(
new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
View parentRow = (View) v.getParent();
ListView listView = (ListView) parentRow.getParent();
final int position = listView.getPositionForView(parentRow);
Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), "Button " + position, Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
}
);
Please could someone help me make the button work without changing much code or give me a step by step tutorial on how to add an adapter but make my populateListView function do the same thing.
Ps. I have looked at so many tutorials about list adapters but can't find ones that are for my specific need
Related
this is my first post here so be gentle :p
Here is the thing, I'm facing a really though issue and after several research i did not manage to figure out a clean solution. Let me explain:
I'm actually developing an android app for restaurant management.
In activity A, i'm able to create some articles with different parameters (picture, name, price ..).
I can also create a menu in which i indicate which articles are included. To do so i run Activity B that contains a dynamic list of the available articles (the ones i created) to be chosen. After picking up some of them the customised chosen objects are sent to Activity A through Parcel. And the chosen article list is updated in the menu.
But here is the thing, as far as i know, using Parcels create another instance of the object. As a result, if i modify or delete an article, the article list included in the menu does not change, and obviously i would like the list in the menu to be automatically updated.
Is there a way to simply pass customised objects through activities by reference?
What could be a clean solution to make the article list in the menu dynamic?
Here is some code:
In Activity A, in the menu interface i click + button to add an article, which run Activity B (the extras is the list of articles already included in the menu before, so in the beginning it's empty).
//Add article
FloatingActionButton addArticleButton = (FloatingActionButton)parentActivity.findViewById(R.id.addArticleButton);
addArticleButton.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
showMenuDetails(menuListView,menuAdapter,currentMenu);
parentActivity.startActivityForResult(new Intent(parentActivity.getApplicationContext(),ChooseArticleActivity.class).putParcelableArrayListExtra("menuArticleList",currentMenu.getArticles()),PICK_ARTICLES);
}
});
In activity B: I select Articles in a list of available Articles (the ones i created). After picking up i press OK button to put the list of chosen articles in result Intent as Parcelable Extras
protected void onCreate(#Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.choose_article_layout);
initializeLists();
this.resultIntent = new Intent();
}
private void initializeLists(){
final ListView articleToChoose = (ListView)findViewById(R.id.articleToChoose);
final ListView articleChosen = (ListView)findViewById(R.id.articleChosen);
final ArrayList<Article> articleToChooseList = (ArrayList<Article>)MainActivity.model.getArticleList().getArticleList().clone();
final ArrayList<Parcelable> articleChosenListParcelable = (ArrayList<Parcelable>)this.getIntent().getParcelableArrayListExtra("menuArticleList");
final ArticleAdapter articleToChooseAdapter = new ArticleAdapter(getApplicationContext(), articleToChooseList);
articleToChoose.setAdapter(articleToChooseAdapter);
ArrayList<Article> articleChosenListTemp = new ArrayList<>();
ArrayList<Article> articleToRemove = new ArrayList<>();
for(Parcelable a:articleChosenListParcelable){
articleChosenListTemp.add((Article)a);
for(Article article:articleToChooseList){
if(article.getName().equals(((Article) a).getName())){
articleToRemove.add(article);
}
}
}
articleToChooseList.removeAll(articleToRemove);
articleToChooseAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
final ArrayList<Article> articleChosenList = articleChosenListTemp;
final ArticleAdapter articleChosenAdapter = new ArticleAdapter(getApplicationContext(),articleChosenList);
articleChosen.setAdapter(articleChosenAdapter);
articleChosen.setOnItemClickListener(new AdapterView.OnItemClickListener() {
#Override
public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> parent, View view, int position, long id) {
Article articleClicked = articleChosenAdapter.getItem(position);
articleChosenList.remove(articleClicked);
articleToChooseList.add(articleClicked);
articleChosenAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
articleToChooseAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
}
});
articleToChoose.setOnItemClickListener(new AdapterView.OnItemClickListener() {
#Override
public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> parent, View view, int position, long id) {
Article articleClicked = articleToChooseAdapter.getItem(position);
if(!articleChosenList.contains(articleClicked)){
articleChosenList.add(articleClicked);
articleToChooseList.remove(articleClicked);
articleToChooseAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
articleChosenAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
}
}
});
Button okButton = (Button)findViewById(R.id.okButton);
okButton.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
chosenArticleListAttr = articleChosenList;
resultIntent.putParcelableArrayListExtra("articleList",chosenArticleListAttr);
setResult(RESULT_OK,resultIntent);
finish();
}
});
Button cancelButton = (Button)findViewById(R.id.cancelButton);
cancelButton.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
finish();
}
});
}
In activity A, in onActivityResult i catch the result and update the list, but the added Articles here are not the same instance as the article list in the model
if(requestCode==PICK_ARTICLES && resultCode==RESULT_OK){
ArticleAdapter articleAdapter = (ArticleAdapter) gestionMenusLayout.getMenuArticleListView().getAdapter();
ArrayList<Parcelable> chosenArticleList = (ArrayList<Parcelable>)data.getParcelableArrayListExtra("articleList");
gestionMenusLayout.getCurrentMenu().getArticles().clear();
for(Parcelable a:chosenArticleList){
gestionMenusLayout.getCurrentMenu().addArticle((Article)a);
}
articleAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
}
For debugging purpose only, I suggest that you use a public static List<Article> articleList and call it directly from whether activity A or B
A better but take-alittle-more-effort solution is that you store the list in a database, and every updates, queries, ... come through it.You can use the server's database (where people usually get articles from), or a offline database like Realm here
I figured it out with a quite easy and simple solution finally.
I keep passing my Article objects through intents by parcels.
But as it creates a new instance, instead of adding this instance i add the original one (the one from the model) after an equality key check (the name of the article). By doing so i keep the reference on my Article.
Thank you for helping!
Edit:
Here is the code:
if(requestCode==PICK_ARTICLES && resultCode==RESULT_OK){
ArticleAdapter articleAdapter = (ArticleAdapter) gestionMenusLayout.getMenuArticleListView().getAdapter();
ArrayList<Parcelable> chosenArticleList = (ArrayList<Parcelable>)data.getParcelableArrayListExtra("articleList");
gestionMenusLayout.getCurrentMenu().getArticles().clear();
ArrayList<Article> modelArticles = MainActivity.model.getArticleList().getArticleList();
for(Parcelable a:chosenArticleList){
for(Article modelArticle:modelArticles){
if(((Article)a).getName().equals(modelArticle.getName())){
gestionMenusLayout.getCurrentMenu().addArticle(modelArticle);
}
}
}
articleAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
}
I have tried to click on the first item of my arraylist for few hours, I have read a lot of questions on Stack Overflow, tutorials and I have tried to implement them in many ways, but it doesn't work.
clickView(getSearchActivity().hintListView);
onData(anything())
.onChildView(withId(R.id.hintLayout))
.atPosition(0)
.perform(click());
onData(allOf(is(instanceOf(String.class))))
.atPosition(0)
.perform(click());
onData(instanceOf(ArrayList.class))
.atPosition(0)
.perform(click());
onData(instanceOf(String.class))
.atPosition(0)
.perform(click());
onData(anything())
.inAdapterView(withId(R.id.hintLayout))
.atPosition(0)
.perform(click());
onData(anything())
.inAdapterView(allOf(withId(R.id.hintLayout), isCompletelyDisplayed()))
.atPosition(0).perform(click());
I have to click on the first item of the ListView, that take ArrayList
id of this ListView is hintLayout.
Does anybody know what is the problem ? and where can it be ?
A ListView must be filled with an adapter. After your adapter is finished just add it to your ListView like this:
private void setListAdapter(ListDataAdapter adapter){
lvYourListView.setAdapter(adapter);
}
In order to get the data back out on the OnClick event you need to something like this in you onCreate() method:
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
lvYourListView = (ListView) findViewById(R.id.lvListview);
lvYourListView.setOnItemClickListener(new AdapterView.OnItemClickListener() {
#Override
public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> parent, View view, int position, long id) {
ListData data = new ListData();
data = (ListData)parent.getItemAtPosition(position);
doSomethingWithData(data);
}
});
If you need help with the adapter - just let me know. I will need to see more of your code in order to do that.
Trudging my way through my introduction to Java and Android on a simple app and have run into an issue with ListView item selection. For one of my activities, I have a layout with two buttons, one of which is a "Delete" button, and a ListView of "passages" which are essentially timestamps for when a device has passed a sensor.
I have implemented the ability to click on an item to select it, which then enables the "Delete" button. A click of the "Delete" button removes the "passage" but I still end up with a selected item, which I don't want.
To implement selection, I added the following property to the ListView:
android:id="#+id/passagesListView"
android:choiceMode="singleChoice"
android:listSelector="#666666"
Selection is supported in OnCreate via a an OnItemClickListener:
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_view_passages);
passagesViewAdapter = new PassagesViewAdapter(this, R.layout.passages_row_layout, passages);
final ListView passagesListView = (ListView) findViewById(R.id.passagesListView);
assert passagesListView != null;
final Button deleteButton = (Button) findViewById(R.id.deleteButton);
deleteButton.setEnabled(false);
buildPassageList();
passagesListView.setAdapter(passagesViewAdapter);
passagesListView.setOnItemClickListener(new AdapterView.OnItemClickListener() {
#Override
public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> adapter, View view, int position,long arg3) {
Toast.makeText(ViewPassagesActivity.this, "position is " + position,
Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
view.setSelected(true);
passagesViewAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
selectedItemPos = position;
deleteButton.setEnabled(true);
}
});
}
This part works. However, there is some issue with deletion. As you can see in the comments, I have tried several methods that I found on StackOverflow that seemed to apply but, although I am able to delete the correct item from the list, I am still ending up with a selected item after the call to delete().
public void delete (View view)
{
final Button deleteButton = (Button) findViewById(R.id.deleteButton);
ListView passagesListView = (ListView) findViewById(R.id.passagesListView);
if(selectedItemPos != -1)
{
Toast.makeText(ViewPassagesActivity.this, "remove " + selectedItemPos,
Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
// This did not work, which is strange since it worked similarly for selection when clicked
// View itemView = passagesListView.getChildAt(selectedItemPos);
View itemView = passagesViewAdapter.getView(selectedItemPos, null, passagesListView);
itemView.setSelected(false);
// This was also recommended in various posts on StackOverflow.
// Not clear whether clearChoices applies only to checkBoxes?
// passagesListView.clearChoices();
// passagesListView.requestLayout();
passages.remove(selectedItemPos);
deleteButton.setEnabled(false);
selectedItemPos = -1;
passagesViewAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
}}
}
I also ran into some issues trying to track which item is selected via setSelected() and getSelectedItemPosition() and punted by just tracking the index myself. So, as I am new to this, I'm sure there is something I am not understanding about Views or maybe something else such as a misunderstanding of how selection works?
How can I clear the selection?
Thanks!
I don't know what your PassagesViewAdapter class looks like. Maybe you can try
passagesViewAdapter.remove(passages.get(selectedItemPos));
passages.remove(selectedItemPos);
deleteButton.setEnabled(false);
selectedItemPos = -1;
passagesViewAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
I am currently creating a basic news aggregator app for Android, I have so far managed to create multiple HorizontalListViews derived from this: http://www.dev-smart.com/archives/34
I am parsing all data from live JSON objects and arrays.
The process goes something like this:
1) Start app
2) Grab a JSON file which lists all feeds to display
3) Parse feed titles and article links, add each to an array
4) Get number of feeds from array and create individual HorizontalListView for each. i.e. "Irish Times".
5) Apply BaseAdapter "mAdapter" to each HorizontalListView during creation.
My baseadapter is responsible for populating my HorizontalListViews by getting each title and thumbnail.
My problem is however that all my feeds seem to contain the same articles and thumbnails. Now I am only new to Android so I'm not 100% sure whats going wrong here. See screenshot below.
Do I need to create a new BaseAdaptor for each HorizontalListview or can I use the same one to populate all my listviews with unique data.
Here's some code to help explain what I mean:
1) OnCreate method to get JSON data, parse it, get number of feeds and create each HorizontalListView
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.listviewdemo);
//--------------------JSON PARSE DATA------------------
// Creating JSON Parser instance
JSONParser jParser = new JSONParser();
// getting JSON string from URL
String json = jParser.getJSONFromUrl(sourcesUrl);
//Parse feed titles and article list
getFeeds(json);
//Create Listviews
for(int i = 0; i < feedTitle.size()-1; i++){
//getArticleImage(i);
addHorzListView(i);
articleArrayCount++;//Used to mark feed count for adaptor to know which array position to look at and retrieve data from.
//Each array position i.e. [1] represents a HorizontalListview and its related articles
}
}
2) addHorzListView method, used to create HorizontalListView and apply adaptor
//Method used to dynamically add HorizontalListViews
public void addHorzListView(int count){
LinearLayout mainLayout = (LinearLayout) findViewById(R.id.main_layout);
View view = getLayoutInflater().inflate(R.layout.listview, mainLayout,false);
//Set lists header name
TextView header = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.header);
header.setText(feedTitle.get(count));
//Create individual listview
HorizontalListView listview = (HorizontalListView) view.findViewById(R.id.listviewReuse);
listview.setAdapter(mAdapter);
//add listview to array list
listviewList.add(listview);
mainLayout.addView(view, count);
}
3) Baseadaptor itself:
private BaseAdapter mAdapter = new BaseAdapter() {
private OnClickListener mOnButtonClicked = new OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(HorizontalListViewDemo.this);
builder.setMessage("hello from " + v);
builder.setPositiveButton("Cool", null);
builder.show();
}
};
#Override
public int getCount() {
return noOfArticles.length;
}
#Override
public Object getItem(int position) {
return null;
}
#Override
public long getItemId(int position) {
return 0;
}
//Each listview is populated with data here
#Override
public View getView(int position, View convertView, ViewGroup parent) {
View retval = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.viewitem, null);
TextView title = (TextView) retval.findViewById(R.id.title);
title.setText(getArticleTitle(position));
new DownloadImageTask((ImageView) retval.findViewById(R.id.ImageView01)) .execute(getArticleImage(position));
Button button = (Button) retval.findViewById(R.id.clickbutton);
button.setOnClickListener(mOnButtonClicked);
return retval;
}
};
The adapter mAdapter is currently displaying the articles from the last HorizontalListView that calls it.
Currently I am using the same BaseAdaptor for each ListView as I figured it populated the listview as soon as its called but i looks as though a BaseAdaptor can only be called once, I really dont know.
I want to dynamically populate feeds though without having to create a new Adaptor manually for each HorizontalListView.
Any help would be much appreciated.
So...you got the same info in 4 listview, right? In that case you only need oneAdapter populating 4 listview.
An adapter just provide the views which are visible in that moment to the listview (if it is implemented in the right way) so you can reuse the adapter if the info contained is the same.
So I'm gunna try give as much information as I can to get this sorted. My application contains a database with the standard methods implemented; retrieving a record or all records returns a Cursor.
My application has a ListView, a text box and an add button. Here's what I'm trying to achieve (please note, the first is the most important):
I would like to display the current contents of the database in the ListView area.
I want to have the button insert whatever is in the text box into the database (and the ListView should automatically update to show the insertion)
I would like the ability to tap an item in the ListView and have it deleted from the database.
I have tried to tackle the first bullet point through assigning a Cursor to the return of the getAllRecords() method; Cursor c = dba.getAllRecords();. I have tired to get it to add field entries via a for-loop which didn't turn out too well.
Button add;
EditText tm;
ListView lv;
DBAdapter dba = new DBAdapter(this);
#Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_general);
add = (Button) findViewById(R.id.button1);
tm = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.editText1);
lv = (ListView) findViewById(R.id.generalList);
Cursor c = dba.getAllRecords();
c.moveToFirst();
// Trying to add database contents to ListView here.
add.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
insertIntoDatabase();
}
});
}
If you have a Cursor from a database and whant to show into a list, and is simple data like a few text values. Take a look at SimpleCursorAdapter.
The situation is this, you need an adapter, the adapter is the one that loads from the cursor and push into the layout that represent the correspoding list item. Anything that inherits from a CursorAdapter is good. All depends on how much flexibility you need, so you may implement as much as you need.
This is a snnipet from a sample app that I posted at github.
https://github.com/soynerdito/trainningSample/blob/master/src/com/example/sample/app/Dashboard.java
Also the app is in the marketplace. Is just a very simple app used during a "trainning" the app is called "Nerdito Sample" search for it, try and the code is on github. Adds items to a database and show in list.
Sample:
Device device = new Device();
Cursor cursor = mdb.get(device);
SimpleCursorAdapter adapter = new SimpleCursorAdapter(this,
android.R.layout.simple_list_item_2, cursor, new String[] {
device.mDescription.mName, device.mDeviceID.mName },
new int[] { android.R.id.text1, android.R.id.text2 }, 0);
// Create Cursor and set to List
mDeviceListView.setAdapter(adapter);