Related
From Create dynamic lists with RecyclerView:
When we create a RecyclerView.Adapter we have to specify ViewHolder that will bind with the adapter.
public class MyAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<MyAdapter.ViewHolder> {
private String[] mDataset;
public MyAdapter(String[] myDataset) {
mDataset = myDataset;
}
public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public TextView mTextView;
public ViewHolder(TextView v) {
super(v);
mTextView = v;
}
}
#Override
public MyAdapter.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.some_layout, parent, false);
//findViewById...
ViewHolder vh = new ViewHolder(v);
return vh;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
holder.mTextView.setText(mDataset[position]);
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return mDataset.length;
}
}
Is it possible to create RecyclerView with multiple view types?
Yes, it's possible. Just implement getItemViewType(), and take care of the viewType parameter in onCreateViewHolder().
So you do something like:
public class MyAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder> {
class ViewHolder0 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
...
public ViewHolder0(View itemView){
...
}
}
class ViewHolder2 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
...
public ViewHolder2(View itemView){
...
}
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
// Just as an example, return 0 or 2 depending on position
// Note that unlike in ListView adapters, types don't have to be contiguous
return position % 2 * 2;
}
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
switch (viewType) {
case 0: return new ViewHolder0(...);
case 2: return new ViewHolder2(...);
...
}
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(final RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
switch (holder.getItemViewType()) {
case 0:
ViewHolder0 viewHolder0 = (ViewHolder0)holder;
...
break;
case 2:
ViewHolder2 viewHolder2 = (ViewHolder2)holder;
...
break;
}
}
}
If the layouts for view types are only a few and binding logics are simple, follow Anton's solution. But the code will be messy if you need to manage the complex layouts and binding logics.
I believe the following solution will be useful for someone who need to handle complex view types.
Base DataBinder class
abstract public class DataBinder<T extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder> {
private DataBindAdapter mDataBindAdapter;
public DataBinder(DataBindAdapter dataBindAdapter) {
mDataBindAdapter = dataBindAdapter;
}
abstract public T newViewHolder(ViewGroup parent);
abstract public void bindViewHolder(T holder, int position);
abstract public int getItemCount();
......
}
The functions needed to define in this class are pretty much same as the adapter class when creating the single view type.
For each view type, create the class by extending this DataBinder.
Sample DataBinder class
public class Sample1Binder extends DataBinder<Sample1Binder.ViewHolder> {
private List<String> mDataSet = new ArrayList();
public Sample1Binder(DataBindAdapter dataBindAdapter) {
super(dataBindAdapter);
}
#Override
public ViewHolder newViewHolder(ViewGroup parent) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(
R.layout.layout_sample1, parent, false);
return new ViewHolder(view);
}
#Override
public void bindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
String title = mDataSet.get(position);
holder.mTitleText.setText(title);
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return mDataSet.size();
}
public void setDataSet(List<String> dataSet) {
mDataSet.addAll(dataSet);
}
static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView mTitleText;
public ViewHolder(View view) {
super(view);
mTitleText = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.title_type1);
}
}
}
In order to manage DataBinder classes, create an adapter class.
Base DataBindAdapter class
abstract public class DataBindAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder> {
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
return getDataBinder(viewType).newViewHolder(parent);
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(RecyclerView.ViewHolder viewHolder, int position) {
int binderPosition = getBinderPosition(position);
getDataBinder(viewHolder.getItemViewType()).bindViewHolder(viewHolder, binderPosition);
}
#Override
public abstract int getItemCount();
#Override
public abstract int getItemViewType(int position);
public abstract <T extends DataBinder> T getDataBinder(int viewType);
public abstract int getPosition(DataBinder binder, int binderPosition);
public abstract int getBinderPosition(int position);
......
}
Create the class by extending this base class, and then instantiate DataBinder classes and override abstract methods
getItemCount
Return the total item count of DataBinders
getItemViewType
Define the mapping logic between the adapter position and view type.
getDataBinder
Return the DataBinder instance based on the view type
getPosition
Define convert logic to the adapter position from the position in the specified DataBinder
getBinderPosition
Define convert logic to the position in the DataBinder from the adapter position
I left a more detailed solution and samples on GitHub, so please refer to RecyclerView-MultipleViewTypeAdapter if you need.
The below is not pseudocode. I have tested it and it has worked for me.
I wanted to create a headerview in my recyclerview and then display a list of pictures below the header which the user can click on.
I used a few switches in my code and don't know if that is the most efficient way to do this, so feel free to give your comments:
public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder{
//These are the general elements in the RecyclerView
public TextView place;
public ImageView pics;
//This is the Header on the Recycler (viewType = 0)
public TextView name, description;
//This constructor would switch what to findViewBy according to the type of viewType
public ViewHolder(View v, int viewType) {
super(v);
if (viewType == 0) {
name = (TextView) v.findViewById(R.id.name);
decsription = (TextView) v.findViewById(R.id.description);
} else if (viewType == 1) {
place = (TextView) v.findViewById(R.id.place);
pics = (ImageView) v.findViewById(R.id.pics);
}
}
}
#Override
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent,
int viewType)
{
View v;
ViewHolder vh;
// create a new view
switch (viewType) {
case 0: //This would be the header view in my Recycler
v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext())
.inflate(R.layout.recyclerview_welcome, parent, false);
vh = new ViewHolder(v,viewType);
return vh;
default: //This would be the normal list with the pictures of the places in the world
v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext())
.inflate(R.layout.recyclerview_picture, parent, false);
vh = new ViewHolder(v, viewType);
v.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener(){
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
Intent intent = new Intent(mContext, nextActivity.class);
intent.putExtra("ListNo",mRecyclerView.getChildPosition(v));
mContext.startActivity(intent);
}
});
return vh;
}
}
//Overridden so that I can display custom rows in the recyclerview
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
int viewType = 1; //Default is 1
if (position == 0) viewType = 0; //If zero, it will be a header view
return viewType;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
//position == 0 means it's the info header view on the Recycler
if (position == 0) {
holder.name.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
Toast.makeText(mContext,"name clicked", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
});
holder.description.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
Toast.makeText(mContext,"description clicked", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
});
//This means it is beyond the headerview now as it is no longer 0. For testing purposes, I'm alternating between two pics for now
} else if (position > 0) {
holder.place.setText(mDataset[position]);
if (position % 2 == 0) {
holder.pics.setImageDrawable(mContext.getResources().getDrawable(R.drawable.pic1));
}
if (position % 2 == 1) {
holder.pics.setImageDrawable(mContext.getResources().getDrawable(R.drawable.pic2));
}
}
}
Here is a complete sample to show a RecyclerView with two types, the view type decided by the object.
Class model
open class RecyclerViewItem
class SectionItem(val title: String) : RecyclerViewItem()
class ContentItem(val name: String, val number: Int) : RecyclerViewItem()
Adapter code
const val VIEW_TYPE_SECTION = 1
const val VIEW_TYPE_ITEM = 2
class UserAdapter : RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder>() {
var data = listOf<RecyclerViewItem>()
override fun getItemViewType(position: Int): Int {
if (data[position] is SectionItem) {
return VIEW_TYPE_SECTION
}
return VIEW_TYPE_ITEM
}
override fun getItemCount(): Int {
return data.size
}
override fun onCreateViewHolder(parent: ViewGroup, viewType: Int): RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
if (viewType == VIEW_TYPE_SECTION) {
return SectionViewHolder(
LayoutInflater.from(parent.context).inflate(R.layout.item_user_section, parent, false)
)
}
return ContentViewHolder(
LayoutInflater.from(parent.context).inflate(R.layout.item_user_content, parent, false)
)
}
override fun onBindViewHolder(holder: RecyclerView.ViewHolder, position: Int) {
val item = data[position]
if (holder is SectionViewHolder && item is SectionItem) {
holder.bind(item)
}
if (holder is ContentViewHolder && item is ContentItem) {
holder.bind(item)
}
}
internal inner class SectionViewHolder(itemView: View) : RecyclerView.ViewHolder(itemView) {
fun bind(item: SectionItem) {
itemView.text_section.text = item.title
}
}
internal inner class ContentViewHolder(itemView: View) : RecyclerView.ViewHolder(itemView) {
fun bind(item: ContentItem) {
itemView.text_name.text = item.name
itemView.text_number.text = item.number.toString()
}
}
}
item_user_section.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<TextView xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:id="#+id/text_section"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:background="#eee"
android:padding="16dp" />
item_user_content.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<LinearLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
xmlns:tools="http://schemas.android.com/tools"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:orientation="horizontal"
android:padding="32dp">
<TextView
android:id="#+id/text_name"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
tools:text="Name" />
<TextView
android:id="#+id/text_number"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content" />
</LinearLayout>
Example using
val dataSet = arrayListOf<RecyclerViewItem>(
SectionItem("A1"),
ContentItem("11", 11),
ContentItem("12", 12),
ContentItem("13", 13),
SectionItem("A2"),
ContentItem("21", 21),
ContentItem("22", 22),
SectionItem("A3"),
ContentItem("31", 31),
ContentItem("32", 32),
ContentItem("33", 33),
ContentItem("33", 34),
)
recyclerAdapter.data = dataSet
recyclerAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged()
Create a different ViewHolder for different layouts
RecyclerView can have any number of viewholders you want, but for better readability let’s see how to create one with two ViewHolders.
It can be done in three simple steps
Override public int getItemViewType(int position)
Return different ViewHolders based on the ViewType in onCreateViewHolder() method
Populate View based on the itemViewType in onBindViewHolder() method
Here is a small code snippet:
public class YourListAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder> {
private static final int LAYOUT_ONE = 0;
private static final int LAYOUT_TWO = 1;
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position)
{
if(position==0)
return LAYOUT_ONE;
else
return LAYOUT_TWO;
}
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View view = null;
RecyclerView.ViewHolder viewHolder = null;
if(viewType==LAYOUT_ONE)
{
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.one,parent,false);
viewHolder = new ViewHolderOne(view);
}
else
{
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.two,parent,false);
viewHolder= new ViewHolderTwo(view);
}
return viewHolder;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
if(holder.getItemViewType() == LAYOUT_ONE)
{
// Typecast Viewholder
// Set Viewholder properties
// Add any click listener if any
}
else {
ViewHolderOne vaultItemHolder = (ViewHolderOne) holder;
vaultItemHolder.name.setText(displayText);
vaultItemHolder.name.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
.......
}
});
}
}
//**************** VIEW HOLDER 1 ******************//
public class ViewHolderOne extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public TextView name;
public ViewHolderOne(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
name = (TextView)itemView.findViewById(R.id.displayName);
}
}
//**************** VIEW HOLDER 2 ******************//
public class ViewHolderTwo extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public ViewHolderTwo(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
..... Do something
}
}
}
getItemViewType(int position) is the key.
In my opinion, the starting point to create this kind of recyclerView is the knowledge of this method. Since this method is optional to override, it is not visible in RecylerView class by default which in turn makes many developers (including me) wonder where to begin.
Once you know that this method exists, creating such RecyclerView would be a cakewalk.
Let's see one example to prove my point. If you want to show two layout
at alternate positions do this
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position)
{
if(position%2==0) // Even position
return LAYOUT_ONE;
else // Odd position
return LAYOUT_TWO;
}
Relevant Links:
Check out the project where I have implemented this.
Yes, it is possible.
Write a generic view holder:
public abstract class GenericViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder
{
public GenericViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
}
public abstract void setDataOnView(int position);
}
then create your view holders and make them extend the GenericViewHolder. For example, this one:
public class SectionViewHolder extends GenericViewHolder{
public final View mView;
public final TextView dividerTxtV;
public SectionViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
mView = itemView;
dividerTxtV = (TextView) mView.findViewById(R.id.dividerTxtV);
}
#Override
public void setDataOnView(int position) {
try {
String title= sections.get(position);
if(title!= null)
this.dividerTxtV.setText(title);
}catch (Exception e){
new CustomError("Error!"+e.getMessage(), null, false, null, e);
}
}
}
then the RecyclerView.Adapter class will look like this one:
public class MyClassRecyclerViewAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<MyClassRecyclerViewAdapter.GenericViewHolder> {
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
// depends on your problem
switch (position) {
case : return VIEW_TYPE1;
case : return VIEW_TYPE2;
...
}
}
#Override
public GenericViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View view;
if(viewType == VIEW_TYPE1){
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.layout1, parent, false);
return new SectionViewHolder(view);
}else if( viewType == VIEW_TYPE2){
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.layout2, parent, false);
return new OtherViewHolder(view);
}
// Cont. other view holders ...
return null;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(GenericViewHolder holder, int position) {
holder.setDataOnView(position);
}
Yes, it is possible.
In your adapter getItemViewType Layout like this ....
public class MultiViewTypeAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter {
private ArrayList<Model>dataSet;
Context mContext;
int total_types;
MediaPlayer mPlayer;
private boolean fabStateVolume = false;
public static class TextTypeViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView txtType;
CardView cardView;
public TextTypeViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
this.txtType = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.type);
this.cardView = (CardView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.card_view);
}
}
public static class ImageTypeViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView txtType;
ImageView image;
public ImageTypeViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
this.txtType = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.type);
this.image = (ImageView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.background);
}
}
public static class AudioTypeViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView txtType;
FloatingActionButton fab;
public AudioTypeViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
this.txtType = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.type);
this.fab = (FloatingActionButton) itemView.findViewById(R.id.fab);
}
}
public MultiViewTypeAdapter(ArrayList<Model>data, Context context) {
this.dataSet = data;
this.mContext = context;
total_types = dataSet.size();
}
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View view;
switch (viewType) {
case Model.TEXT_TYPE:
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.text_type, parent, false);
return new TextTypeViewHolder(view);
case Model.IMAGE_TYPE:
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.image_type, parent, false);
return new ImageTypeViewHolder(view);
case Model.AUDIO_TYPE:
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.audio_type, parent, false);
return new AudioTypeViewHolder(view);
}
return null;
}
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
switch (dataSet.get(position).type) {
case 0:
return Model.TEXT_TYPE;
case 1:
return Model.IMAGE_TYPE;
case 2:
return Model.AUDIO_TYPE;
default:
return -1;
}
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(final RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, final int listPosition) {
Model object = dataSet.get(listPosition);
if (object != null) {
switch (object.type) {
case Model.TEXT_TYPE:
((TextTypeViewHolder) holder).txtType.setText(object.text);
break;
case Model.IMAGE_TYPE:
((ImageTypeViewHolder) holder).txtType.setText(object.text);
((ImageTypeViewHolder) holder).image.setImageResource(object.data);
break;
case Model.AUDIO_TYPE:
((AudioTypeViewHolder) holder).txtType.setText(object.text);
}
}
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return dataSet.size();
}
}
For the reference link: Android RecyclerView Example – Multiple ViewTypes
Simpler than ever, forget about ViewTypes. It is not recommended to use multiple viewtypes inside one adapter. It will mess the code and break the single responsibility principle since now the adapter needs to handle logic to know which view to inflate.
Now imagine working in large teams where each team has to work in one of those viewtypes features. It will be a mess to touch the same adapter by all the teams that work in the different viewtypes. This is solved using ConcatAdapter where you isolate the adapters. Code them one by one and then just merge them inside one view.
From recyclerview:1.2.0-alpha04 you now can use ConcatAdapter.
If you need a view with different viewTypes, you can just write the Adapters for each section and just use ConcatAdapter to merge all of them inside one recyclerview.
ConcatAdapter
This image shows three different viewtypes that one recyclerview has, header, content and footer.
You only create one adapter for each section, and then just use ConcatAdapter to merge them inside one recyclerview:
val firstAdapter: FirstAdapter = …
val secondAdapter: SecondAdapter = …
val thirdAdapter: ThirdAdapter = …
val concatAdapter = ConcatAdapter(firstAdapter, secondAdapter,
thirdAdapter)
recyclerView.adapter = concatAdapter
That's all you need to know. If you want to handle loading state, for example remove the last adapter after some loading happened, you can use LoadState.
For more in depth information follow Florina Muntenescu post here https://medium.com/androiddevelopers/merge-adapters-sequentially-with-mergeadapter-294d2942127a
Following Anton's solution, I came up with this ViewHolder which holds/handles/delegates different type of layouts.
But I am not sure if the replacing new layout would work when the recycling view's ViewHolder is not the type of the data roll in.
So basically,
onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) is only called when new view layout is needed;
getItemViewType(int position) will be called for the viewType;
onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) is always called when recycling the view (new data is brought in and try to display with that ViewHolder).
So when onBindViewHolder is called it needs to be put in the right view layout and update the ViewHolder.
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
TypedData data = mDataSource.get(position);
return data.type;
}
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent,
int viewType) {
return ViewHolder.makeViewHolder(parent, viewType);
}
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder,
int position) {
TypedData data = mDataSource.get(position);
holder.updateData(data);
}
///
public static class ViewHolder extends
RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
ViewGroup mParentViewGroup;
View mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor;
int mDataType;
public TypeOneViewHolder mTypeOneViewHolder;
public TypeTwoViewHolder mTypeTwoViewHolder;
static ViewHolder makeViewHolder(ViewGroup vwGrp,
int dataType) {
View v = getLayoutView(vwGrp, dataType);
return new ViewHolder(vwGrp, v, viewType);
}
static View getLayoutView(ViewGroup vwGrp,
int dataType) {
int layoutId = getLayoutId(dataType);
return LayoutInflater.from(vwGrp.getContext())
.inflate(layoutId, null);
}
static int getLayoutId(int dataType) {
if (dataType == TYPE_ONE) {
return R.layout.type_one_layout;
} else if (dataType == TYPE_TWO) {
return R.layout.type_two_layout;
}
}
public ViewHolder(ViewGroup vwGrp, View v,
int dataType) {
super(v);
mDataType = dataType;
mParentViewGroup = vwGrp;
mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor = v;
if (data.type == TYPE_ONE) {
mTypeOneViewHolder = new TypeOneViewHolder(v);
} else if (data.type == TYPE_TWO) {
mTypeTwoViewHolder = new TypeTwoViewHolder(v);
}
}
public void updateData(TypeData data) {
mDataType = data.type;
if (data.type == TYPE_ONE) {
mTypeTwoViewHolder = null;
if (mTypeOneViewHolder == null) {
View newView = getLayoutView(mParentViewGroup,
data.type);
/**
* How can I replace a new view with
the view in the parent
view container?
*/
replaceView(mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor,
newView);
mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor = newView;
mTypeOneViewHolder =
new TypeOneViewHolder(newView);
}
mTypeOneViewHolder.updateDataTypeOne(data);
} else if (data.type == TYPE_TWO){
mTypeOneViewHolder = null;
if (mTypeTwoViewHolder == null) {
View newView = getLayoutView(mParentViewGroup,
data.type);
/**
* How can I replace a new view with
the view in the parent view
container?
*/
replaceView(mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor,
newView);
mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor = newView;
mTypeTwoViewHolder =
new TypeTwoViewHolder(newView);
}
mTypeTwoViewHolder.updateDataTypeOne(data);
}
}
}
public static void replaceView(View currentView,
View newView) {
ViewGroup parent = (ViewGroup)currentView.getParent();
if(parent == null) {
return;
}
final int index = parent.indexOfChild(currentView);
parent.removeView(currentView);
parent.addView(newView, index);
}
ViewHolder has member mItemViewType to hold the view.
It looks like in onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) the ViewHolder passed in has been picked up (or created) by looked at getItemViewType(int position) to make sure it is a match, so it may not need to worry there that ViewHolder's type does not match the data[position]'s type.
It looks like The recycle ViewHolder is picked by type, so no warrior there.
Building a RecyclerView LayoutManager – Part 1 answers this question.
It gets the recycle ViewHolder like:
holder = getRecycledViewPool().getRecycledView(mAdapter.getItemViewType(offsetPosition));
Or create a new one if not find recycle ViewHolder of the right type.
public ViewHolder getRecycledView(int viewType) {
final ArrayList<ViewHolder> scrapHeap = mScrap.get(viewType);
if (scrapHeap != null && !scrapHeap.isEmpty()) {
final int index = scrapHeap.size() - 1;
final ViewHolder scrap = scrapHeap.get(index);
scrapHeap.remove(index);
return scrap;
}
return null;
}
View getViewForPosition(int position, boolean dryRun) {
......
if (holder == null) {
final int offsetPosition = mAdapterHelper.findPositionOffset(position);
if (offsetPosition < 0 || offsetPosition >= mAdapter.getItemCount()) {
throw new IndexOutOfBoundsException("Inconsistency detected. Invalid item "
+ "position " + position + "(offset:" + offsetPosition + ")."
+ "state:" + mState.getItemCount());
}
final int type = mAdapter.getItemViewType(offsetPosition);
// 2) Find from scrap via stable ids, if exists
if (mAdapter.hasStableIds()) {
holder = getScrapViewForId(mAdapter.getItemId(offsetPosition), type, dryRun);
if (holder != null) {
// update position
holder.mPosition = offsetPosition;
fromScrap = true;
}
}
if (holder == null && mViewCacheExtension != null) {
// We are NOT sending the offsetPosition because LayoutManager does not
// know it.
final View view = mViewCacheExtension
.getViewForPositionAndType(this, position, type);
if (view != null) {
holder = getChildViewHolder(view);
if (holder == null) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("getViewForPositionAndType returned"
+ " a view which does not have a ViewHolder");
} else if (holder.shouldIgnore()) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("getViewForPositionAndType returned"
+ " a view that is ignored. You must call stopIgnoring before"
+ " returning this view.");
}
}
}
if (holder == null) { // fallback to recycler
// try recycler.
// Head to the shared pool.
if (DEBUG) {
Log.d(TAG, "getViewForPosition(" + position + ") fetching from shared "
+ "pool");
}
holder = getRecycledViewPool()
.getRecycledView(mAdapter.getItemViewType(offsetPosition));
if (holder != null) {
holder.resetInternal();
if (FORCE_INVALIDATE_DISPLAY_LIST) {
invalidateDisplayListInt(holder);
}
}
}
if (holder == null) {
holder = mAdapter.createViewHolder(RecyclerView.this,
mAdapter.getItemViewType(offsetPosition));
if (DEBUG) {
Log.d(TAG, "getViewForPosition created new ViewHolder");
}
}
}
boolean bound = false;
if (mState.isPreLayout() && holder.isBound()) {
// do not update unless we absolutely have to.
holder.mPreLayoutPosition = position;
} else if (!holder.isBound() || holder.needsUpdate() || holder.isInvalid()) {
if (DEBUG && holder.isRemoved()) {
throw new IllegalStateException("Removed holder should be bound and it should"
+ " come here only in pre-layout. Holder: " + holder);
}
final int offsetPosition = mAdapterHelper.findPositionOffset(position);
mAdapter.bindViewHolder(holder, offsetPosition);
attachAccessibilityDelegate(holder.itemView);
bound = true;
if (mState.isPreLayout()) {
holder.mPreLayoutPosition = position;
}
}
final ViewGroup.LayoutParams lp = holder.itemView.getLayoutParams();
final LayoutParams rvLayoutParams;
if (lp == null) {
rvLayoutParams = (LayoutParams) generateDefaultLayoutParams();
holder.itemView.setLayoutParams(rvLayoutParams);
} else if (!checkLayoutParams(lp)) {
rvLayoutParams = (LayoutParams) generateLayoutParams(lp);
holder.itemView.setLayoutParams(rvLayoutParams);
} else {
rvLayoutParams = (LayoutParams) lp;
}
rvLayoutParams.mViewHolder = holder;
rvLayoutParams.mPendingInvalidate = fromScrap && bound;
return holder.itemView;
}
Although the selected answer is correct, I just want to further elaborate it. I found a useful Custom Adapter for multiple View Types in RecyclerView.
Its Kotlin version is here.
The custom adapter is the following:
public class CustomAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder> {
private final Context context;
ArrayList<String> list; // ArrayList of your Data Model
final int VIEW_TYPE_ONE = 1;
final int VIEW_TYPE_TWO = 2;
public CustomAdapter(Context context, ArrayList<String> list) { // you can pass other parameters in constructor
this.context = context;
this.list = list;
}
private class ViewHolder1 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView yourView;
ViewHolder1(final View itemView) {
super(itemView);
yourView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.yourView); // Initialize your All views prensent in list items
}
void bind(int position) {
// This method will be called anytime a list item is created or update its data
// Do your stuff here
yourView.setText(list.get(position));
}
}
private class ViewHolder2 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView yourView;
ViewHolder2(final View itemView) {
super(itemView);
yourView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.yourView); // Initialize your All views prensent in list items
}
void bind(int position) {
// This method will be called anytime a list item is created or update its data
//Do your stuff here
yourView.setText(list.get(position));
}
}
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
if (viewType == VIEW_TYPE_ONE) {
return new ViewHolder1(LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.your_list_item_1, parent, false));
}
//if its not VIEW_TYPE_ONE then its VIEW_TYPE_TWO
return new ViewHolder2(LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.your_list_item_2, parent, false));
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, int position) {
if (list.get(position).type == Something) { // Put your condition, according to your requirements
((ViewHolder1) holder).bind(position);
} else {
((ViewHolder2) holder).bind(position);
}
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return list.size();
}
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
// Here you can get decide from your model's ArrayList, which type of view you need to load. Like
if (list.get(position).type == Something) { // Put your condition, according to your requirements
return VIEW_TYPE_ONE;
}
return VIEW_TYPE_TWO;
}
}
I have a better solution which allows to create multiple view types in a declarative and type safe way. It’s written in Kotlin which, by the way, is really nice.
Simple view holders for all required view types
class ViewHolderMedium(itemView: View) : RecyclerView.ViewHolder(itemView) {
val icon: ImageView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.icon) as ImageView
val label: TextView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.label) as TextView
}
There is an abstraction of adapter data item. Note that a view type is represented by a hashCode of particular view holder class (KClass in Kotlin)
trait AdapterItem {
val viewType: Int
fun bindViewHolder(viewHolder: RecyclerView.ViewHolder)
}
abstract class AdapterItemBase<T>(val viewHolderClass: KClass<T>) : AdapterItem {
override val viewType: Int = viewHolderClass.hashCode()
abstract fun bindViewHolder(viewHolder: T)
override fun bindViewHolder(viewHolder: RecyclerView.ViewHolder) {
bindViewHolder(viewHolder as T)
}
}
Only bindViewHolder needs to be overridden in concrete adapter item classes (type safe way).
class AdapterItemMedium(val icon: Drawable, val label: String, val onClick: () -> Unit) : AdapterItemBase<ViewHolderMedium>(ViewHolderMedium::class) {
override fun bindViewHolder(viewHolder: ViewHolderMedium) {
viewHolder.icon.setImageDrawable(icon)
viewHolder.label.setText(label)
viewHolder.itemView.setOnClickListener { onClick() }
}
}
List of such AdapterItemMedium objects is a data source for the adapter which actually accepts List<AdapterItem>. See below.
The important part of this solution is a view holder factory which will provide fresh instances of a specific ViewHolder:
class ViewHolderProvider {
private val viewHolderFactories = hashMapOf<Int, Pair<Int, Any>>()
fun provideViewHolder(viewGroup: ViewGroup, viewType: Int): RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
val (layoutId: Int, f: Any) = viewHolderFactories.get(viewType)
val viewHolderFactory = f as (View) -> RecyclerView.ViewHolder
val view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(layoutId, viewGroup, false)
return viewHolderFactory(view)
}
fun registerViewHolderFactory<T>(key: KClass<T>, layoutId: Int, viewHolderFactory: (View) -> T) {
viewHolderFactories.put(key.hashCode(), Pair(layoutId, viewHolderFactory))
}
}
And the simple adapter class looks like this:
public class MultitypeAdapter(val items: List<AdapterItem>) : RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder>() {
val viewHolderProvider = ViewHolderProvider() // inject ex Dagger2
init {
viewHolderProvider!!.registerViewHolderFactory(ViewHolderMedium::class, R.layout.item_medium, { itemView ->
ViewHolderMedium(itemView)
})
}
override fun getItemViewType(position: Int): Int {
return items[position].viewType
}
override fun getItemCount(): Int {
return items.size()
}
override fun onCreateViewHolder(viewGroup: ViewGroup, viewType: Int): RecyclerView.ViewHolder? {
return viewHolderProvider!!.provideViewHolder(viewGroup, viewType)
}
override fun onBindViewHolder(viewHolder: RecyclerView.ViewHolder, position: Int) {
items[position].bindViewHolder(viewHolder)
}
}
There are only three steps to create a new view type:
create a view holder class
create an adapter item class (extending from AdapterItemBase)
register the view holder class in ViewHolderProvider
Here is an example of this concept: android-drawer-template.
It goes even further - a view type which acts as a spinner component, with selectable adapter items.
It is very simple and straightforward.
Just override the getItemViewType() method in your adapter. On the basis of data return different itemViewType values. E.g., consider an object of type Person with a member isMale, if isMale is true, return 1 and isMale is false, return 2 in the getItemViewType() method.
Now coming to the createViewHolder (ViewGroup parent, int viewType), on the basis of different viewType yon can inflate the different layout file. Like the following:
if (viewType == 1){
View view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.male, parent, false);
return new AdapterMaleViewHolder(view);
}
else{
View view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.female, parent, false);
return new AdapterFemaleViewHolder(view);
}
in onBindViewHolder (VH holder,int position) check where holder is an instance of AdapterFemaleViewHolder or AdapterMaleViewHolder by instanceof and accordingly assign the values.
ViewHolder may be like this
class AdapterMaleViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
...
public AdapterMaleViewHolder(View itemView){
...
}
}
class AdapterFemaleViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
...
public AdapterFemaleViewHolder(View itemView){
...
}
}
I recommend this library from Hannes Dorfmann. It encapsulates all the logic related to a particular view type in a separate object called "AdapterDelegate".
https://github.com/sockeqwe/AdapterDelegates
public class CatAdapterDelegate extends AdapterDelegate<List<Animal>> {
private LayoutInflater inflater;
public CatAdapterDelegate(Activity activity) {
inflater = activity.getLayoutInflater();
}
#Override public boolean isForViewType(#NonNull List<Animal> items, int position) {
return items.get(position) instanceof Cat;
}
#NonNull #Override public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent) {
return new CatViewHolder(inflater.inflate(R.layout.item_cat, parent, false));
}
#Override public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull List<Animal> items, int position,
#NonNull RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, #Nullable List<Object> payloads) {
CatViewHolder vh = (CatViewHolder) holder;
Cat cat = (Cat) items.get(position);
vh.name.setText(cat.getName());
}
static class CatViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public TextView name;
public CatViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
name = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.name);
}
}
}
public class AnimalAdapter extends ListDelegationAdapter<List<Animal>> {
public AnimalAdapter(Activity activity, List<Animal> items) {
// DelegatesManager is a protected Field in ListDelegationAdapter
delegatesManager.addDelegate(new CatAdapterDelegate(activity))
.addDelegate(new DogAdapterDelegate(activity))
.addDelegate(new GeckoAdapterDelegate(activity))
.addDelegate(23, new SnakeAdapterDelegate(activity));
// Set the items from super class.
setItems(items);
}
}
I firstly recommend you to read Hannes Dorfmann's great article about this topic.
When a new view type comes, you have to edit your adapter and you have to handle so many messy things. Your adapter should be open for extension, but closed for modification.
You may check this two project, they can give the idea about how to handle different ViewTypes in Adapter:
https://github.com/sockeqwe/AdapterDelegates
https://github.com/ibrahimyilmaz/kiel
If anyone is interested to see the super simple solution written in Kotlin, check the blogpost I just created. The example in the blogpost is based on creating Sectioned RecyclerView:
https://brona.blog/2020/06/sectioned-recyclerview-in-three-steps/
Actually, I'd like to improve on Anton's answer.
Since getItemViewType(int position) returns an integer value, you can return the layout resource ID you'd need to inflate. That way you'd save some logic in onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) method.
Also, I wouldn't suggest doing intensive calculations in getItemCount() as that particular function is called at least 5 times while rendering the list, as well as while rendering each item beyond the visible items. Sadly since notifyDatasetChanged() method is final, you can't really override it, but you can call it from another function within the adapter.
You can use the library: https://github.com/vivchar/RendererRecyclerViewAdapter
mRecyclerViewAdapter = new RendererRecyclerViewAdapter(); /* Included from library */
mRecyclerViewAdapter.registerRenderer(new SomeViewRenderer(SomeModel.TYPE, this));
mRecyclerViewAdapter.registerRenderer(...); /* You can use several types of cells */
For each item, you should to implement a ViewRenderer, ViewHolder, SomeModel:
ViewHolder - it is a simple view holder of recycler view.
SomeModel - it is your model with ItemModel interface
public class SomeViewRenderer extends ViewRenderer<SomeModel, SomeViewHolder> {
public SomeViewRenderer(final int type, final Context context) {
super(type, context);
}
#Override
public void bindView(#NonNull final SomeModel model, #NonNull final SomeViewHolder holder) {
holder.mTitle.setText(model.getTitle());
}
#NonNull
#Override
public SomeViewHolder createViewHolder(#Nullable final ViewGroup parent) {
return new SomeViewHolder(LayoutInflater.from(getContext()).inflate(R.layout.some_item, parent, false));
}
}
For more details you can look at the documentation.
View types implementation becomes easier with Kotlin. Here is a sample with this light library https://github.com/Link184/KidAdapter
recyclerView.setUp {
withViewType {
withLayoutResId(R.layout.item_int)
withItems(mutableListOf(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6))
bind<Int> { // this - is adapter view hoder itemView, it - current item
intName.text = it.toString()
}
}
withViewType("SECOND_STRING_TAG") {
withLayoutResId(R.layout.item_text)
withItems(mutableListOf("eight", "nine", "ten", "eleven", "twelve"))
bind<String> {
stringName.text = it
}
}
}
You can deal with multipleViewTypes RecyclerAdapter by making getItemViewType() return the expected viewType value for that position.
I prepared an MultipleViewTypeAdapter for constructing an MCQ list for examinations which may throw a question that may have two or more valid answers (checkbox options) and a single answer questions (radiobutton options).
For this I get the type of question from the API response and I used that for deciding which view I have to show for that question.
public class MultiViewTypeAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter {
Context mContext;
ArrayList<Question> dataSet;
ArrayList<String> questions;
private Object radiobuttontype1;
//Viewholder to display Questions with checkboxes
public static class Checkboxtype2 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
ImageView imgclockcheck;
CheckBox checkbox;
public Checkboxtype2(#NonNull View itemView) {
super(itemView);
imgclockcheck = (ImageView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.clockout_cbox_image);
checkbox = (CheckBox) itemView.findViewById(R.id.clockout_cbox);
}
}
//Viewholder to display Questions with radiobuttons
public static class Radiobuttontype1 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
ImageView clockout_imageradiobutton;
RadioButton clockout_radiobutton;
TextView sample;
public radiobuttontype1(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
clockout_imageradiobutton = (ImageView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.clockout_imageradiobutton);
clockout_radiobutton = (RadioButton) itemView.findViewById(R.id.clockout_radiobutton);
sample = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.sample);
}
}
public MultiViewTypeAdapter(ArrayList<QueDatum> data, Context context) {
this.dataSet = data;
this.mContext = context;
}
#NonNull
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(#NonNull ViewGroup viewGroup, int viewType) {
if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("1")) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.clockout_radio_list_row, viewGroup, false);
return new radiobuttontype1(view);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("2")) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.clockout_cbox_list_row, viewGroup, false);
view.setHorizontalFadingEdgeEnabled(true);
return new Checkboxtype2(view);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("3")) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.clockout_radio_list_row, viewGroup, false);
return new Radiobuttontype1(view);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("4")) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.clockout_radio_list_row, viewGroup, false);
return new Radiobuttontype1(view);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("5")) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.clockout_radio_list_row, viewGroup, false);
return new Radiobuttontype1(view);
}
return null;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull RecyclerView.ViewHolder viewHolder, int viewType) {
if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("1")) {
options = dataSet.get(i).getOptions();
question = dataSet.get(i).getQuestion();
image = options.get(i).getValue();
((radiobuttontype1) viewHolder).clockout_radiobutton.setChecked(false);
((radiobuttontype1) viewHolder).sample.setText(question);
//Loading image bitmap in the ViewHolder's View
Picasso.with(mContext)
.load(image)
.into(((radiobuttontype1) viewHolder).clockout_imageradiobutton);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("2")) {
options = (ArrayList<Clockout_questions_Option>) dataSet.get(i).getOptions();
question = dataSet.get(i).getQuestion();
image = options.get(i).getValue();
//Loading image bitmap in the ViewHolder's View
Picasso.with(mContext)
.load(image)
.into(((Checkboxtype2) viewHolder).imgclockcheck);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("3")) {
//Fit data to viewHolder for ViewType 3
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("4")) {
//Fit data to viewHolder for ViewType 4
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("5")) {
//Fit data to viewHolder for ViewType 5
}
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return dataSet.size();
}
/**
* Returns viewType for that position by picking the viewType value from the
* dataset
*/
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
return dataSet.get(position).getViewType();
}
}
You can avoid multiple conditionals based viewHolder data fillings in onBindViewHolder() by assigning same ids for the similar views across viewHolders which differ in their positioning.
If you want to use it in conjunction with Android Data Binding look into the https://github.com/evant/binding-collection-adapter - it is by far the best solution for the multiple view types RecyclerView I have even seen.
You may use it like
var items: AsyncDiffPagedObservableList<BaseListItem> =
AsyncDiffPagedObservableList(GenericDiff)
val onItemBind: OnItemBind<BaseListItem> =
OnItemBind { itemBinding, _, item -> itemBinding.set(BR.item, item.layoutRes) }
And then in the layout where the list is:
<androidx.recyclerview.widget.RecyclerView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="0dp"
android:layout_weight="1"
app:enableAnimations="#{false}"
app:scrollToPosition="#{viewModel.scrollPosition}"
app:itemBinding="#{viewModel.onItemBind}"
app:items="#{viewModel.items}"
app:reverseLayoutManager="#{true}"/>
Your list items must implement the BaseListItem interface which looks like this:
interface BaseListItem {
val layoutRes: Int
}
And the item view should look something like this:
<layout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
<data>
<variable
name="item"
type="...presentation.somescreen.list.YourListItem"/>
</data>
...
</layout>
Where YourListItem implements BaseListItem.
First you must create two layout XML files. After that inside recyclerview adapter TYPE_CALL and TYPE_EMAIL are two static values with 1 and 2 respectively in the adapter class.
Now define two static values at the Recycler view Adapter class level, for example: private static int TYPE_CALL = 1; private static int TYPE_EMAIL = 2;
Now create the view holder with multiple views like this:
class CallViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
private TextView txtName;
private TextView txtAddress;
CallViewHolder(#NonNull View itemView) {
super(itemView);
txtName = itemView.findViewById(R.id.txtName);
txtAddress = itemView.findViewById(R.id.txtAddress);
}
}
class EmailViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
private TextView txtName;
private TextView txtAddress;
EmailViewHolder(#NonNull View itemView) {
super(itemView);
txtName = itemView.findViewById(R.id.txtName);
txtAddress = itemView.findViewById(R.id.txtAddress);
}
}
Now code as below in onCreateViewHolder and onBindViewHolder method in the recyclerview adapter:
#NonNull
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(#NonNull ViewGroup viewGroup, int viewType) {
View view;
if (viewType == TYPE_CALL) { // for call layout
view = LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.item_call, viewGroup, false);
return new CallViewHolder(view);
} else { // for email layout
view = LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.item_email, viewGroup, false);
return new EmailViewHolder(view);
}
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull RecyclerView.ViewHolder viewHolder, int position) {
if (getItemViewType(position) == TYPE_CALL) {
((CallViewHolder) viewHolder).setCallDetails(employees.get(position));
} else {
((EmailViewHolder) viewHolder).setEmailDetails(employees.get(position));
}
}
I did something like this. I passed "fragmentType" and created two ViewHolders and on basis of this, I classified my Layouts accordingly in a single adapter that can have different Layouts and LayoutManagers
private Context mContext;
protected IOnLoyaltyCardCategoriesItemClicked mListener;
private String fragmentType;
private View view;
public LoyaltyCardsCategoriesRecyclerViewAdapter(Context context, IOnLoyaltyCardCategoriesItemClicked itemListener, String fragmentType) {
this.mContext = context;
this.mListener = itemListener;
this.fragmentType = fragmentType;
}
public class LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener {
private ImageView lc_categories_iv;
private TextView lc_categories_name_tv;
private int pos;
public LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentViewHolder(View v) {
super(v);
view.setOnClickListener(this);
lc_categories_iv = (ImageView) v.findViewById(R.id.lc_categories_iv);
lc_categories_name_tv = (TextView) v.findViewById(R.id.lc_categories_name_tv);
}
public void setData(int pos) {
this.pos = pos;
lc_categories_iv.setImageResource(R.mipmap.ic_launcher);
lc_categories_name_tv.setText("Loyalty Card Categories");
}
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
if (mListener != null) {
mListener.onLoyaltyCardCategoriesItemClicked(pos);
}
}
}
public class MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTagViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener {
public ImageButton lc_categories_btn;
private int pos;
public MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTagViewHolder(View v) {
super(v);
lc_categories_btn = (ImageButton) v.findViewById(R.id.lc_categories_btn);
lc_categories_btn.setOnClickListener(this);
}
public void setData(int pos) {
this.pos = pos;
lc_categories_btn.setImageResource(R.mipmap.ic_launcher);
}
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
if (mListener != null) {
mListener.onLoyaltyCardCategoriesItemClicked(pos);
}
}
}
#NonNull
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
if (fragmentType.equalsIgnoreCase(Constants.LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentTag)) {
view = LayoutInflater.from(mContext).inflate(R.layout.loyalty_cards_categories_frag_item, parent, false);
return new LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentViewHolder(view);
} else if (fragmentType.equalsIgnoreCase(Constants.MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTag)) {
view = LayoutInflater.from(mContext).inflate(R.layout.my_loyalty_cards_categories_frag_item, parent, false);
return new MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTagViewHolder(view);
} else {
return null;
}
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, int position) {
if (fragmentType.equalsIgnoreCase(Constants.LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentTag)) {
((LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentViewHolder) holder).setData(position);
} else if (fragmentType.equalsIgnoreCase(Constants.MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTag)) {
((MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTagViewHolder) holder).setData(position);
}
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return 7;
}
I see there are a lot of great answers, incredibly detailed and extensive. In my case, I always understand things better if I follow along the reasoning from almost scratch, step by step. I would recommend you check this link out and whenever you have similar questions, search for any codelabs that address the issue.
Android Kotlin Fundamentals: Headers in RecyclerView
I'm trying to get ItemTouchHelper to work with a RecyclerView that has multiple view types. I've seen a few answers that say that in order to get this to work the recyclerView adapter has to have setHasStableIds(true) and overrider getItemId(int position) -making sure your items have stable ids. However, I can not seem to get this to work, and cannot seem to find any actual examples of an implementation.
Can anyone provide or point to a working example of using ItemTouchHelper with multiple view types?
public class NewsAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter {
private static final String TAG = NewsAdapter.class.getSimpleName();
private ArrayList<Article> articles = new ArrayList<>();
public void setList(ArrayList<Article> articles) {
this.articles = articles;
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
setList
private static final String TAG = NewsAdapter.class.getSimpleName();
private ArrayList<Article> articles = new ArrayList<>();
public void setList(ArrayList<Article> articles) {
this.articles = articles;
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
onCreateViewHolder
#NonNull
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(#NonNull ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
LayoutInflater layoutInflater = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext());
View view;
// Here types are: 0=item news image, 1=item news horizontal, 2=Card
if (viewType == 0) {
view = layoutInflater.inflate(R.layout.item_news_image, parent, false);
return new ImageViewHolder(view);
} else {
view = layoutInflater.inflate(R.layout.item_news_horizontal, parent, false);
return new HorizontalViewHolder(view);
}
}
onBindViewHolder
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, int position) {
if (position == 0) {
// bind viewHolder 'item news image'
ImageViewHolder imageViewHolder = (ImageViewHolder) holder;
Glide.with(imageViewHolder.itemView.getContext()).load(articles.get(position).getUrlToImage()).into(imageViewHolder.urlToImageView);
imageViewHolder.publishedAtTextView.setText(articles.get(position).getPublishedAt());
imageViewHolder.authorTextView.setText(articles.get(position).getAuthor());
imageViewHolder.titleTextView.setText(articles.get(position).getTitle());
} else {
// bind viewHolder 'horizontal'
HorizontalViewHolder horizontalViewHolder = (HorizontalViewHolder) holder;
Glide.with(horizontalViewHolder.itemView.getContext()).load(articles.get(position).getUrlToImage()).into(horizontalViewHolder.urlToImageView);
horizontalViewHolder.publishedAtTextView.setText(articles.get(position).getPublishedAt());
horizontalViewHolder.authorTextView.setText(articles.get(position).getAuthor());
horizontalViewHolder.titleTextView.setText(articles.get(position).getTitle());
}
}
getItemCount
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return articles.size();
}
getItemViewType
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
if (position == 0) {
return 0;
} else {
return 1;
}
}
ImageViewHolder
static class ImageViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
ImageView urlToImageView;
TextView publishedAtTextView, authorTextView, titleTextView;
public ImageViewHolder(#NonNull View itemView) {
super(itemView);
urlToImageView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.imageINIUrlToImage);
publishedAtTextView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.textINIPublishedAt);
authorTextView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.textINIAuthor);
titleTextView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.textINITitle);
}
}
HorizontalViewHolder
static class HorizontalViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
ImageView urlToImageView;
TextView publishedAtTextView, authorTextView, titleTextView;
public HorizontalViewHolder(#NonNull View itemView) {
super(itemView);
urlToImageView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.imageINHUrlToImage);
publishedAtTextView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.textINHPublishedAt);
authorTextView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.textINHAuthor);
titleTextView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.textINHTitle);
}
}
MainActivity
final NewsAdapter newsAdapter = new NewsAdapter();
binding.recyclerViewTopStories.setAdapter(newsAdapter);
topStoriesViewModel.getList().observe(getViewLifecycleOwner(), newsAdapter::setList);
From Create dynamic lists with RecyclerView:
When we create a RecyclerView.Adapter we have to specify ViewHolder that will bind with the adapter.
public class MyAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<MyAdapter.ViewHolder> {
private String[] mDataset;
public MyAdapter(String[] myDataset) {
mDataset = myDataset;
}
public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public TextView mTextView;
public ViewHolder(TextView v) {
super(v);
mTextView = v;
}
}
#Override
public MyAdapter.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.some_layout, parent, false);
//findViewById...
ViewHolder vh = new ViewHolder(v);
return vh;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
holder.mTextView.setText(mDataset[position]);
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return mDataset.length;
}
}
Is it possible to create RecyclerView with multiple view types?
Yes, it's possible. Just implement getItemViewType(), and take care of the viewType parameter in onCreateViewHolder().
So you do something like:
public class MyAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder> {
class ViewHolder0 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
...
public ViewHolder0(View itemView){
...
}
}
class ViewHolder2 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
...
public ViewHolder2(View itemView){
...
}
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
// Just as an example, return 0 or 2 depending on position
// Note that unlike in ListView adapters, types don't have to be contiguous
return position % 2 * 2;
}
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
switch (viewType) {
case 0: return new ViewHolder0(...);
case 2: return new ViewHolder2(...);
...
}
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(final RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
switch (holder.getItemViewType()) {
case 0:
ViewHolder0 viewHolder0 = (ViewHolder0)holder;
...
break;
case 2:
ViewHolder2 viewHolder2 = (ViewHolder2)holder;
...
break;
}
}
}
If the layouts for view types are only a few and binding logics are simple, follow Anton's solution. But the code will be messy if you need to manage the complex layouts and binding logics.
I believe the following solution will be useful for someone who need to handle complex view types.
Base DataBinder class
abstract public class DataBinder<T extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder> {
private DataBindAdapter mDataBindAdapter;
public DataBinder(DataBindAdapter dataBindAdapter) {
mDataBindAdapter = dataBindAdapter;
}
abstract public T newViewHolder(ViewGroup parent);
abstract public void bindViewHolder(T holder, int position);
abstract public int getItemCount();
......
}
The functions needed to define in this class are pretty much same as the adapter class when creating the single view type.
For each view type, create the class by extending this DataBinder.
Sample DataBinder class
public class Sample1Binder extends DataBinder<Sample1Binder.ViewHolder> {
private List<String> mDataSet = new ArrayList();
public Sample1Binder(DataBindAdapter dataBindAdapter) {
super(dataBindAdapter);
}
#Override
public ViewHolder newViewHolder(ViewGroup parent) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(
R.layout.layout_sample1, parent, false);
return new ViewHolder(view);
}
#Override
public void bindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
String title = mDataSet.get(position);
holder.mTitleText.setText(title);
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return mDataSet.size();
}
public void setDataSet(List<String> dataSet) {
mDataSet.addAll(dataSet);
}
static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView mTitleText;
public ViewHolder(View view) {
super(view);
mTitleText = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.title_type1);
}
}
}
In order to manage DataBinder classes, create an adapter class.
Base DataBindAdapter class
abstract public class DataBindAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder> {
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
return getDataBinder(viewType).newViewHolder(parent);
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(RecyclerView.ViewHolder viewHolder, int position) {
int binderPosition = getBinderPosition(position);
getDataBinder(viewHolder.getItemViewType()).bindViewHolder(viewHolder, binderPosition);
}
#Override
public abstract int getItemCount();
#Override
public abstract int getItemViewType(int position);
public abstract <T extends DataBinder> T getDataBinder(int viewType);
public abstract int getPosition(DataBinder binder, int binderPosition);
public abstract int getBinderPosition(int position);
......
}
Create the class by extending this base class, and then instantiate DataBinder classes and override abstract methods
getItemCount
Return the total item count of DataBinders
getItemViewType
Define the mapping logic between the adapter position and view type.
getDataBinder
Return the DataBinder instance based on the view type
getPosition
Define convert logic to the adapter position from the position in the specified DataBinder
getBinderPosition
Define convert logic to the position in the DataBinder from the adapter position
I left a more detailed solution and samples on GitHub, so please refer to RecyclerView-MultipleViewTypeAdapter if you need.
The below is not pseudocode. I have tested it and it has worked for me.
I wanted to create a headerview in my recyclerview and then display a list of pictures below the header which the user can click on.
I used a few switches in my code and don't know if that is the most efficient way to do this, so feel free to give your comments:
public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder{
//These are the general elements in the RecyclerView
public TextView place;
public ImageView pics;
//This is the Header on the Recycler (viewType = 0)
public TextView name, description;
//This constructor would switch what to findViewBy according to the type of viewType
public ViewHolder(View v, int viewType) {
super(v);
if (viewType == 0) {
name = (TextView) v.findViewById(R.id.name);
decsription = (TextView) v.findViewById(R.id.description);
} else if (viewType == 1) {
place = (TextView) v.findViewById(R.id.place);
pics = (ImageView) v.findViewById(R.id.pics);
}
}
}
#Override
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent,
int viewType)
{
View v;
ViewHolder vh;
// create a new view
switch (viewType) {
case 0: //This would be the header view in my Recycler
v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext())
.inflate(R.layout.recyclerview_welcome, parent, false);
vh = new ViewHolder(v,viewType);
return vh;
default: //This would be the normal list with the pictures of the places in the world
v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext())
.inflate(R.layout.recyclerview_picture, parent, false);
vh = new ViewHolder(v, viewType);
v.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener(){
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
Intent intent = new Intent(mContext, nextActivity.class);
intent.putExtra("ListNo",mRecyclerView.getChildPosition(v));
mContext.startActivity(intent);
}
});
return vh;
}
}
//Overridden so that I can display custom rows in the recyclerview
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
int viewType = 1; //Default is 1
if (position == 0) viewType = 0; //If zero, it will be a header view
return viewType;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
//position == 0 means it's the info header view on the Recycler
if (position == 0) {
holder.name.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
Toast.makeText(mContext,"name clicked", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
});
holder.description.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
Toast.makeText(mContext,"description clicked", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
});
//This means it is beyond the headerview now as it is no longer 0. For testing purposes, I'm alternating between two pics for now
} else if (position > 0) {
holder.place.setText(mDataset[position]);
if (position % 2 == 0) {
holder.pics.setImageDrawable(mContext.getResources().getDrawable(R.drawable.pic1));
}
if (position % 2 == 1) {
holder.pics.setImageDrawable(mContext.getResources().getDrawable(R.drawable.pic2));
}
}
}
Here is a complete sample to show a RecyclerView with two types, the view type decided by the object.
Class model
open class RecyclerViewItem
class SectionItem(val title: String) : RecyclerViewItem()
class ContentItem(val name: String, val number: Int) : RecyclerViewItem()
Adapter code
const val VIEW_TYPE_SECTION = 1
const val VIEW_TYPE_ITEM = 2
class UserAdapter : RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder>() {
var data = listOf<RecyclerViewItem>()
override fun getItemViewType(position: Int): Int {
if (data[position] is SectionItem) {
return VIEW_TYPE_SECTION
}
return VIEW_TYPE_ITEM
}
override fun getItemCount(): Int {
return data.size
}
override fun onCreateViewHolder(parent: ViewGroup, viewType: Int): RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
if (viewType == VIEW_TYPE_SECTION) {
return SectionViewHolder(
LayoutInflater.from(parent.context).inflate(R.layout.item_user_section, parent, false)
)
}
return ContentViewHolder(
LayoutInflater.from(parent.context).inflate(R.layout.item_user_content, parent, false)
)
}
override fun onBindViewHolder(holder: RecyclerView.ViewHolder, position: Int) {
val item = data[position]
if (holder is SectionViewHolder && item is SectionItem) {
holder.bind(item)
}
if (holder is ContentViewHolder && item is ContentItem) {
holder.bind(item)
}
}
internal inner class SectionViewHolder(itemView: View) : RecyclerView.ViewHolder(itemView) {
fun bind(item: SectionItem) {
itemView.text_section.text = item.title
}
}
internal inner class ContentViewHolder(itemView: View) : RecyclerView.ViewHolder(itemView) {
fun bind(item: ContentItem) {
itemView.text_name.text = item.name
itemView.text_number.text = item.number.toString()
}
}
}
item_user_section.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<TextView xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:id="#+id/text_section"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:background="#eee"
android:padding="16dp" />
item_user_content.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<LinearLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
xmlns:tools="http://schemas.android.com/tools"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:orientation="horizontal"
android:padding="32dp">
<TextView
android:id="#+id/text_name"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
tools:text="Name" />
<TextView
android:id="#+id/text_number"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content" />
</LinearLayout>
Example using
val dataSet = arrayListOf<RecyclerViewItem>(
SectionItem("A1"),
ContentItem("11", 11),
ContentItem("12", 12),
ContentItem("13", 13),
SectionItem("A2"),
ContentItem("21", 21),
ContentItem("22", 22),
SectionItem("A3"),
ContentItem("31", 31),
ContentItem("32", 32),
ContentItem("33", 33),
ContentItem("33", 34),
)
recyclerAdapter.data = dataSet
recyclerAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged()
Create a different ViewHolder for different layouts
RecyclerView can have any number of viewholders you want, but for better readability let’s see how to create one with two ViewHolders.
It can be done in three simple steps
Override public int getItemViewType(int position)
Return different ViewHolders based on the ViewType in onCreateViewHolder() method
Populate View based on the itemViewType in onBindViewHolder() method
Here is a small code snippet:
public class YourListAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder> {
private static final int LAYOUT_ONE = 0;
private static final int LAYOUT_TWO = 1;
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position)
{
if(position==0)
return LAYOUT_ONE;
else
return LAYOUT_TWO;
}
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View view = null;
RecyclerView.ViewHolder viewHolder = null;
if(viewType==LAYOUT_ONE)
{
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.one,parent,false);
viewHolder = new ViewHolderOne(view);
}
else
{
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.two,parent,false);
viewHolder= new ViewHolderTwo(view);
}
return viewHolder;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
if(holder.getItemViewType() == LAYOUT_ONE)
{
// Typecast Viewholder
// Set Viewholder properties
// Add any click listener if any
}
else {
ViewHolderOne vaultItemHolder = (ViewHolderOne) holder;
vaultItemHolder.name.setText(displayText);
vaultItemHolder.name.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
.......
}
});
}
}
//**************** VIEW HOLDER 1 ******************//
public class ViewHolderOne extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public TextView name;
public ViewHolderOne(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
name = (TextView)itemView.findViewById(R.id.displayName);
}
}
//**************** VIEW HOLDER 2 ******************//
public class ViewHolderTwo extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public ViewHolderTwo(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
..... Do something
}
}
}
getItemViewType(int position) is the key.
In my opinion, the starting point to create this kind of recyclerView is the knowledge of this method. Since this method is optional to override, it is not visible in RecylerView class by default which in turn makes many developers (including me) wonder where to begin.
Once you know that this method exists, creating such RecyclerView would be a cakewalk.
Let's see one example to prove my point. If you want to show two layout
at alternate positions do this
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position)
{
if(position%2==0) // Even position
return LAYOUT_ONE;
else // Odd position
return LAYOUT_TWO;
}
Relevant Links:
Check out the project where I have implemented this.
Yes, it is possible.
Write a generic view holder:
public abstract class GenericViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder
{
public GenericViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
}
public abstract void setDataOnView(int position);
}
then create your view holders and make them extend the GenericViewHolder. For example, this one:
public class SectionViewHolder extends GenericViewHolder{
public final View mView;
public final TextView dividerTxtV;
public SectionViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
mView = itemView;
dividerTxtV = (TextView) mView.findViewById(R.id.dividerTxtV);
}
#Override
public void setDataOnView(int position) {
try {
String title= sections.get(position);
if(title!= null)
this.dividerTxtV.setText(title);
}catch (Exception e){
new CustomError("Error!"+e.getMessage(), null, false, null, e);
}
}
}
then the RecyclerView.Adapter class will look like this one:
public class MyClassRecyclerViewAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<MyClassRecyclerViewAdapter.GenericViewHolder> {
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
// depends on your problem
switch (position) {
case : return VIEW_TYPE1;
case : return VIEW_TYPE2;
...
}
}
#Override
public GenericViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View view;
if(viewType == VIEW_TYPE1){
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.layout1, parent, false);
return new SectionViewHolder(view);
}else if( viewType == VIEW_TYPE2){
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.layout2, parent, false);
return new OtherViewHolder(view);
}
// Cont. other view holders ...
return null;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(GenericViewHolder holder, int position) {
holder.setDataOnView(position);
}
Yes, it is possible.
In your adapter getItemViewType Layout like this ....
public class MultiViewTypeAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter {
private ArrayList<Model>dataSet;
Context mContext;
int total_types;
MediaPlayer mPlayer;
private boolean fabStateVolume = false;
public static class TextTypeViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView txtType;
CardView cardView;
public TextTypeViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
this.txtType = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.type);
this.cardView = (CardView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.card_view);
}
}
public static class ImageTypeViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView txtType;
ImageView image;
public ImageTypeViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
this.txtType = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.type);
this.image = (ImageView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.background);
}
}
public static class AudioTypeViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView txtType;
FloatingActionButton fab;
public AudioTypeViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
this.txtType = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.type);
this.fab = (FloatingActionButton) itemView.findViewById(R.id.fab);
}
}
public MultiViewTypeAdapter(ArrayList<Model>data, Context context) {
this.dataSet = data;
this.mContext = context;
total_types = dataSet.size();
}
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View view;
switch (viewType) {
case Model.TEXT_TYPE:
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.text_type, parent, false);
return new TextTypeViewHolder(view);
case Model.IMAGE_TYPE:
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.image_type, parent, false);
return new ImageTypeViewHolder(view);
case Model.AUDIO_TYPE:
view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.audio_type, parent, false);
return new AudioTypeViewHolder(view);
}
return null;
}
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
switch (dataSet.get(position).type) {
case 0:
return Model.TEXT_TYPE;
case 1:
return Model.IMAGE_TYPE;
case 2:
return Model.AUDIO_TYPE;
default:
return -1;
}
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(final RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, final int listPosition) {
Model object = dataSet.get(listPosition);
if (object != null) {
switch (object.type) {
case Model.TEXT_TYPE:
((TextTypeViewHolder) holder).txtType.setText(object.text);
break;
case Model.IMAGE_TYPE:
((ImageTypeViewHolder) holder).txtType.setText(object.text);
((ImageTypeViewHolder) holder).image.setImageResource(object.data);
break;
case Model.AUDIO_TYPE:
((AudioTypeViewHolder) holder).txtType.setText(object.text);
}
}
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return dataSet.size();
}
}
For the reference link: Android RecyclerView Example – Multiple ViewTypes
Simpler than ever, forget about ViewTypes. It is not recommended to use multiple viewtypes inside one adapter. It will mess the code and break the single responsibility principle since now the adapter needs to handle logic to know which view to inflate.
Now imagine working in large teams where each team has to work in one of those viewtypes features. It will be a mess to touch the same adapter by all the teams that work in the different viewtypes. This is solved using ConcatAdapter where you isolate the adapters. Code them one by one and then just merge them inside one view.
From recyclerview:1.2.0-alpha04 you now can use ConcatAdapter.
If you need a view with different viewTypes, you can just write the Adapters for each section and just use ConcatAdapter to merge all of them inside one recyclerview.
ConcatAdapter
This image shows three different viewtypes that one recyclerview has, header, content and footer.
You only create one adapter for each section, and then just use ConcatAdapter to merge them inside one recyclerview:
val firstAdapter: FirstAdapter = …
val secondAdapter: SecondAdapter = …
val thirdAdapter: ThirdAdapter = …
val concatAdapter = ConcatAdapter(firstAdapter, secondAdapter,
thirdAdapter)
recyclerView.adapter = concatAdapter
That's all you need to know. If you want to handle loading state, for example remove the last adapter after some loading happened, you can use LoadState.
For more in depth information follow Florina Muntenescu post here https://medium.com/androiddevelopers/merge-adapters-sequentially-with-mergeadapter-294d2942127a
Following Anton's solution, I came up with this ViewHolder which holds/handles/delegates different type of layouts.
But I am not sure if the replacing new layout would work when the recycling view's ViewHolder is not the type of the data roll in.
So basically,
onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) is only called when new view layout is needed;
getItemViewType(int position) will be called for the viewType;
onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) is always called when recycling the view (new data is brought in and try to display with that ViewHolder).
So when onBindViewHolder is called it needs to be put in the right view layout and update the ViewHolder.
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
TypedData data = mDataSource.get(position);
return data.type;
}
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent,
int viewType) {
return ViewHolder.makeViewHolder(parent, viewType);
}
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder,
int position) {
TypedData data = mDataSource.get(position);
holder.updateData(data);
}
///
public static class ViewHolder extends
RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
ViewGroup mParentViewGroup;
View mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor;
int mDataType;
public TypeOneViewHolder mTypeOneViewHolder;
public TypeTwoViewHolder mTypeTwoViewHolder;
static ViewHolder makeViewHolder(ViewGroup vwGrp,
int dataType) {
View v = getLayoutView(vwGrp, dataType);
return new ViewHolder(vwGrp, v, viewType);
}
static View getLayoutView(ViewGroup vwGrp,
int dataType) {
int layoutId = getLayoutId(dataType);
return LayoutInflater.from(vwGrp.getContext())
.inflate(layoutId, null);
}
static int getLayoutId(int dataType) {
if (dataType == TYPE_ONE) {
return R.layout.type_one_layout;
} else if (dataType == TYPE_TWO) {
return R.layout.type_two_layout;
}
}
public ViewHolder(ViewGroup vwGrp, View v,
int dataType) {
super(v);
mDataType = dataType;
mParentViewGroup = vwGrp;
mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor = v;
if (data.type == TYPE_ONE) {
mTypeOneViewHolder = new TypeOneViewHolder(v);
} else if (data.type == TYPE_TWO) {
mTypeTwoViewHolder = new TypeTwoViewHolder(v);
}
}
public void updateData(TypeData data) {
mDataType = data.type;
if (data.type == TYPE_ONE) {
mTypeTwoViewHolder = null;
if (mTypeOneViewHolder == null) {
View newView = getLayoutView(mParentViewGroup,
data.type);
/**
* How can I replace a new view with
the view in the parent
view container?
*/
replaceView(mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor,
newView);
mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor = newView;
mTypeOneViewHolder =
new TypeOneViewHolder(newView);
}
mTypeOneViewHolder.updateDataTypeOne(data);
} else if (data.type == TYPE_TWO){
mTypeOneViewHolder = null;
if (mTypeTwoViewHolder == null) {
View newView = getLayoutView(mParentViewGroup,
data.type);
/**
* How can I replace a new view with
the view in the parent view
container?
*/
replaceView(mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor,
newView);
mCurrentViewThisViewHolderIsFor = newView;
mTypeTwoViewHolder =
new TypeTwoViewHolder(newView);
}
mTypeTwoViewHolder.updateDataTypeOne(data);
}
}
}
public static void replaceView(View currentView,
View newView) {
ViewGroup parent = (ViewGroup)currentView.getParent();
if(parent == null) {
return;
}
final int index = parent.indexOfChild(currentView);
parent.removeView(currentView);
parent.addView(newView, index);
}
ViewHolder has member mItemViewType to hold the view.
It looks like in onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) the ViewHolder passed in has been picked up (or created) by looked at getItemViewType(int position) to make sure it is a match, so it may not need to worry there that ViewHolder's type does not match the data[position]'s type.
It looks like The recycle ViewHolder is picked by type, so no warrior there.
Building a RecyclerView LayoutManager – Part 1 answers this question.
It gets the recycle ViewHolder like:
holder = getRecycledViewPool().getRecycledView(mAdapter.getItemViewType(offsetPosition));
Or create a new one if not find recycle ViewHolder of the right type.
public ViewHolder getRecycledView(int viewType) {
final ArrayList<ViewHolder> scrapHeap = mScrap.get(viewType);
if (scrapHeap != null && !scrapHeap.isEmpty()) {
final int index = scrapHeap.size() - 1;
final ViewHolder scrap = scrapHeap.get(index);
scrapHeap.remove(index);
return scrap;
}
return null;
}
View getViewForPosition(int position, boolean dryRun) {
......
if (holder == null) {
final int offsetPosition = mAdapterHelper.findPositionOffset(position);
if (offsetPosition < 0 || offsetPosition >= mAdapter.getItemCount()) {
throw new IndexOutOfBoundsException("Inconsistency detected. Invalid item "
+ "position " + position + "(offset:" + offsetPosition + ")."
+ "state:" + mState.getItemCount());
}
final int type = mAdapter.getItemViewType(offsetPosition);
// 2) Find from scrap via stable ids, if exists
if (mAdapter.hasStableIds()) {
holder = getScrapViewForId(mAdapter.getItemId(offsetPosition), type, dryRun);
if (holder != null) {
// update position
holder.mPosition = offsetPosition;
fromScrap = true;
}
}
if (holder == null && mViewCacheExtension != null) {
// We are NOT sending the offsetPosition because LayoutManager does not
// know it.
final View view = mViewCacheExtension
.getViewForPositionAndType(this, position, type);
if (view != null) {
holder = getChildViewHolder(view);
if (holder == null) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("getViewForPositionAndType returned"
+ " a view which does not have a ViewHolder");
} else if (holder.shouldIgnore()) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("getViewForPositionAndType returned"
+ " a view that is ignored. You must call stopIgnoring before"
+ " returning this view.");
}
}
}
if (holder == null) { // fallback to recycler
// try recycler.
// Head to the shared pool.
if (DEBUG) {
Log.d(TAG, "getViewForPosition(" + position + ") fetching from shared "
+ "pool");
}
holder = getRecycledViewPool()
.getRecycledView(mAdapter.getItemViewType(offsetPosition));
if (holder != null) {
holder.resetInternal();
if (FORCE_INVALIDATE_DISPLAY_LIST) {
invalidateDisplayListInt(holder);
}
}
}
if (holder == null) {
holder = mAdapter.createViewHolder(RecyclerView.this,
mAdapter.getItemViewType(offsetPosition));
if (DEBUG) {
Log.d(TAG, "getViewForPosition created new ViewHolder");
}
}
}
boolean bound = false;
if (mState.isPreLayout() && holder.isBound()) {
// do not update unless we absolutely have to.
holder.mPreLayoutPosition = position;
} else if (!holder.isBound() || holder.needsUpdate() || holder.isInvalid()) {
if (DEBUG && holder.isRemoved()) {
throw new IllegalStateException("Removed holder should be bound and it should"
+ " come here only in pre-layout. Holder: " + holder);
}
final int offsetPosition = mAdapterHelper.findPositionOffset(position);
mAdapter.bindViewHolder(holder, offsetPosition);
attachAccessibilityDelegate(holder.itemView);
bound = true;
if (mState.isPreLayout()) {
holder.mPreLayoutPosition = position;
}
}
final ViewGroup.LayoutParams lp = holder.itemView.getLayoutParams();
final LayoutParams rvLayoutParams;
if (lp == null) {
rvLayoutParams = (LayoutParams) generateDefaultLayoutParams();
holder.itemView.setLayoutParams(rvLayoutParams);
} else if (!checkLayoutParams(lp)) {
rvLayoutParams = (LayoutParams) generateLayoutParams(lp);
holder.itemView.setLayoutParams(rvLayoutParams);
} else {
rvLayoutParams = (LayoutParams) lp;
}
rvLayoutParams.mViewHolder = holder;
rvLayoutParams.mPendingInvalidate = fromScrap && bound;
return holder.itemView;
}
Although the selected answer is correct, I just want to further elaborate it. I found a useful Custom Adapter for multiple View Types in RecyclerView.
Its Kotlin version is here.
The custom adapter is the following:
public class CustomAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder> {
private final Context context;
ArrayList<String> list; // ArrayList of your Data Model
final int VIEW_TYPE_ONE = 1;
final int VIEW_TYPE_TWO = 2;
public CustomAdapter(Context context, ArrayList<String> list) { // you can pass other parameters in constructor
this.context = context;
this.list = list;
}
private class ViewHolder1 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView yourView;
ViewHolder1(final View itemView) {
super(itemView);
yourView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.yourView); // Initialize your All views prensent in list items
}
void bind(int position) {
// This method will be called anytime a list item is created or update its data
// Do your stuff here
yourView.setText(list.get(position));
}
}
private class ViewHolder2 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView yourView;
ViewHolder2(final View itemView) {
super(itemView);
yourView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.yourView); // Initialize your All views prensent in list items
}
void bind(int position) {
// This method will be called anytime a list item is created or update its data
//Do your stuff here
yourView.setText(list.get(position));
}
}
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
if (viewType == VIEW_TYPE_ONE) {
return new ViewHolder1(LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.your_list_item_1, parent, false));
}
//if its not VIEW_TYPE_ONE then its VIEW_TYPE_TWO
return new ViewHolder2(LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.your_list_item_2, parent, false));
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, int position) {
if (list.get(position).type == Something) { // Put your condition, according to your requirements
((ViewHolder1) holder).bind(position);
} else {
((ViewHolder2) holder).bind(position);
}
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return list.size();
}
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
// Here you can get decide from your model's ArrayList, which type of view you need to load. Like
if (list.get(position).type == Something) { // Put your condition, according to your requirements
return VIEW_TYPE_ONE;
}
return VIEW_TYPE_TWO;
}
}
I have a better solution which allows to create multiple view types in a declarative and type safe way. It’s written in Kotlin which, by the way, is really nice.
Simple view holders for all required view types
class ViewHolderMedium(itemView: View) : RecyclerView.ViewHolder(itemView) {
val icon: ImageView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.icon) as ImageView
val label: TextView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.label) as TextView
}
There is an abstraction of adapter data item. Note that a view type is represented by a hashCode of particular view holder class (KClass in Kotlin)
trait AdapterItem {
val viewType: Int
fun bindViewHolder(viewHolder: RecyclerView.ViewHolder)
}
abstract class AdapterItemBase<T>(val viewHolderClass: KClass<T>) : AdapterItem {
override val viewType: Int = viewHolderClass.hashCode()
abstract fun bindViewHolder(viewHolder: T)
override fun bindViewHolder(viewHolder: RecyclerView.ViewHolder) {
bindViewHolder(viewHolder as T)
}
}
Only bindViewHolder needs to be overridden in concrete adapter item classes (type safe way).
class AdapterItemMedium(val icon: Drawable, val label: String, val onClick: () -> Unit) : AdapterItemBase<ViewHolderMedium>(ViewHolderMedium::class) {
override fun bindViewHolder(viewHolder: ViewHolderMedium) {
viewHolder.icon.setImageDrawable(icon)
viewHolder.label.setText(label)
viewHolder.itemView.setOnClickListener { onClick() }
}
}
List of such AdapterItemMedium objects is a data source for the adapter which actually accepts List<AdapterItem>. See below.
The important part of this solution is a view holder factory which will provide fresh instances of a specific ViewHolder:
class ViewHolderProvider {
private val viewHolderFactories = hashMapOf<Int, Pair<Int, Any>>()
fun provideViewHolder(viewGroup: ViewGroup, viewType: Int): RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
val (layoutId: Int, f: Any) = viewHolderFactories.get(viewType)
val viewHolderFactory = f as (View) -> RecyclerView.ViewHolder
val view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(layoutId, viewGroup, false)
return viewHolderFactory(view)
}
fun registerViewHolderFactory<T>(key: KClass<T>, layoutId: Int, viewHolderFactory: (View) -> T) {
viewHolderFactories.put(key.hashCode(), Pair(layoutId, viewHolderFactory))
}
}
And the simple adapter class looks like this:
public class MultitypeAdapter(val items: List<AdapterItem>) : RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder>() {
val viewHolderProvider = ViewHolderProvider() // inject ex Dagger2
init {
viewHolderProvider!!.registerViewHolderFactory(ViewHolderMedium::class, R.layout.item_medium, { itemView ->
ViewHolderMedium(itemView)
})
}
override fun getItemViewType(position: Int): Int {
return items[position].viewType
}
override fun getItemCount(): Int {
return items.size()
}
override fun onCreateViewHolder(viewGroup: ViewGroup, viewType: Int): RecyclerView.ViewHolder? {
return viewHolderProvider!!.provideViewHolder(viewGroup, viewType)
}
override fun onBindViewHolder(viewHolder: RecyclerView.ViewHolder, position: Int) {
items[position].bindViewHolder(viewHolder)
}
}
There are only three steps to create a new view type:
create a view holder class
create an adapter item class (extending from AdapterItemBase)
register the view holder class in ViewHolderProvider
Here is an example of this concept: android-drawer-template.
It goes even further - a view type which acts as a spinner component, with selectable adapter items.
It is very simple and straightforward.
Just override the getItemViewType() method in your adapter. On the basis of data return different itemViewType values. E.g., consider an object of type Person with a member isMale, if isMale is true, return 1 and isMale is false, return 2 in the getItemViewType() method.
Now coming to the createViewHolder (ViewGroup parent, int viewType), on the basis of different viewType yon can inflate the different layout file. Like the following:
if (viewType == 1){
View view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.male, parent, false);
return new AdapterMaleViewHolder(view);
}
else{
View view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.female, parent, false);
return new AdapterFemaleViewHolder(view);
}
in onBindViewHolder (VH holder,int position) check where holder is an instance of AdapterFemaleViewHolder or AdapterMaleViewHolder by instanceof and accordingly assign the values.
ViewHolder may be like this
class AdapterMaleViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
...
public AdapterMaleViewHolder(View itemView){
...
}
}
class AdapterFemaleViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
...
public AdapterFemaleViewHolder(View itemView){
...
}
}
I recommend this library from Hannes Dorfmann. It encapsulates all the logic related to a particular view type in a separate object called "AdapterDelegate".
https://github.com/sockeqwe/AdapterDelegates
public class CatAdapterDelegate extends AdapterDelegate<List<Animal>> {
private LayoutInflater inflater;
public CatAdapterDelegate(Activity activity) {
inflater = activity.getLayoutInflater();
}
#Override public boolean isForViewType(#NonNull List<Animal> items, int position) {
return items.get(position) instanceof Cat;
}
#NonNull #Override public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent) {
return new CatViewHolder(inflater.inflate(R.layout.item_cat, parent, false));
}
#Override public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull List<Animal> items, int position,
#NonNull RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, #Nullable List<Object> payloads) {
CatViewHolder vh = (CatViewHolder) holder;
Cat cat = (Cat) items.get(position);
vh.name.setText(cat.getName());
}
static class CatViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public TextView name;
public CatViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
name = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.name);
}
}
}
public class AnimalAdapter extends ListDelegationAdapter<List<Animal>> {
public AnimalAdapter(Activity activity, List<Animal> items) {
// DelegatesManager is a protected Field in ListDelegationAdapter
delegatesManager.addDelegate(new CatAdapterDelegate(activity))
.addDelegate(new DogAdapterDelegate(activity))
.addDelegate(new GeckoAdapterDelegate(activity))
.addDelegate(23, new SnakeAdapterDelegate(activity));
// Set the items from super class.
setItems(items);
}
}
I firstly recommend you to read Hannes Dorfmann's great article about this topic.
When a new view type comes, you have to edit your adapter and you have to handle so many messy things. Your adapter should be open for extension, but closed for modification.
You may check this two project, they can give the idea about how to handle different ViewTypes in Adapter:
https://github.com/sockeqwe/AdapterDelegates
https://github.com/ibrahimyilmaz/kiel
If anyone is interested to see the super simple solution written in Kotlin, check the blogpost I just created. The example in the blogpost is based on creating Sectioned RecyclerView:
https://brona.blog/2020/06/sectioned-recyclerview-in-three-steps/
Actually, I'd like to improve on Anton's answer.
Since getItemViewType(int position) returns an integer value, you can return the layout resource ID you'd need to inflate. That way you'd save some logic in onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) method.
Also, I wouldn't suggest doing intensive calculations in getItemCount() as that particular function is called at least 5 times while rendering the list, as well as while rendering each item beyond the visible items. Sadly since notifyDatasetChanged() method is final, you can't really override it, but you can call it from another function within the adapter.
You can use the library: https://github.com/vivchar/RendererRecyclerViewAdapter
mRecyclerViewAdapter = new RendererRecyclerViewAdapter(); /* Included from library */
mRecyclerViewAdapter.registerRenderer(new SomeViewRenderer(SomeModel.TYPE, this));
mRecyclerViewAdapter.registerRenderer(...); /* You can use several types of cells */
For each item, you should to implement a ViewRenderer, ViewHolder, SomeModel:
ViewHolder - it is a simple view holder of recycler view.
SomeModel - it is your model with ItemModel interface
public class SomeViewRenderer extends ViewRenderer<SomeModel, SomeViewHolder> {
public SomeViewRenderer(final int type, final Context context) {
super(type, context);
}
#Override
public void bindView(#NonNull final SomeModel model, #NonNull final SomeViewHolder holder) {
holder.mTitle.setText(model.getTitle());
}
#NonNull
#Override
public SomeViewHolder createViewHolder(#Nullable final ViewGroup parent) {
return new SomeViewHolder(LayoutInflater.from(getContext()).inflate(R.layout.some_item, parent, false));
}
}
For more details you can look at the documentation.
View types implementation becomes easier with Kotlin. Here is a sample with this light library https://github.com/Link184/KidAdapter
recyclerView.setUp {
withViewType {
withLayoutResId(R.layout.item_int)
withItems(mutableListOf(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6))
bind<Int> { // this - is adapter view hoder itemView, it - current item
intName.text = it.toString()
}
}
withViewType("SECOND_STRING_TAG") {
withLayoutResId(R.layout.item_text)
withItems(mutableListOf("eight", "nine", "ten", "eleven", "twelve"))
bind<String> {
stringName.text = it
}
}
}
You can deal with multipleViewTypes RecyclerAdapter by making getItemViewType() return the expected viewType value for that position.
I prepared an MultipleViewTypeAdapter for constructing an MCQ list for examinations which may throw a question that may have two or more valid answers (checkbox options) and a single answer questions (radiobutton options).
For this I get the type of question from the API response and I used that for deciding which view I have to show for that question.
public class MultiViewTypeAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter {
Context mContext;
ArrayList<Question> dataSet;
ArrayList<String> questions;
private Object radiobuttontype1;
//Viewholder to display Questions with checkboxes
public static class Checkboxtype2 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
ImageView imgclockcheck;
CheckBox checkbox;
public Checkboxtype2(#NonNull View itemView) {
super(itemView);
imgclockcheck = (ImageView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.clockout_cbox_image);
checkbox = (CheckBox) itemView.findViewById(R.id.clockout_cbox);
}
}
//Viewholder to display Questions with radiobuttons
public static class Radiobuttontype1 extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
ImageView clockout_imageradiobutton;
RadioButton clockout_radiobutton;
TextView sample;
public radiobuttontype1(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
clockout_imageradiobutton = (ImageView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.clockout_imageradiobutton);
clockout_radiobutton = (RadioButton) itemView.findViewById(R.id.clockout_radiobutton);
sample = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.sample);
}
}
public MultiViewTypeAdapter(ArrayList<QueDatum> data, Context context) {
this.dataSet = data;
this.mContext = context;
}
#NonNull
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(#NonNull ViewGroup viewGroup, int viewType) {
if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("1")) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.clockout_radio_list_row, viewGroup, false);
return new radiobuttontype1(view);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("2")) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.clockout_cbox_list_row, viewGroup, false);
view.setHorizontalFadingEdgeEnabled(true);
return new Checkboxtype2(view);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("3")) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.clockout_radio_list_row, viewGroup, false);
return new Radiobuttontype1(view);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("4")) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.clockout_radio_list_row, viewGroup, false);
return new Radiobuttontype1(view);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("5")) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.clockout_radio_list_row, viewGroup, false);
return new Radiobuttontype1(view);
}
return null;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull RecyclerView.ViewHolder viewHolder, int viewType) {
if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("1")) {
options = dataSet.get(i).getOptions();
question = dataSet.get(i).getQuestion();
image = options.get(i).getValue();
((radiobuttontype1) viewHolder).clockout_radiobutton.setChecked(false);
((radiobuttontype1) viewHolder).sample.setText(question);
//Loading image bitmap in the ViewHolder's View
Picasso.with(mContext)
.load(image)
.into(((radiobuttontype1) viewHolder).clockout_imageradiobutton);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("2")) {
options = (ArrayList<Clockout_questions_Option>) dataSet.get(i).getOptions();
question = dataSet.get(i).getQuestion();
image = options.get(i).getValue();
//Loading image bitmap in the ViewHolder's View
Picasso.with(mContext)
.load(image)
.into(((Checkboxtype2) viewHolder).imgclockcheck);
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("3")) {
//Fit data to viewHolder for ViewType 3
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("4")) {
//Fit data to viewHolder for ViewType 4
} else if (viewType.equalsIgnoreCase("5")) {
//Fit data to viewHolder for ViewType 5
}
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return dataSet.size();
}
/**
* Returns viewType for that position by picking the viewType value from the
* dataset
*/
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
return dataSet.get(position).getViewType();
}
}
You can avoid multiple conditionals based viewHolder data fillings in onBindViewHolder() by assigning same ids for the similar views across viewHolders which differ in their positioning.
If you want to use it in conjunction with Android Data Binding look into the https://github.com/evant/binding-collection-adapter - it is by far the best solution for the multiple view types RecyclerView I have even seen.
You may use it like
var items: AsyncDiffPagedObservableList<BaseListItem> =
AsyncDiffPagedObservableList(GenericDiff)
val onItemBind: OnItemBind<BaseListItem> =
OnItemBind { itemBinding, _, item -> itemBinding.set(BR.item, item.layoutRes) }
And then in the layout where the list is:
<androidx.recyclerview.widget.RecyclerView
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="0dp"
android:layout_weight="1"
app:enableAnimations="#{false}"
app:scrollToPosition="#{viewModel.scrollPosition}"
app:itemBinding="#{viewModel.onItemBind}"
app:items="#{viewModel.items}"
app:reverseLayoutManager="#{true}"/>
Your list items must implement the BaseListItem interface which looks like this:
interface BaseListItem {
val layoutRes: Int
}
And the item view should look something like this:
<layout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
<data>
<variable
name="item"
type="...presentation.somescreen.list.YourListItem"/>
</data>
...
</layout>
Where YourListItem implements BaseListItem.
First you must create two layout XML files. After that inside recyclerview adapter TYPE_CALL and TYPE_EMAIL are two static values with 1 and 2 respectively in the adapter class.
Now define two static values at the Recycler view Adapter class level, for example: private static int TYPE_CALL = 1; private static int TYPE_EMAIL = 2;
Now create the view holder with multiple views like this:
class CallViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
private TextView txtName;
private TextView txtAddress;
CallViewHolder(#NonNull View itemView) {
super(itemView);
txtName = itemView.findViewById(R.id.txtName);
txtAddress = itemView.findViewById(R.id.txtAddress);
}
}
class EmailViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
private TextView txtName;
private TextView txtAddress;
EmailViewHolder(#NonNull View itemView) {
super(itemView);
txtName = itemView.findViewById(R.id.txtName);
txtAddress = itemView.findViewById(R.id.txtAddress);
}
}
Now code as below in onCreateViewHolder and onBindViewHolder method in the recyclerview adapter:
#NonNull
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(#NonNull ViewGroup viewGroup, int viewType) {
View view;
if (viewType == TYPE_CALL) { // for call layout
view = LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.item_call, viewGroup, false);
return new CallViewHolder(view);
} else { // for email layout
view = LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.item_email, viewGroup, false);
return new EmailViewHolder(view);
}
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull RecyclerView.ViewHolder viewHolder, int position) {
if (getItemViewType(position) == TYPE_CALL) {
((CallViewHolder) viewHolder).setCallDetails(employees.get(position));
} else {
((EmailViewHolder) viewHolder).setEmailDetails(employees.get(position));
}
}
I did something like this. I passed "fragmentType" and created two ViewHolders and on basis of this, I classified my Layouts accordingly in a single adapter that can have different Layouts and LayoutManagers
private Context mContext;
protected IOnLoyaltyCardCategoriesItemClicked mListener;
private String fragmentType;
private View view;
public LoyaltyCardsCategoriesRecyclerViewAdapter(Context context, IOnLoyaltyCardCategoriesItemClicked itemListener, String fragmentType) {
this.mContext = context;
this.mListener = itemListener;
this.fragmentType = fragmentType;
}
public class LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener {
private ImageView lc_categories_iv;
private TextView lc_categories_name_tv;
private int pos;
public LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentViewHolder(View v) {
super(v);
view.setOnClickListener(this);
lc_categories_iv = (ImageView) v.findViewById(R.id.lc_categories_iv);
lc_categories_name_tv = (TextView) v.findViewById(R.id.lc_categories_name_tv);
}
public void setData(int pos) {
this.pos = pos;
lc_categories_iv.setImageResource(R.mipmap.ic_launcher);
lc_categories_name_tv.setText("Loyalty Card Categories");
}
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
if (mListener != null) {
mListener.onLoyaltyCardCategoriesItemClicked(pos);
}
}
}
public class MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTagViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener {
public ImageButton lc_categories_btn;
private int pos;
public MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTagViewHolder(View v) {
super(v);
lc_categories_btn = (ImageButton) v.findViewById(R.id.lc_categories_btn);
lc_categories_btn.setOnClickListener(this);
}
public void setData(int pos) {
this.pos = pos;
lc_categories_btn.setImageResource(R.mipmap.ic_launcher);
}
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
if (mListener != null) {
mListener.onLoyaltyCardCategoriesItemClicked(pos);
}
}
}
#NonNull
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
if (fragmentType.equalsIgnoreCase(Constants.LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentTag)) {
view = LayoutInflater.from(mContext).inflate(R.layout.loyalty_cards_categories_frag_item, parent, false);
return new LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentViewHolder(view);
} else if (fragmentType.equalsIgnoreCase(Constants.MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTag)) {
view = LayoutInflater.from(mContext).inflate(R.layout.my_loyalty_cards_categories_frag_item, parent, false);
return new MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTagViewHolder(view);
} else {
return null;
}
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, int position) {
if (fragmentType.equalsIgnoreCase(Constants.LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentTag)) {
((LoyaltyCardCategoriesFragmentViewHolder) holder).setData(position);
} else if (fragmentType.equalsIgnoreCase(Constants.MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTag)) {
((MyLoyaltyCardsFragmentTagViewHolder) holder).setData(position);
}
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return 7;
}
I see there are a lot of great answers, incredibly detailed and extensive. In my case, I always understand things better if I follow along the reasoning from almost scratch, step by step. I would recommend you check this link out and whenever you have similar questions, search for any codelabs that address the issue.
Android Kotlin Fundamentals: Headers in RecyclerView
Unable to add second child in Recyclerview I am passing two different arrays to RecyclerAdapter to display two child layout with different data and views.Is there any solution to add different child layout using same header layout.I added horizontal Recyclerview in vertical Recyclerview and I want to display details like I attached the image
private void setupRecyclerView(RecyclerView recyclerView) {
recyclerView.setLayoutManager(new LinearLayoutManager(getActivity()));
RecyclerAdapter recyclerAdapter = new RecyclerAdapter();
int[] images = new int[]{
R.drawable.finance,
R.drawable.business,
R.drawable.financejob,
R.drawable.ecomchallenges
};
ArrayList<ChildView> childViews = new ArrayList<>();
childViews.add(new ChildView(images[0], "The \"Best\" Startup Pitch Deck - How To Raise Venture Capital", "$100"));
childViews.add(new ChildView(images[1], "An Entire MBA in 1 Course:Award Winning Business School Prof", "$100"));
childViews.add(new ChildView(images[2], "What Finance Job is for You? Explanation of 14 Finance Roles", "$100"));
childViews.add(new ChildView(images[3], "Learn To Build Beautiful HTML5 And CSS3 Websites In 1 Month", "$100"));
int[] courseImage = new int[] {
R.drawable.php,
R.drawable.development,
R.drawable.web,
R.drawable.java
};
ArrayList<CourseByType> courseByTypes = new ArrayList<>();
courseByTypes.add(new CourseByType("Technology", courseImage[0]));
courseByTypes.add(new CourseByType("Business", courseImage[1]));
courseByTypes.add(new CourseByType("Photography", courseImage[2]));
courseByTypes.add(new CourseByType("Development", courseImage[3]));
Log.d("","Above adapter");
recyclerAdapter.addItem(new GroupView("Business", childViews));
Log.d("","Below Child");
recyclerAdapter.addCourseByType(new CourseByHeader("Technology", courseByTypes));
Log.d("","Below Course");
recyclerView.setAdapter(recyclerAdapter);
}
This is the main fragment where I set the values to two different
arraylist ArrayList<ChildView> childViews = new ArrayList<>()
and
ArrayList<CourseByType> courseByTypes = new ArrayList<>()
Values of child views are passing properly but CourseByType values are not passing.This is the adapter class for this fragment class.
RecyclerAdapter.java
public class RecyclerAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerAdapter.ViewHolder> {
ArrayList<PassValues> containerArrayList;
ArrayList<GroupView> groupViews;
ArrayList<CourseByHeader>courseByHeaders;
private static final int TYPE_HEADER = 0;
private static final int TYPE_ITEM = 1;
#Override
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
Context context = parent.getContext();
View view = LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.group_title, parent, false);
return new ViewHolder(view);
}
public RecyclerAdapter(){
containerArrayList = new ArrayList<>();
groupViews = new ArrayList<>();
courseByHeaders = new ArrayList<>();
}
public void addContainer(PassValues container){
containerArrayList.add(container);
}
public void addItem(GroupView groupView){
Log.d("","Inside Group method");
groupViews.add(groupView);
}
public void addCourseByType(CourseByHeader courseByHeader){
Log.d("","Inside Course method");
courseByHeaders.add(courseByHeader);
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
Log.d("", "Pass Values out of IF" + position);
ChildViewAdapter childViewAdapter = new ChildViewAdapter();
if(position == 0){
GroupView groupView = groupViews.get(position);
holder.title.setText(groupView.getTitle());
Log.d("", "Passing Values" + groupView.getTitle());
holder.recyclerView.setLayoutManager(new LinearLayoutManager(holder.recyclerView.getContext(), LinearLayoutManager.HORIZONTAL, false));
holder.recyclerView.setOnFlingListener(null);
childViewAdapter.addChild(groupView.getChildViewList());
holder.recyclerView.setAdapter(childViewAdapter);
}
if (position == 1) {
CourseByHeader courseByHeader = courseByHeaders.get(position);
holder.title.setText(courseByHeader.getTitle());
Log.d("", "Passing Values" + courseByHeader.getTitle());
holder.recyclerView.setLayoutManager(new LinearLayoutManager(holder.recyclerView.getContext(), LinearLayoutManager.HORIZONTAL, false));
holder.recyclerView.setOnFlingListener(null);
childViewAdapter.addCourse(courseByHeader.getCourseByTypes());
holder.recyclerView.setAdapter(childViewAdapter);
}
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
if(getItemViewType(0) == TYPE_HEADER)
return groupViews.size() ;
if (getItemViewType(1) == TYPE_ITEM)
return courseByHeaders.size();
else return -1;
}
public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView title;
RecyclerView recyclerView;
public ViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
title = (TextView)itemView.findViewById(R.id.course_title);
recyclerView = (RecyclerView)itemView.findViewById(R.id.group_recycler);
}
}
}
This RecyclerAdapter contains one RecyclerView in that first row has one image and 3 textviews and 2nd row has 1 ImageView and 1 TextView. At position first,one image and 3 textviews are shown but it's not going on 2nd view
This is the view I getting after run on emulator.
This are two child for RecyclerViews
ChildView.java
public class ChildView {
int image;
String course, price;
public ChildView(int image, String course, String price) {
this.image = image;
this.course = course;
this.price = price;
}
public int getImage() {
return image;
}
public String getCourse() {
return course;
}
public String getPrice() {
return price;
}
}
CourseByType.java
public class CourseByType {
String courseName;
int courseImage;
public CourseByType(String courseName, int courseImage) {
this.courseName = courseName;
this.courseImage = courseImage;
}
public String getCourseName() {
return courseName;
}
public int getCourseImage() {
return courseImage;
}
}
CourseByHeader.java
public class CourseByHeader {
String title;
ArrayList<CourseByType> courseByTypes;
public CourseByHeader(String title, ArrayList<CourseByType> courseByTypes) {
this.title = title;
this.courseByTypes = courseByTypes;
}
public String getTitle() {
return title;
}
public ArrayList<CourseByType> getCourseByTypes() {
return courseByTypes;
}
}
GroupView.java
public class GroupView {
String title;
ArrayList<ChildView> childViewList;
String courseBy;
ArrayList<CourseByType> courseByTypes;
public GroupView(String title, ArrayList<ChildView> childViewList) {
this.title = title;
this.childViewList = childViewList;
}
public String getTitle() {
return title;
}
public ArrayList<ChildView> getChildViewList() {
return childViewList;
}
}
Groupview and CouseByType class have title and child list for recycleradapter
ChildViewAdapter.java
public class ChildViewAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter {
ArrayList<ChildView> childViewList;
ArrayList<CourseByType> courseByTypes;
private static final int TYPE_HEADER = 0;
private static final int TYPE_ITEM = 1;
public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder{
public ViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
}
}
public class GroupHolder extends ViewHolder {
public ImageView iamView;
public TextView course, price;
public GroupHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
iamView = (ImageView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.course_image);
course = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.course_by);
price = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.price);
}
}
public void addCourse(ArrayList<CourseByType> courseByType){
courseByTypes = courseByType;
}
public void addChild(ArrayList<ChildView> childView){
childViewList = childView;
}
public class Course extends ViewHolder {
public ImageView courseTypeImage;
public TextView courseType;
public Course(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
courseTypeImage = (ImageView)itemView.findViewById(R.id.course_image);
courseType = (TextView)itemView.findViewById(R.id.course_name_course);
}
}
public ChildViewAdapter() {
childViewList = new ArrayList<>();
courseByTypes = new ArrayList<>();
}
#Override
public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
Context context = parent.getContext();
RecyclerView.ViewHolder vh = null;
View v;
if(viewType == TYPE_HEADER){
v = LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.recycler_item, parent, false);
return new GroupHolder(v);
}if(viewType == TYPE_ITEM){
v = LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.type_of_courses, parent, false);
return new Course(v);
}
return vh;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, int position) {
if(holder instanceof GroupHolder){
Log.d("","instance of Group Holder");
ChildView childView = childViewList.get(position);
((GroupHolder)holder).iamView.setImageResource(childView.getImage());
((GroupHolder)holder).course.setText(childView.getCourse());
((GroupHolder)holder).price.setText(childView.getPrice());
return;
}
if(holder instanceof Course){
Log.d("","instance of Course ");
CourseByType courseByType = courseByTypes.get(position);
((Course)holder).courseTypeImage.setImageResource(courseByType.getCourseImage());
((Course)holder).courseType.setText(courseByType.getCourseName());
return;
}
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
int size;
if(childViewList.size()>0){
return size = childViewList.size();
}else return size = courseByTypes.size();
}
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
if(childViewList.size() != 0 && childViewList.size()>0){
return TYPE_HEADER;
}else return TYPE_ITEM;
}
}
This childview adapter has two view types first is one image and 3 text and second view type contain one image and one text.When I pass values from fragment only first view type get displayed and second view type not gets value from fragment.
To show multiple different views in a recyclerview, you have to override getItemViewType() in the recyclerview adapter.
//getItemViewType enables dynamic viewholder creation
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
//you will need to add a integer with variable name viewTypeCode
//for view1 set viewTypeCode = 100 and for view2 set viewTypeCode = 200
viewTypeCode = itemList.get(position).getViewTypeCode();
return viewTypeCode;
}
This is how the onCreateViewHolder will be different for multiple viewtypes. You will have to modify yours like this
#Override
public FeedViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
switch (viewType) {
case 100: return new FeedViewHolder(layoutInflater.inflate(R.layout.v1, parent, false),100);
case 200: return new FeedViewHolder(layoutInflater.inflate(R.layout.v2, parent, false),200);
}
return null;
}
OnBindViewHolder will be similarly modified
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(final FeedViewHolder holder, int position) {
viewTypeCode = itemList.get(position).getViewTypeCode();
switch ( viewTypeCode) {
case 100:
//your code for v1
case 200:
//your code for v2
}
}
Similarly the ViewHolder class is modified
class FeedViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder{
//declare variables here
public FeedViewHolder(View v, int viewType) {
super(v);
switch (viewType) {
//instead of itemView.findViewById you will have to use v.findViewById
case 100:
//your code for v1
case 200:
//your code for v2
}
}
For further reference refer to this SO answer
Don't pass two separate list.Make a custom class like this-
class MyClass {
int viewTypeCode;
CustomClass1 c1;
CustomClass2 c2;
//add the setter getter
}
In your activity while preparing the data.
List<MyClass> itemList = new ArrayList<>();
//put whatever logic you need to make the order of the list
//if CustomClass1 object is put then setViewTypeCode(100), setCustomClass2 = null
//if CustomClass2 object is put then setViewTypeCode(200), setCustomClass1 = null
After data is built, then send this to the adapter.
I have a RecyclerView which shows list of items sorted in descending order that works fine when I initially launch the screen, but when I add some more items to the existing list and setting it to the adapter with notifyDataSetChanged() method the existing list gets sorted in ascending order and the new items get added at the bottom of the view.
below is adapter
public class RecycleAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecycleAdapter.ViewHolder> {
private List<Cinema> lists;
private int savedItems;
public RecycleAdapter(List<Cinema> cinemas, int savedItems) {
this.lists = cinemas;
this.savedItems = savedItems;
}
public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public TextView cinemaTitle;
public TextView cinemaDescription;
public TextView cinemaDate;
public LinearLayout newLayout;
public ViewHolder(View view) {
super(view);
cinemaTitle = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.cinema_title);
cinemaDescription = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.description_text);
cinemaDate = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.cinema_date);
newLayout = (LinearLayout) view.findViewById(R.id.new_cinema_layout);
}
}
#Override
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View itemView = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext())
.inflate(R.layout.item_cinema, parent, false);
return new ViewHolder(itemView);
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
Cinema cinema = cinemas.get(position);
if (cinema.getId() > savedItems) {
holder.newLayout.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
} else {
holder.newLayout.setVisibility(View.INVISIBLE);
}
String title = cinema.getMessage().trim();
String description = cinema.getDescription().trim();
String date = cinema.getPublishedDate().trim();
holder.cinemaTitle.setText(title);
holder.cinemaDescription.setText(description);
holder.cinemaDate.setText(date);
}
public void setCineams(List<Cinema> cinemas) {
this.cinemas = cinemas;
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return cinemas.size();
}
}
and the method which updates the list from Fragment is given below:
#Override
public void onCinemaUpdated() {
cinemas = firebaseHelper.getAllCinemas();
//Method which sorts the lists in descending order after adding new items into it
sortCinemas();
if (recycleAdapterAdapter != null) {
recycleAdapterAdapter.setCineams(cinemas);
}
}
I am not sure why am I getting this behaviour. Can anyone clarify on this?
Change your constructor and setCinemas method code to : Let me know if it helps..
public RecycleAdapter(List<Cinema> cinemas, int savedItems) {
this.lists = cinemas;
this.savedItems = savedItems;
}
public void setCineams(List<Cinema> cinemas) {
this.lists = cinemas;
notifyDataSetChanged();
}