I have a recyclerview where i want to change the color of the selected item and re change it on unselected. I have used an string arraylist and an interface for that here is interface code in adapter -
public interface Callback{
void onItemClicked(String i_name, boolean longClick);
}
Here is onclick and onlongclick code-
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
String[] tag = ((String) view.getTag()).split(":");
String i_name = tag[1];
Toast.makeText(context, ""+i_name, Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
if(callback != null)
{
callback.onItemClicked(i_name,false);
}
}
#Override
public boolean onLongClick(View view) {
String[] tag = ((String) view.getTag()).split(":");
String i_name = tag[1];
if(callback != null)
{
callback.onItemClicked(i_name,false);
}
return false;
}
Here is the toggleselected code -
public void toggleSelected(String i_name)
{
final boolean newState = !selectedList.contains(i_name);
if(newState)
{
// i want to give background color to i_name
selectedList.add(i_name);
Toast.makeText(context, "selected list1- "+selectedList, Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
else
{
selectedList.remove((String) i_name);
Toast.makeText(context, "selected list2- "+selectedList, Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
here is onItemClicked code from fragment -
#Override
public void onItemClicked(String i_name, boolean longClick) {
if(longClick)
{
((MyCategoryAdaptercheckbox) MyAdapter).toggleSelected(i_name);
}
else
{
((MyCategoryAdaptercheckbox) MyAdapter).toggleSelected(i_name);
}
}
This is the code from onbindviewholder where i am settingthe tag -
getMyCategoryAdapter1 = category_name.get(i);
viewHolder.view.setActivated(selectedList.contains(i));
viewHolder.view.setTag("items:" + getMyCategoryAdapter1.getC_name());
viewHolder.view.setOnClickListener(this);
viewHolder.view.setOnLongClickListener(this);
I want to give background color to i_name on toggleselected() method.HOw can i do this.Please help.Thanks in advance.
Basic idea for selecting and disselecting items in a recyclerview.
Maintain a tag in your model for selected and unselected.
for e.x
boolean isSelected;
when you populate the data make all values in your list for isSelected false bydefault.
Then in your long press set the value of isSelected to true for that position only in your arraylist and call notifyDataSetChanged.
and in your onbindviewholder check
if(yourModel.isSelected){
// show the row selected
}else {
// show the row unselected
}
I hope you get the idea.
Attention! This question is not about dynamic loading of items into a very long ListView.
This is about adding PageUP and PageDown buttons to a ListView so that user can touch the button and scroll ListView page by page. Page means all fully and partially visible items on the screen.
I have partially implemented this in the following code, but my problem is that when I have lets say 10 items of approximately same height in the listview and 7 of them fit into the first page, then when I press PgDown button, user expects that item 8 to be on top of the screen (next page), but because there are only 10 items, ListView scrolls to the bottom of the list and because there is no extra scroll space I have item number 4 on top.
What is the best solution in this situation?
Should I add one item to the end of the list which will make the last page the height of the screen or there are any better options?
Here is my code:
public class cPaginatedListViewHelper {
Activity m_parentActivity;
private ListView mList;
//controls
private LinearLayout m_PagingLL;
//buttons
private ImageButton m_btnPrevPage;
private ImageButton m_btnNextPage;
private ImageButton m_btnExitPaginatedMode;
public cPaginatedListViewHelper(ListActivity mParent) {
this.m_parentActivity = mParent;
m_btnPrevPage=(ImageButton) mParent.findViewById(R.id.btnPrevPage);
m_btnNextPage=(ImageButton) mParent.findViewById(R.id.btnNextPage);
m_btnExitPaginatedMode =(ImageButton) mParent.findViewById(R.id.btnClosePage);
if(m_btnPrevPage!=null) {
m_btnPrevPage.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
showSiblingPage(-1);
}
});
m_btnPrevPage.setOnLongClickListener(new View.OnLongClickListener() {
#Override
public boolean onLongClick(View v) {
mList.smoothScrollToPosition(0);
return true;
}
}
);
}
if(m_btnNextPage!=null) {
m_btnNextPage.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
showSiblingPage(1);
}
});
m_btnNextPage.setOnLongClickListener(new View.OnLongClickListener() {
#Override
public boolean onLongClick(View v) {
mList.smoothScrollToPosition(mList.getCount());
return true;
}
}
);
}
m_btnExitPaginatedMode.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
setEnabled(false);
m_PagingLL.setVisibility(View.GONE);
}
});
mList=mParent.getListView();
m_PagingLL = (LinearLayout) mParent.findViewById(R.id.pageControls);
}
public void updateControlsVisibility()
{
ViewTreeObserver observer = mList.getViewTreeObserver();
observer.addOnGlobalLayoutListener(new ViewTreeObserver.OnGlobalLayoutListener() {
#Override
public void onGlobalLayout() {
if (willMyListScroll()) {
boolean psm = isEnabled();
//enable or disable
m_PagingLL.setVisibility( psm ? View.VISIBLE : View.GONE);
((View)mList).setVerticalScrollbarPosition(psm ? View.SCROLLBAR_POSITION_LEFT: View.SCROLLBAR_POSITION_RIGHT);
}
else
{
m_PagingLL.setVisibility(View.GONE);
((View)mList).setVerticalScrollbarPosition(View.SCROLLBAR_POSITION_RIGHT);
}
}
});
}
private boolean willMyListScroll() {
try {
int pos = mList.getLastVisiblePosition();
if (mList.getChildAt(pos).getBottom() > mList.getHeight()) {
return true;
} else {
return false;
}
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return false;
}
private void showSiblingPage(int shift)
{
if(mList!=null) {
int iScrollPageHeight = mList.getHeight();
mList.scrollListBy(iScrollPageHeight * shift);
}
}
public void setEnabled(boolean psm) {
MyApp.Pref.edit().putBoolean("PSModeEnabled", psm).commit();
}
public boolean isEnabled(){
return MyApp.Pref.getBoolean("PSModeEnabled", false);
}
public void pagedScrollEnableDisable() {
boolean pagingEnabled = isEnabled();
pagingEnabled=!pagingEnabled;
setEnabled(pagingEnabled);
m_PagingLL.setVisibility( pagingEnabled ? View.VISIBLE : View.GONE);
updateControlsVisibility();
}
}
I finished up with using ListView's footer with variable height as shown in the following code:
LayoutInflater inflater = m_parentActivity.getLayoutInflater();
m_footerView = inflater.inflate(R.layout.listview_paged_overscroll, mList, false );
ViewGroup.LayoutParams lp =m_footerView.getLayoutParams();
if(m_tvPageNum!=null) recalcPagination();
if(lp!=null) lp.height = m_extraScrollFooterHeight;
int iFooters = mList.getFooterViewsCount();
if(iFooters==0) mList.addFooterView(m_footerView);
I have a recyclerview with simple items - an item has an image, title and a button. When the user clicks on the button it needs to change its layout -> indicating that button is clicked (similar to checkbox functionality).
Problem is that when I click on a button, for example the second item, it behaves weirdly when I scroll - multiple items are toggled or the original one is untoggled. You can check it out in image here:
GIF PREVIEW
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, int position)
{
holder.button.setOnClickListener(view -> {
toggleButtonStyle((Button)view);
});
}
public void toggleButtonStyle(Button toggle)
{
Context ctx = toggle.getContext();
if (toggle.isActivated()) {
toggle.setActivated(false);
toggle.setBackground(ContextCompat.getDrawable(ctx, R.drawable.btn_purple_corners));
toggle.setTextColor(ContextCompat.getColor(ctx, R.color.purple_light));
} else {
toggle.setActivated(true);
toggle.setBackground(ContextCompat.getDrawable(ctx, R.drawable.btn_purple));
toggle.setTextColor(ContextCompat.getColor(ctx, R.color.white));
}
}
You need to specify position for a onBindView method, because it's called multiple times. If you are using AutoValue immutable types, you can try to make an Array of booleans where you'll be storing toggled states (true/false). Then in onBindViewMethod check a value of current position and style a button.
private boolean[] toggledChoices = new boolean[yourListWithItems.size()];
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, int position) {
if (toggledChoices[position]) {
toggleButtonStyle(true, holder.toggleButton);
} else {
toggleButtonStyle(false, holder.toggleButton;
}
holderVote.bToggleItem.setOnClickListener(v -> {
if (!toggledChoices[position]) {
toggledChoices[position] = true;
} else {
toggledChoices[position] = false;
}
});
}
I had some strange behavior too in the past.
For me it was solved by simply calling
toggle.invalidate();
after your if/else block. This forces the redraw. Try it, I was surprised too, that this fixed it for me.
Check Out my code
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(GifGridAdapter.ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
final DataModel model = arrayList.get(position);
if (model.isToggle()) {
//Code for changing the button background color and text color
} else {
//Code for changing the button background color and text color
}
holder.ivGif.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
model.setToggle(!model.isToggle());
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
});
}
I'm trying to update the items of a recycleview using notifyDataSetChanged().
This is my onBindViewHolder() method in the recycleview adapter.
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder viewHolder, int position) {
//checkbox view listener
viewHolder.getCheckbox().setOnCheckedChangeListener(new CompoundButton.OnCheckedChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onCheckedChanged(CompoundButton buttonView, boolean isChecked) {
//update list items
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
});
}
What I want to do is update the list items, after I check a checkbox. I get an illegal exception though: "Cannot call this method while RecyclerView is computing a layout or scrolling"
java.lang.IllegalStateException: Cannot call this method while RecyclerView is computing a layout or scrolling
at android.support.v7.widget.RecyclerView.assertNotInLayoutOrScroll(RecyclerView.java:1462)
at android.support.v7.widget.RecyclerView$RecyclerViewDataObserver.onChanged(RecyclerView.java:2982)
at android.support.v7.widget.RecyclerView$AdapterDataObservable.notifyChanged(RecyclerView.java:7493)
at android.support.v7.widget.RecyclerView$Adapter.notifyDataSetChanged(RecyclerView.java:4338)
at com.app.myapp.screens.RecycleAdapter.onRowSelect(RecycleAdapter.java:111)
I also used notifyItemChanged(), same exception. Any secret way to update to notify the adapter that something changed?
You should move method 'setOnCheckedChangeListener()' to ViewHolder which is inner class on your adapter.
onBindViewHolder() is not a method that initialize ViewHolder.
This method is step of refresh each recycler item.
When you call notifyDataSetChanged(), onBindViewHolder() will be called as the number of each item times.
So If you notifyDataSetChanged() put into onCheckChanged() and initialize checkBox in onBindViewHolder(), you will get IllegalStateException because of circular method call.
click checkbox -> onCheckedChanged() -> notifyDataSetChanged() -> onBindViewHolder() -> set checkbox -> onChecked...
Simply, you can fix this by put one flag into Adapter.
try this,
private boolean onBind;
public ViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
mCheckBox = (CheckBox) itemView.findViewById(R.id.checkboxId);
mCheckBox.setOnCheckChangeListener(this);
}
#Override
public void onCheckedChanged(CompoundButton buttonView, boolean isChecked) {
if(!onBind) {
// your process when checkBox changed
// ...
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
}
...
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(YourAdapter.ViewHolder viewHolder, int position) {
// process other views
// ...
onBind = true;
viewHolder.mCheckBox.setChecked(trueOrFalse);
onBind = false;
}
You can just reset the previous listener before you make changes and you won't get this exception.
private CompoundButton.OnCheckedChangeListener checkedListener = new CompoundButton.OnCheckedChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onCheckedChanged(CompoundButton buttonView, boolean isChecked) {
//Do your stuff
});;
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(final ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
holder.checkbox.setOnCheckedChangeListener(null);
holder.checkbox.setChecked(condition);
holder.checkbox.setOnCheckedChangeListener(checkedListener);
}
Using a Handler for adding items and calling notify...() from this Handler fixed the issue for me.
I don't know well, but I also had same problem. I solved this by using onClickListner on checkbox
viewHolder.mCheckBox.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
// TODO Auto-generated method stub
if (model.isCheckboxBoolean()) {
model.setCheckboxBoolean(false);
viewHolder.mCheckBox.setChecked(false);
} else {
model.setCheckboxBoolean(true);
viewHolder.mCheckBox.setChecked(true);
}
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
});
Try this, this may help!
protected void postAndNotifyAdapter(final Handler handler, final RecyclerView recyclerView, final RecyclerView.Adapter adapter) {
handler.post(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
if (!recyclerView.isComputingLayout()) {
adapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
} else {
postAndNotifyAdapter(handler, recyclerView, adapter);
}
}
});
}
Found a simple solution -
public class MyAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder>{
private RecyclerView mRecyclerView;
#Override
public void onAttachedToRecyclerView(RecyclerView recyclerView) {
super.onAttachedToRecyclerView(recyclerView);
mRecyclerView = recyclerView;
}
private CompoundButton.OnCheckedChangeListener checkedChangeListener
= (compoundButton, b) -> {
final int position = (int) compoundButton.getTag();
// This class is used to make changes to child view
final Event event = mDataset.get(position);
// Update state of checkbox or some other computation which you require
event.state = b;
// we create a runnable and then notify item changed at position, this fix crash
mRecyclerView.post(new Runnable() {
#Override public void run() {
notifyItemChanged(position));
}
});
}
}
Here we create a runnable to notifyItemChanged for a position when recyclerview is ready to handle it.
When you have the Message Error:
Cannot call this method while RecyclerView is computing a layout or scrolling
Simple, Just do what cause the Exception in:
RecyclerView.post(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
/**
** Put Your Code here, exemple:
**/
notifyItemChanged(position);
}
});
At first I thought Moonsoo's answer (the accepted answer) wouldn't work for me because I cannot initialize my setOnCheckedChangeListener() in the ViewHolder constructor because I need to bind it each time so it gets an updated position variable. But it took me a long time to realize what he was saying.
Here is an example of the "circular method call" he is talking about:
public void onBindViewHolder(final ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
SwitchCompat mySwitch = (SwitchCompat) view.findViewById(R.id.switch);
mySwitch.setOnCheckedChangeListener(new CompoundButton.OnCheckedChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onCheckedChanged(CompoundButton buttonView, boolean isChecked) {
if (isChecked) {
data.delete(position);
notifyItemRemoved(position);
//This will call onBindViewHolder, but we can't do that when we are already in onBindViewHolder!
notifyItemRangeChanged(position, data.size());
}
}
});
//Set the switch to how it previously was.
mySwitch.setChecked(savedSwitchState); //If the saved state was "true", then this will trigger the infinite loop.
}
The only problem with this, is that when we need to initialize the switch to be on or off (from past saved state, for example), it is calling the listener which might call nofityItemRangeChanged which calls onBindViewHolder again. You cannot call onBindViewHolder when you are already in onBindViewHolder], because you cannot notifyItemRangeChanged if you are already in the middle of notifying that the item range has changed. But I only needed to update the UI to show it on or off, not wanting to actually trigger anything.
Here is the solution I learned from JoniDS's answer that will prevent the infinite loop. As long as we set the listener to "null" before we set Checked, then it will update the UI without triggering the listener, avoiding the infinite loop. Then we can set the listener after.
JoniDS's code:
holder.checkbox.setOnCheckedChangeListener(null);
holder.checkbox.setChecked(condition);
holder.checkbox.setOnCheckedChangeListener(checkedListener);
Full solution to my example:
public void onBindViewHolder(final ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
SwitchCompat mySwitch = (SwitchCompat) view.findViewById(R.id.switch);
//Set it to null to erase an existing listener from a recycled view.
mySwitch.setOnCheckedChangeListener(null);
//Set the switch to how it previously was without triggering the listener.
mySwitch.setChecked(savedSwitchState); //If the saved state was "true", then this will trigger the infinite loop.
//Set the listener now.
mySwitch.setOnCheckedChangeListener(new CompoundButton.OnCheckedChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onCheckedChanged(CompoundButton buttonView, boolean isChecked) {
if (isChecked) {
data.delete(position);
notifyItemRemoved(position);
//This will call onBindViewHolder, but we can't do that when we are already in onBindViewHolder!
notifyItemRangeChanged(position, data.size());
}
}
});
}
your CheckBox item is in changing drawable when you call notifyDataSetChanged(); so this exception would be occurred.
Try call notifyDataSetChanged(); in post of your view. For Example:
buttonView.post(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
});
Why not checking the RecyclerView.isComputingLayout() state as follows?
public class MyAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<RecyclerView.ViewHolder>{
private RecyclerView mRecyclerView;
#Override
public void onAttachedToRecyclerView(RecyclerView recyclerView) {
super.onAttachedToRecyclerView(recyclerView);
mRecyclerView = recyclerView;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder viewHolder, int position) {
viewHolder.getCheckbox().setOnCheckedChangeListener(new CompoundButton.OnCheckedChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onCheckedChanged(CompoundButton buttonView, boolean isChecked) {
if (mRecyclerView != null && !mRecyclerView.isComputingLayout()) {
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
}
});
}
}
While item is being bound by the layout manager, it is very likely that you are setting the checked state of your checkbox, which is triggering the callback.
Of course this is a guess because you did not publish the full stack trace.
You cannot change adapter contents while RV is recalculating the layout. You can avoid it by not calling notifyDataSetChanged if item's checked state is equal to the value sent in the callback (which will be the case if calling checkbox.setChecked is triggering the callback).
Use onClickListner on checkbox instead of OnCheckedChangeListener, It will solve the problem
viewHolder.myCheckBox.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
if (viewHolder.myCheckBox.isChecked()) {
// Do something when checkbox is checked
} else {
// Do something when checkbox is unchecked
}
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
});
I ran into this exact issue! After Moonsoo's answer didn't really float my boat, I messed around a bit and found a solution that worked for me.
First, here's some of my code:
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
final Event event = mDataset.get(position);
//
// .......
//
holder.mSwitch.setOnCheckedChangeListener(new CompoundButton.OnCheckedChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onCheckedChanged(CompoundButton buttonView, boolean isChecked) {
event.setActive(isChecked);
try {
notifyItemChanged(position);
} catch (Exception e) {
Log.e("onCheckChanged", e.getMessage());
}
}
});
You'll notice I'm specifically notifying the adapter for the position I'm changing, instead of the entire dataset like you're doing. That being said, although I can't guarantee this will work for you, I resolved the problem by wrapping my notifyItemChanged() call in a try/catch block. This simply caught the exception, but still allowed my adapter to register the state change and update the display!
Hope this helps someone!
EDIT: I'll admit, this probably is not the proper/mature way of handle the issue, but since it doesn't appear to be causing any problems by leaving the exception unhandled, I thought I'd share in case it was good enough for someone else.
Before notifyDataSetChanged() just check that with this method: recyclerView.IsComputingLayout()
Simple use Post:
new Handler().post(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
mAdapter.notifyItemChanged(mAdapter.getItemCount() - 1);
}
}
});
simply use isPressed() method of CompoundButton in onCheckedChanged(CompoundButton compoundButton, boolean isChecked)
e.g
public void onCheckedChanged(CompoundButton compoundButton, boolean isChecked) {
... //your functionality
if(compoundButton.isPressed()){
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
} });
mostly it happen beacause notifydatasetchanged calling onCheckedchanged event of checkbox and in that event again there is notifydatasetchanged.
to solve it you can just check that checkbox is checked by programatically or user pressed it. there is method isPressed for it.
so wrap whole listner code inside isPressed method. and its done.
holder.mBinding.cbAnnual.setOnCheckedChangeListener(new CompoundButton.OnCheckedChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onCheckedChanged(CompoundButton compoundButton, boolean b) {
if(compoundButton.isPressed()) {
//your code
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
});
I suffered with this problem for hour and this is how you can fix it.
But before you began there are some conditions to this solution.
MODEL CLASS
public class SelectUserModel {
private String userName;
private String UserId;
private Boolean isSelected;
public String getUserName() {
return userName;
}
public void setUserName(String userName) {
this.userName = userName;
}
public String getUserId() {
return UserId;
}
public void setUserId(String userId) {
UserId = userId;
}
public Boolean getSelected() {
return isSelected;
}
public void setSelected(Boolean selected) {
isSelected = selected;
}
}
CHECKBOX in ADAPTER CLASS
CheckBox cb;
ADAPTER CLASS CONSTRUCTOR & LIST OF MODEL
private List<SelectUserModel> userList;
public StudentListAdapter(List<SelectUserModel> userList) {
this.userList = userList;
for (int i = 0; i < this.userList.size(); i++) {
this.userList.get(i).setSelected(false);
}
}
ONBINDVIEW [Please use onclick in place of onCheckChange]
public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull final StudentListAdapter.ViewHolder holder, int position) {
holder.cb.setChecked(user.getSelected());
holder.cb.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
int pos = (int) view.getTag();
Log.d(TAG, "onClick: " + pos);
for (int i = 0; i < userList.size(); i++) {
if (i == pos) {
userList.get(i).setSelected(true);
// an interface to listen to callbacks
clickListener.onStudentItemClicked(userList.get(i));
} else {
userList.get(i).setSelected(false);
}
}
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
});
}
This is happening because you're probably setting the 'listener' before you configure the value for that row, which makes the listener to get triggered when you 'configure the value' for the checkbox.
What you need to do is:
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(YourAdapter.ViewHolder viewHolder, int position) {
viewHolder.mCheckBox.setOnCheckedChangeListener(null);
viewHolder.mCheckBox.setChecked(trueOrFalse);
viewHolder.setOnCheckedChangeListener(yourCheckedChangeListener);
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(final MyViewHolder holder, final int position) {
holder.textStudentName.setText(getStudentList.get(position).getName());
holder.rbSelect.setChecked(getStudentList.get(position).isSelected());
holder.rbSelect.setTag(position); // This line is important.
holder.rbSelect.setOnClickListener(onStateChangedListener(holder.rbSelect, position));
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return getStudentList.size();
}
private View.OnClickListener onStateChangedListener(final RadioButton checkBox, final int position) {
return new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
if (checkBox.isChecked()) {
for (int i = 0; i < getStudentList.size(); i++) {
getStudentList.get(i).setSelected(false);
}
getStudentList.get(position).setSelected(checkBox.isChecked());
notifyDataSetChanged();
} else {
}
}
};
}
I had the same problem using the Checkbox and the RadioButton. Replacing notifyDataSetChanged() with notifyItemChanged(position) worked. I added a Boolean field isChecked to the data model. Then I updated the Boolean value and in onCheckedChangedListener, I called notifyItemChanged(adapterPosition). This might not be the best way, but worked for me. The boolean value is used for checking whether the item is checked.
override fun bindItemViewHolder(viewHolder: RecyclerView.ViewHolder, position: Int) {
var item: ThingChannels = items[position]
rowActionBinding.xCbChannel.text = item.channelType?.primaryType
rowActionBinding.xTvRoomName.text = item.thingDetail?.room?.name
rowActionBinding.xCbChannel.isChecked = item.isSelected
rowActionBinding.xCbChannel.tag = position
rowActionBinding.xCbChannel.setOnClickListener {
setSelected(it.tag as Int)
if (onItemClickListener != null) {
onItemClickListener!!.onItemClick(position, null)
}
}
}
None of the past answers solve the problem!
The problem with past answers
All of them either avoid the problem by swallowing the change (i.e. not notifying the adapter of the change) if the user is scrolling, which just means that if the user was scrolling when the change was ready, they will never see the change. Or, they suggest using recylerView.post() which just postpones the problem.
The answer
Option #1
Stop the scrolling and then notify the adapter:
recyclerView.stopScroll()
val copy = workingList.toList()
//prevent IndexOutOfBoundsException: Inconsistency detected... (https://stackoverflow.com/questions/41054959/java-lang-indexoutofboundsexception-inconsistency-detected-invalid-view-holder)
workingList.clear()
recyclerViewAdapter?.notifyDataSetChanged()
//set display to correct data
workingList.addAll(copy)
recyclerViewAdapter?.notifyItemRangeInserted(0, workingList.size)
Option #2
For a better user experience, you can let them continue scrolling and listen for when they stop scrolling in order to update the UI, but this method should only be used if you do not plan on writing a function that will accept different RecyclerView instances, because if you add multiple listeners to the same RecyclerView which are all trying to be updated, the app will crash:
if(recyclerView.scrollState != RecyclerView.SCROLL_STATE_IDLE) //notify RecyclerView
else recyclerView.addOnScrollListener(object: RecyclerView.OnScrollListener() {
override fun onScrollStateChanged(
recyclerView: RecyclerView,
newState: Int
) {
if(newState == RecyclerView.SCROLL_STATE_IDLE) {
//notify RecyclerView...
val copy = workingList.toList()
//prevent IndexOutOfBoundsException: Inconsistency detected... (https://stackoverflow.com/questions/41054959/java-lang-indexoutofboundsexception-inconsistency-detected-invalid-view-holder)
workingList.clear()
recyclerViewAdapter?.notifyDataSetChanged()
//set to display correct data
workingList.addAll(copy)
recyclerViewAdapter?.notifyItemRangeInserted(0, workingList.size)
}
})
Note: you can use option #2 even if you are writing a util function by keeping a list of previously registered instances and not add a listener if it has already been registered, but it is not "clean coding" to rely on state in a library/util class.
For me problem occurred when I exited from EditText by Done, Back, or outside input touch. This causes to update model with input text, then refresh recycler view via live data observing.
The Problem was that cursor/focus remain in EditText.
When I have deleted focus by using:
editText.clearFocus()
Notify data changed method of recycler view did stop throwing this error.
I think this is one of the possible reason/solutions to this problem. It is possible that this exception can be fixed in another way as it can be caused by totally different reason.