I'm very new to android programming and working on an existing app. The app has a PIN entry with 4 digits. The problem I face, is that the keyboard is not showing every time when the PIN entry mask shows up, sometimes the keyboard is showing and somethimes not. In the app are 4 cases, when the PIN entry is showed: after login, when the app is opened and a user is logged in, to enter the profile settings and to change the PIN. The behaviour is really strange, it isn't like the keyboard gets toggled, so one time it shows and the next time it doesn't, it appears random.
This is the part which should show the keyboard:
public void showSoftInput() {
if (mEditText != null) {
mEditText.requestFocus();
InputMethodManager imm = (InputMethodManager) getContext().getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
imm.showSoftInput(mEditText, InputMethodManager.SHOW_IMPLICIT);
}
}
What you can do is give a focus to your pin edittext, something else is taking the focus, may be because of that keyboard is not coming up.
try requestfocus to give focus to your PIN edittext
Programatically
edittext.requestFocus();
in the xml if you want
<EditText...>
<requestFocus />
</EditText>
Related
I've looked at other StackOverflow posts, but many of them don't work, or the comments say that they don't work. I'm wondering how I can clear the focus on an edittext. I was hoping that when I close the keyboard, it would also lose focus, but this didn't happen.
Because of this, whenever someone exits the app and goes back in (with the app running in the background) the regular keyboard shows up, even though it's not supposed to. I have a whole system in place for managing the keyboard.
Code for showing/closing keyboard
private void closeEmojiKeyboard()
{
ivEmoji.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
ivKeyboard.setVisibility(View.GONE);
showKeyboard(etMessage);
llEmojiKeyboard.setVisibility(View.GONE);
}
private void showKeyboard(EditText view)
{
view.requestFocus();
InputMethodManager imm = (InputMethodManager) getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
imm.showSoftInput(view, InputMethodManager.SHOW_IMPLICIT);
}
Code for hiding keyboard when someone opens the emoji keyboard
ivEmoji.setVisibility(View.GONE);
ivKeyboard.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
hideKeyboard(etMessage);
llEmojiKeyboard.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
And the code that hides the emoji keyboard when clicking the editext
llEmojiKeyboard.setVisibility(View.GONE);
showKeyboard(etMessage);
ivEmoji.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
ivKeyboard.setVisibility(View.GONE);
rvMessages.scrollToPosition(messagesList.size()-1);
Can anybody share some code with me that could help clear focus on my edittext? Thanks.
you can
ex 1.
editText.clearFocus()
ex 2.
EditText et = (EditText)view.findViewById(R.id.my_name);
et.setInputType(EditorInfo.TYPE_NULL); // setCursorVisible(false);
Many questions refer to a keyboard service rearing it's head at the wrong time, or how to substitute a view specific keyboard. I have no problem doing this. This problem is different in that the keyboard service pops up on top of a custom keyboard that was working fine until a long press to make a selection. At that point the default keyboard appears. I want to stop this.
As further clarification, it is not the long press that opens the system keyboard. It is action of making a selection. For example: A long press at the end of input does not select anything, but does pop up the "cut copy select all share..." dialog. When you click on "Select All" then the system keyboard opens.
I think the misleading suggestion of a link to a solution to this problem should be removed.
I use the following to install a special keyboard under an EditText:
MA_expression.setOnClickListener { view ->
mKeyboardView.visibility = View.VISIBLE
mKeyboardView.isEnabled = true
if (view != null) {
val imm = getSystemService(Activity.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE) as InputMethodManager
imm.hideSoftInputFromWindow(view.windowToken, 0)
}
}
This works as expected:
Now the goal is to use "45" as the argument to a function, so the range of text that is to become the argument is selected (simple here, but it could just as well be embedded in a more complicated expression):
Now the problem is evident -- the standard keyboard service has popped up. It can be dismissed with the done button, the selection remains, my keyboard remains, the FUNa keyboard is selected and the function to apply is picked.
The result is correct, it is only the intervening system keyboard that must be told it is not wanted.
How is that done?
dismiss the android key board on the focus listener
view.setOnFocusChangeListener
view.setOnFocusChangeListener(new OnFocusChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onFocusChange(View view, boolean hasFocus) {
if (hasFocus) {
val imm = getSystemService(Activity.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE) as InputMethodManager
imm.hideSoftInputFromWindow(view.windowToken, 0)
}
}
});
I am using a custom in-app keyboard, so I need to disable the system keyboard. I can do that with
editText.setShowSoftInputOnFocus(false);
for Android API 21+. But to do the same thing down to API 11, I am doing
editText.setTextIsSelectable(true);
Sometimes I want to show the system keyboard again after disabling it with setTextIsSelectable. But I can't figure out how. Doing the following does show the system keyboard, but if the user hides the keyboard and then clicks the EditText again, the keyboard still won't show.
InputMethodManager imm = (InputMethodManager) getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
imm.showSoftInput(editText, 0);
I guess I could do editText.setOnFocusChangeListener and then manually show or hide the system keyboard, but I would prefer to undo whatever setTextIsSelectable did. The following also does not work:
editText.setFocusable(true);
editText.setFocusableInTouchMode(true);
editText.setClickable(true);
editText.setLongClickable(true);
How do I do it?
Related question
Short answer
Doing the following will reverse the effects of setTextIsSelectable(true) and allow the keyboard to show again when the EditText receives focus.
editText.setTextIsSelectable(false);
editText.setFocusable(true);
editText.setFocusableInTouchMode(true);
editText.setClickable(true);
editText.setLongClickable(true);
editText.setMovementMethod(ArrowKeyMovementMethod.getInstance());
editText.setText(editText.getText(), TextView.BufferType.SPANNABLE);
Explanation
The thing that prevents the keyboard from showing is isTextSelectable() being true. You can see that here (thanks to #adneal).
The source code for setTextIsSelectable is
public void setTextIsSelectable(boolean selectable) {
if (!selectable && mEditor == null) return; // false is default value with no edit data
createEditorIfNeeded();
if (mEditor.mTextIsSelectable == selectable) return;
mEditor.mTextIsSelectable = selectable;
setFocusableInTouchMode(selectable);
setFocusable(selectable);
setClickable(selectable);
setLongClickable(selectable);
// mInputType should already be EditorInfo.TYPE_NULL and mInput should be null
setMovementMethod(selectable ? ArrowKeyMovementMethod.getInstance() : null);
setText(mText, selectable ? BufferType.SPANNABLE : BufferType.NORMAL);
// Called by setText above, but safer in case of future code changes
mEditor.prepareCursorControllers();
}
Thus, the code in the short answer section above first sets mTextIsSelectable to false with setTextIsSelectable(false) and then undoes all of the other side effects one-by-one.
Hi I'm making custom dialer so I create my own input pad.
The problem is how do I disable the EditText but still allow cut/copy/paste? The stock dialer can do this.
I have tried android:focusable="false" but it disables cut/copy (can still paste though).
I also tried to disable the inputType programatically which disables all three commands:
myEditText.setInputType(InputType.TYPE_NULL); //Can't cut/copy/paste
Disabling it from manifest also doesn't work:
android:configChanges="orientation|keyboardHidden" //Keyboard still popped up
Any solution? Thanks
After hours and hours of research, I finally found a solution that works for all API versions. Hope this saves someone's time.
If you are developing for API >= 11, the solution is simple, either:
1) Add the two properties below in the xml file of EditText
android:inputType="none"
android:textIsSelectable="true"
or
2) Programatically do the below
myEditText.setInputType(InputType.TYPE_NULL);
myEditText.setTextIsSelectable(true);
And you're done.
If you want to cater for API < 11 as well, I found that there is no way to disable to keyboard from popping out if you wanted to select the text for copy paste purpose. Setting focusable to false will disable the keyboard but it doesn't help because it disables your ability to select text too. Any other solutions I found in stackoverflow all either doesn't work or disables text selection at the same time too.
One ugly way to solve this is as such..
First, add this property in the xml file of EditText
android:editable="false"
Yes this is deprecated, but necessary for making the EditText not editable in API version < 11.
Next, we will need to hide the keyboard as soon as it shows up, so that we can continue selecting text without the keyboard blocking the way.
Use this code below to detect keyboard showing up (solution obtained from https://stackoverflow.com/a/9108219/1241783), and hide it immediately.
if (android.os.Build.VERSION.SDK_INT < android.os.Build.VERSION_CODES.HONEYCOMB)
{
final View activityRootView = findViewById(R.id.activityRoot);
activityRootView.getViewTreeObserver().addOnGlobalLayoutListener(new OnGlobalLayoutListener() {
#Override
public void onGlobalLayout() {
Rect r = new Rect();
//r will be populated with the coordinates of your view that area still visible.
activityRootView.getWindowVisibleDisplayFrame(r);
int heightDiff = activityRootView.getRootView().getHeight() - (r.bottom - r.top);
if (heightDiff > 100) { // if more than 100 pixels, its probably a keyboard...
//Hide the keyboard instantly!
if (getCurrentFocus() != null)
{
InputMethodManager imm = (InputMethodManager) getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
imm.hideSoftInputFromWindow(getCurrentFocus().getWindowToken(), 0);
}
}
}
});
}
It works for my case. Though you can see the keyboard showing up in a split second (which is the ugly part) but I can't think of any other way to get this to work at the time of writing. If you have a better solution, please leave a comment!
Let me know too if this saves someone's time :)
To disable the soft keyboard showing, keeping the copy/paste and cursor functionality, just add this line in your activity:
getWindow().setFlags(WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_ALT_FOCUSABLE_IM,
WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_ALT_FOCUSABLE_IM);
Since the current top answer uses a deprecated method and didn't have the paste method for me, here's another way that doesn't use old methods. But, it does try to use a hidden method via reflection with a fallback. =)
I've subclassed EditText into a new widget called KeyboardlessEditText that still retains all the cool editing features without the keyboard showing. Just drop the file in and go.
The full code is a little long for this post, but as long as GitHub doesn't go down, then this will work: https://github.com/danialgoodwin/android-widget-keyboardless-edittext/blob/master/KeyboardlessEditText2.java
To disable system keyboard automatic pop up for EditText or TextView do the following:
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.LOLLIPOP) {
editTextView.setShowSoftInputOnFocus(false);
} else {
editTextView.setTextIsSelectable(true);
//N.B. Accepting the case when non editable text will be selectable
}
I had the same problem but later I also wanted allow typing after double tap.. after hours and hours of searching I found working solution (at least for me). Use this in your onCreate method:
editText.setCursorVisible(false);
editText.setTextIsSelectable(true);
editText.setShowSoftInputOnFocus(false);
getWindow().setSoftInputMode(WindowManager.LayoutParams.SOFT_INPUT_STATE_HIDDEN); // This just hide keyboard when activity starts
These lines should definitely do the trick.. and if you want to revert that use this:
editText.setCursorVisible(true);
editText.setShowSoftInputOnFocus(true);
To show keyboard again use:
private void showSoftKeyboard(View view) {
InputMethodManager inputMethodManager = (InputMethodManager) getSystemService(INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
view.requestFocus();
inputMethodManager.showSoftInput(view, 0);
}
To allow copy/paste next time just use these three lines:
editText.setCursorVisible(false);
editText.setTextIsSelectable(true);
editText.setShowSoftInputOnFocus(false);
For further keyboard hide use:
private void hideSoftKeyboard() {
if(getCurrentFocus() != null) {
InputMethodManager inputMethodManager = (InputMethodManager) getSystemService(INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
inputMethodManager.hideSoftInputFromWindow(getCurrentFocus().getWindowToken(), 0);
}
}
This code is working on API >= 21
try this
EditText et = ... // your EditText
et.setKeyListener(null) //makes the EditText non-editable so, it acts like a TextView.
No need to subclass. The main difference between this and making your EditText non-focusable, is that the EditText still has its own cursor - you can select text, etc. All it does is suppress the IME from popping up its own soft keyboard.
Had a similar need due to my custom inline "fake" input which was still visible as the os soft keypad was appearing after focus moved to an edit text.
Solution was to make the edit text hide soft input until the previous custom input widget had finished its edit lifecycle.
Used #Bruce's answer for inspiration, also saw a few related posts which I'll attach at end.
Solution I found worked was:
fun setInputType(inputType: Int) {
getEditText().setRawInputType(inputType)
if (inputType == InputType.TYPE_NULL) {
getEditText().setTextIsSelectable(true)
getEditText().isCursorVisible = true
}
}
had to use setRawInputType() instead as multiline text input was not respected when setting from InputType.TYPE_NULL back to InputType.TYPE_TEXT_FLAG_MULTI_LINE.
Seems there are users reporting issues relating to calling setInputType(InputType.TYPE_NULL). see:
https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/36907992
other useful related posts:
How to make EditText not editable through XML in Android?
EditText non editable
In my application I want to display a list of stuff and provide the user with the ability to filter the list by using the soft keyboard. To that end I added a button that should trigger (hide/show) the soft keyboard for filtering. I don't want to have a visible edit text control, cause it would take up unnecessary space. Rather than that, I would like to display a toast showing the filter query as the user types, much as the 'android:textFilterEnabled' attribute for ListView does. To my understanding there is no obvious way of doing this with available Android components. So I tried the following approach:
1) creating a layout containing invisible edit text and the list view:
<ListView android:id="#+id/main_list"
android:drawSelectorOnTop="false"
android:layout_height="0px"
android:layout_width="fill_parent"
android:layout_weight="5"
/>
2) adding button as a popup and invoking InputMethodManager on click to toggle the soft input (called in onCreate):
private void initButton() {
Button buttonView = (Button) getLayoutInflater().inflate(R.layout.keyboard_button, null);
buttonView.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(View v) {
final View target = findViewById(R.id.filterbox);
InputMethodManager imm = (InputMethodManager) getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
// this does not work...
// imm.toggleSoftInputFromWindow(target.getWindowToken(), InputMethodManager.SHOW_FORCED, 0);
// ... so need to track this in an instance variable - which sucks
if (imeShowing) {
imm.hideSoftInputFromWindow(target.getWindowToken(), 0);
imeShowing = false;
} else {
// check that the filterbox got focus
Preconditions.checkState(target.requestFocusFromTouch());
Preconditions.checkState(target.hasWindowFocus());
Preconditions.checkState(target.hasFocus());
imm.showSoftInput(target, 0);
imeShowing = true;
}
}
});
buttonPopup = new PopupWindow(buttonView);
// ... code to display the button as a small popup
}
As mentioned in the code sample, the 'obvious' approach (calling toggleSoftInput) does not work, so I had to revert to this ugly if-else. This is however, a secondary problem. The primary problem is that when I run this in the emulator, the soft keyboard is displayed correctly, but as soon as I start typing in it, the systems starts an intent to the google search activity! And the typed characters appear in the Google search box displayed as a result. What is even more weird, this only happens the first time I type after deploying and running the app. I.e. if I go back to my app from the Google search box, everything works as expected (no redirects to the search box). Before showing the display I make sure that the invisible edittext gets focus, so it should be the target of the soft keyboard, right??
Does anyone have any idea what is happening here?
Sorry this is me (the author of this question), I can't access my old account due to SO new 'awesome' OpenID login:/
So I figured out that what I really need to do is just turn on the 'android:textFilterEnabled' attribute of the list, and focus on it on the button click. ListView supports input from soft keyboard (although I figured it out by looking at the actual code of AbsListView rather than getting hints in any documentation:). Also, I managed to get PopupWindow working for the button (instead of Dialog that I tried previously) so the focus problem is gone. The working code for this (in case anyone has similar problem) below:
View popupView = getLayoutInflater().inflate(R.layout.keyboard_button, null);
Button buttonView = (Button) popupView.findViewById(R.id.keyboardButton);
buttonView.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(View v) {
InputMethodManager imm = (InputMethodManager) getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
final View list = findViewById(R.id.the_list);
list.requestFocus();
imm.toggleSoftInput(InputMethodManager.SHOW_FORCED, 0);
}
});
buttonPopup = new PopupWindow(this);
The list will handle input from soft keyboard just as it does from hard one. The trick is just to trigger the keyboard and focus on the list. Also you may control how the filtering is applied to the list by setting a custom QueryFilterProvider on its associated adapter.