Actually I am going to ask more than one question here. Don't ban me, please, just read a full story. Let's begin. So I need to create an activity or fragment (it doesn't matter) with to parts (views) inside (top and bottom). Inside the bottom part dynamically loads buttons (sometimes 2, sometimes 30), there is a click listener on them. When a user clicks on a button, the button appears on the top part (view) and disappears on the bottom view. The buttons on the top view also have click listener and if a user clicks on a button it appears on the bottom view and disappears on a top. So this is a task. I thought how to implement it. The simplest solution that I created is: two views are recycler views with two adapters. Mm, probably it is not the best solution, I am pretty sure of it. I could implement two adapters, but I can't implement the click listener for my second adapter. It doesn't work!? I don't like this way for two reasons: 1. both adapters are the same; 2. I can't use click adapter for second adapter. Below you can find my code.
My adapter - standard adapter:
public class KeyboardAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<KeyboardAdapter.KeyboardAdapterViewHolder> {
private List<String> values;
/*
* An on-click handler that we've defined to make it easy for an Activity to interface with
* our RecyclerView
*/
private final KeyboardAdapterOnClickHandler mClickHandler;
/**
* The interface that receives onClick messages.
*/
public interface KeyboardAdapterOnClickHandler {
void onClick(int position, String nameClicked);
}
/**
* Creates a SourceAdapter.
*
* #param clickHandler The on-click handler for this adapter. This single handler is called
* when an item is clicked.
*/
public KeyboardAdapter(List<String> myDataset, KeyboardAdapterOnClickHandler clickHandler) {
values = myDataset;
mClickHandler = clickHandler;
}
/**
* Cache of the children views for a forecast list item.
*/
public class KeyboardAdapterViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener {
// each data item is just a string in this case
private Button btnValue;
private String mName;
public View layout;
private int parentId;
private KeyboardAdapterViewHolder(View view) {
super(view);
//layout = view;
btnValue = view.findViewById(R.id.btn);
//parentId = ((View) btnValue.getParent()).getId();
// Call setOnClickListener on the view passed into the constructor (use 'this' as the OnClickListener)
view.setOnClickListener(this);
}
public void setData(String name) {
mName = name;
btnValue.setText(mName);
}
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
int adapterPosition = getAdapterPosition();
mClickHandler.onClick(adapterPosition, mName);
}
}
#Override
public long getItemId(int position) {
return super.getItemId(position);
}
#Override
#NonNull
public KeyboardAdapterViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(#NonNull ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.row_layout, parent, false);
return new KeyboardAdapterViewHolder(v);
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull KeyboardAdapterViewHolder viewHolder, final int position) {
viewHolder.setData(values.get(position));
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return values.size();
}
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
return 0;
}
public void remove(int position) {
values.remove(position);
notifyItemRemoved(position);
notifyItemRangeChanged(position, values.size());
}
}
MainActivity:
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
...
String s = "test it";
mAdapter = new KeyboardAdapter(virtualKeyboardInit(s), MainActivity.this);
recyclerView1.setAdapter(mAdapter);
// empty list just to init rv
answerList = new ArrayList<>();
mAdapter1 = new KeyboardAdapter1(answerList, MainActivity.this); // doesn't work, error message "KeyboardAdapter1.KeyboardAdapterOnClickHandler cannot be applied to MainActivity"
recyclerView2.setAdapter(mAdapter1);
}
private List<String> virtualKeyboardInit(String s) {
boolean checkBool = true;
// convert string to array and then to list
String [] strArray = s.split("(?!^)");
stringList = new ArrayList<>(Arrays.asList(strArray));
// shuffle letters in the list
long seed = System.nanoTime();
Collections.shuffle(stringList, new Random(seed));
// API 24
// /String[] strArray = Stream.of(cArray).toArray(String[]::new);
return stringList;
}
#Override
public void onClick(int position, String nameClicked) {
mAdapter.remove(position);
}
These are just a fragment of code. So, what can I do in this case? Thank you for attention and help.
Related
I have a fragment Users which has 3 other fragments in it (tabs). For one tab ( called Friends2Fragment ) I made a recycler View and made an adapter for it. In each item of RecyclerView I have a button "Add friend" and I want to call it from Friends2Fragment, not to call it from the adapter because I can't use Firestore Database properly.
RecyclerViewInterface:
public interface RecyclerViewInterface {
void onItemClick(int position, String button_pressed);
}
Friends2Fragment.java :
public void onStart(){
super.onStart();
recyclerView = (RecyclerView) v.findViewById(R.id.recycler);
recyclerView.setHasFixedSize(true);
recyclerView.setLayoutManager(new LinearLayoutManager(getActivity()));
friendslist = new ArrayList<>();
myAdapter = new MyAdapter(friendslist,v.getContext());
recyclerView.setAdapter(myAdapter);
------ Firestore operations ------
}
#Override
public void onItemClick(int position, String button_pressed) {
switch ( button_pressed ){
case "ADD_FRIEND":
Log.d(TAG, "item clicked: " + friendslist.get(position).username);
}
}
MyAdapter.java :
public class MyAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<MyAdapter.myViewHolder> {
Context context;
public ArrayList<User> userArrayList;
public MyAdapter(ArrayList<User> userArrayList, Context context) {
this.userArrayList = userArrayList;
this.context = context;
}
public Context getContext() {
return context;
}
public ArrayList<User> getUserArrayList() {
return userArrayList;
}
#NonNull
#Override
public MyAdapter.myViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(#NonNull ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.item, parent, false);
MyAdapter.myViewHolder myViewHolder = new MyAdapter.myViewHolder(v);
myViewHolder.itemView.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
((Friends2Fragment)context).onItemClick(myViewHolder.getAdapterPosition(),"ADD_FRIEND");
}
});
return myViewHolder;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull MyAdapter.myViewHolder holder, int position) {
User user = userArrayList.get(position);
holder.usernamerecycle.setText(user.username);
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return userArrayList.size();
}
public void filterList(List<User> filteredList){
userArrayList = (ArrayList<User>) filteredList;
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
public class myViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder{
TextView usernamerecycle;
Button addbutton;
View rootview;
public myViewHolder(#NonNull View itemView) {
super(itemView);
rootview = itemView;
usernamerecycle = itemView.findViewById(R.id.usernamerecycler);
addbutton = itemView.findViewById(R.id.addfriendbutton);
}
}
}
The problem is at this line : ((Friends2Fragment)context).onItemClick(myViewHolder.getAdapterPosition(),"ADD_FRIEND"); in onCreateViewHolder method in MyAdapter.
I have this error : Inconvertible types; cannot cast 'android.content.Context' to 'com.example.birthday.Fragments.Friends2Fragment'
Please help me ..
A Fragment isn't a Context (that's not one of its supertypes) so that cast is impossible, that's why you're getting the error.
I think you should organise it like this: your Adapter holds a bunch of User objects, right? It displays those, and you have a click listener on each ViewHolder that knows which index in the User list it's currently displaying, and it wants to inform some listener when it's clicked. That index is an internal detail really, it would make more sense to look up the actual User, and provide that to the listener.
The simplest way is to just provide your fragment as a listener. First store it in your adapter:
public class MyAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<MyAdapter.myViewHolder> {
// store a reference to your fragment
private Friends2Fragment listener;
// add a function to provide that fragment
public void setListener(Friends2Fragment: listener) {
this.listener = listener
}
...
public MyAdapter.myViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(#NonNull ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
...
myViewHolder.itemView.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
if (listener != null) {
// look up the actual user
User user = userArrayList.get(myViewHolder.getAdapterPosition());
// call a function on your fragment
listener.onItemClick(user, "ADD_FRIEND");
}
}
});
}
Then add the callback function your adapter uses, and also set your fragment on the adapter as a listener:
// Friends2Fragment
// You should REALLY be doing this in onViewCreated or something, so this setup happens once.
// You're losing all your state by creating a new adapter whenever the user returns to the app
public void onStart(){
...
myAdapter = new MyAdapter(friendslist,v.getContext());
// set the fragment as the listener
myAdapter.setListener(this);
recyclerView.setAdapter(myAdapter);
}
// now add the function the adapter calls
private void onItemClick(User user, String someString) {
// handle the clicked user
}
A better way is to create an interface with all the events that need to be handled, and make your Fragment implement those. It breaks the hard association with the Fragment since you could pass any object that implements those functions, and it's also clearer because the interface kinda documents all the data the adapter produces, and that a listener needs to be able to handle. Something like this:
public class MyAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<MyAdapter.myViewHolder> {
// the listener is now something that implements the Callbacks interface
private Callbacks listener;
...
// nesting it inside MyAdapter makes the path MyAdapter.Callbacks, which makes it clear
// exactly what it is and what it relates to, and kinda gives the Adapter "ownership"
interface Callbacks {
void addFriend(User user)
}
And then you just make the Fragment implement that interface
public class Friends2Fragment() extends Fragment implements MyAdapter.Callbacks {
...
// implement all the callbacks you need to handle
override public void addFriend(User user) {
// do the thing
}
// set it in the same way, since this Fragment implements MyAdapter.Callbacks
myAdapter.setListener(this);
Which is a bit neater and cleaner, I think - but slightly more work. Also if you notice, I renamed the callback function from the generic handleItemClick to the more specific addFriend - so instead of having to pass a String saying what kind of click it is, you just have a function for each event you want to handle, and you can name them appropriately
I have a recycleview showing a list of audio files fetched from my audios.json file hosted on my server. i have a model class with a getter method getLanguage() to see the audio language. I would like to show only audio files of users preference in recycle view. Say for example, if user wants only english and russian i would like to show only list of russian and english. How can we achieve this? Right now the entire list is displayed.
public class AudioAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<AudioAdapter.HomeDataHolder> {
int currentPlayingPosition = -1;
Context context;
ItemClickListener itemClickListener;
List<Output> wikiList;
public AudioAdapter(List<Output> wikiList, Context context) {
this.wikiList = wikiList;
this.context = context;
}
#NonNull
#Override
public HomeDataHolder onCreateViewHolder(#NonNull ViewGroup viewGroup, int i) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.audio_row_layout,viewGroup,false);
HomeDataHolder mh = new HomeDataHolder(view);
return mh;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(#NonNull final HomeDataHolder homeDataHolder, int i) {
String desc = wikiList.get(i).getLanguage() + " • " + wikiList.get(i).getType();
homeDataHolder.tvTitle.setText(wikiList.get(i).getTitle());
homeDataHolder.tvotherinfo.setText(desc);
homeDataHolder.itemView.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
if (itemClickListener != null)
itemClickListener.onClick(view,homeDataHolder.getAdapterPosition());
}
});
homeDataHolder.rippleLayout.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
if (itemClickListener != null)
itemClickListener.onClick(view,homeDataHolder.getAdapterPosition());
}
});
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return wikiList.size();
}
#Override
public long getItemId(int position) {
return position;
}
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
return position;
}
public void setClickListener(ItemClickListener itemClickListener) { // Method for setting clicklistner interface
this.itemClickListener = itemClickListener;
}
public class HomeDataHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView tvTitle,tvotherinfo;
MaterialRippleLayout rippleLayout;
public HomeDataHolder(View v) {
super(v);
this.tvTitle = v.findViewById(R.id.title);
this.tvotherinfo = v.findViewById(R.id.audioDesc);
this.rippleLayout = v.findViewById(R.id.ripple);
}
}
}
The general idea for this should be:
you have one list with all items
you have filter rules selected by the user
You filter items from number 1, to see which ones match the constraints and store this in another list.
Then the recycler view only shows the items of the list from number 3.
This means that recycler view's getItemCount would return the size of the filtered list, not the whole list.
Instead of passing the wikiList as it is, filter it then send it:
Lets say that you filled up the wikiList, before passing it to the adapter, filter it like this:
In the activity that you initialize the adapter in:
public class YourActivity extends ............{
........
........
//your filled list
private List<Output> wikiList;
//filtered list
private List<Output> filteredList= new ArrayList<Output>();
//filters
private List<String> filters = new ArrayList<String>();
//lets say the user chooses the languages "english" and "russian" after a button click or anything (you can add as many as you want)
filters.add("english");
filters.add("russian");
//now filter the original list
for(int i = 0 ; i<wikiList.size() ; i++){
Output item = wikiList.get(i);
if(filters.contains(item.getLanguage())){
filteredList.add(item);
}
}
//now create your adapter and pass the filteredList instead of the wikiList
AudioAdapter adapter = new AudioAdapter(filteredList , this);
//set the adapter to your recyclerview........
......
.....
......
}
I use above "english" and "russian" for language. I don't know how they are set in your response, maybe you use "en" for "english" so be careful.
When button clicked, i must update a TextView in same position and I have done it, but 9th and 10th position of RecyclerView follow first position and second position. In other word, if I clicked first button position, First position of TextView is updated, but, 9th position of TextView also updated, It should be not updated. How to solve this?
I follow this link
here is my Adapter
class ProductsByStoreAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<ProductsByStoreAdapter.ViewHolder> {
private ArrayList<Products> products;
ProductsByStoreAdapter(ArrayList<Products> productses) {
this.products = productses;
//products = CenterRepository.getCenterRepository()
//.getListOfProductsInShoppingList();
}
#Override
public ProductsByStoreAdapter.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup viewGroup, int i) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.products_card_item, viewGroup, false);
return new ProductsByStoreAdapter.ViewHolder(view);
}
class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder{
private TextView tv_product_name, tv_product_price, tv_product_quantity;
private ImageView im_product_image;
private ImageButton button_add_product, button_min_product;
private EditText e_note;
private LinearLayout layout_note;
ViewHolder(View view) {
super(view);
im_product_image = (ImageView)view.findViewById(R.id.product_image);
tv_product_name = (TextView)view.findViewById(R.id.product_name);
tv_product_price = (TextView)view.findViewById(R.id.product_price);
tv_product_quantity = (TextView)view.findViewById(R.id.product_quantity);
e_note = (EditText)view.findViewById(R.id.e_note);
layout_note = (LinearLayout)view.findViewById(R.id.layout_note);
this.button_add_product = (ImageButton)view.findViewById(R.id.button_add_product);
button_min_product = (ImageButton)view.findViewById(R.id.button_min_product);
}
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(final ProductsByStoreAdapter.ViewHolder viewHolder, final int position) {
Glide.with(viewHolder.im_product_image.getContext())
.load(products.get(position).getImage_uri())
.centerCrop()
.crossFade()
//.placeholder(R.drawable.placeholder_main)
.into(viewHolder.im_product_image);
CurrencyFormats currencyFormat = new CurrencyFormats();
viewHolder.tv_product_name.setText(products.get(position).getName());
viewHolder.tv_product_price.setText(currencyFormat.toRupiah(products.get(position).getPrice()));
//viewHolder.tv_product_quantity.setText("0");
viewHolder.button_add_product.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
//current object
Products tempObj = (products).get(position);
((ProductsByStoreActivity)view.getContext()).updateItemCount(true);
tempObj.setQuantity(String.valueOf(1));
viewHolder.tv_product_quantity.setText(tempObj.getQuantity());
}
});
viewHolder.button_min_product.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
Products tempObj = (products).get(position);
viewHolder.tv_product_quantity.setText(CenterRepository
.getCenterRepository().getListOfProductsInShoppingList()
.get(indexOfTempInShopingList).getQuantity());
((ProductsByStoreActivity)view.getContext()).updateItemCount(false);
}
}
}else {
}
}
});
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
//return products.size();
return products == null ? 0 : products.size();
}}
You need to move your onclick listener into onCreateViewHolder.
final ProductsByStoreAdapter.ViewHolder viewHolder = new ProductsByStoreAdapter.ViewHolder(view);
button_add_product.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
//current object
Products tempObj = products.get(viewHolder.getAdapterPosition(););
((ProductsByStoreActivity)view.getContext()).updateItemCount(true);
tempObj.setQuantity(String.valueOf(1));
viewHolder.tv_product_quantity.setText(tempObj.getQuantity());
}
});
return viewHolder;
You can do the same with the other onclicklistener
Update: You do not setText to your product_quantity textview in the BindView function, unless a button is clicked. this means its value will be recycled from other items. you should check with an if statement what is the quantity of the item and present it even without clicking.
Old and not correct answer:
I am not sure if this is the problem, but its an easy check, so try it out. There are 2 positions - the adapter position, and the layout position. I think maybe the position you are using (the one that came from the onBind function) is the latter. You want the adapter position, so try using getAdapterPosition() like this:
Products tempObj = (products).get(getAdapterPosition());
add below line to resolve the problem of 9th and 10th position of item
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position)
{
return position;
}
I have a RecyclerView that will contain list of item retrieved from the internet. So at first, the list will be empty. After the data retrieved from the internet, it will update the list and call notifyDataSetChanged().
I can adapt the data into the RecyclerView just fine. But, I have an ImageButton for each of item which has different Image if it's clicked. If I initialize the flags array inside onBindViewHolder, each time I scrolled the RecyclerView, the flag array will be reinitialize to false. If I initialize it in the Adapter constructor, it will be 0 index since the list will be empty at first. Where should I put array initializing in adapter if the data will come at some amount of time later?
Below is my code, but the flag array (isTrue) is always reinitialize each time I scrolled my RecyclerView.
public class SomethingAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<SomethingAdapter.ViewHolder> {
private ArrayList<String> someList;
private boolean[] isTrue;
public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public TextView someText;
public ImageButton someButton;
public ViewHolder(View v) {
super(v);
someText = (TextView) v.findViewById(R.id.text);
someButton = (ImageButton) v.findViewById(R.id.button);
}
}
public SomethingAdapter(ArrayList<String> someList) {
this.someList = someList;
}
#Override
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.some_layout, parent, false);
return new ViewHolder(v);
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(final ViewHolder viewHolder, final int position) {
//TODO: This thing will make isTrue always reinitialize if scrolled
this.isTrue = new boolean[someList.getResults().size()];
viewHolder.someText.setText(someList.get(position));
if (isTrue[position]) {
viewHolder.someButton.setImageResource(R.drawable.button_true);
} else {
viewHolder.someButton.setImageResource(R.drawable.button_false);
}
viewHolder.someButton.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
if (isTrue[position]) {
//Connect to the internet and if response is positive {
//isTrue[position] = false;
//viewHolder.someButton.setImageResource(R.drawable.button_false);
//}
} else {
//Connect to the internet and if response is positive {
//isTrue[position] = true;
//viewHolder.someButton.setImageResource(R.drawable.button_true);
//}
}
}
});
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return someList.size();
}
Initialize it when you add items to someList.
Also, don't add click listener in your onBind, create it in onCreateViewHolder. You cannot use position in the click callback, instead you should be using ViewHolder#getAdapterPosition.
See docs for details:
https://developer.android.com/reference/android/support/v7/widget/RecyclerView.Adapter.html#onBindViewHolder(VH, int)
I thought they were the same, but they're not. The following code gives an indexOutOfBounds exception when I try to access the "position" index of my dataset, in this case a list of a model I created called Task:
public class TaskAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<TaskAdapter.TaskViewHolder> {
private List<Task> taskList;
private TaskAdapter thisAdapter = this;
// cache of views to reduce number of findViewById calls
public static class TaskViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
protected TextView taskTV;
protected ImageView closeBtn;
public TaskViewHolder(View v) {
super(v);
taskTV = (TextView)v.findViewById(R.id.taskDesc);
closeBtn = (ImageView)v.findViewById(R.id.xImg);
}
}
public TaskAdapter(List<Task> tasks) {
if(tasks == null)
throw new IllegalArgumentException("tasks cannot be null");
taskList = tasks;
}
// onBindViewHolder binds a model to a viewholder
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(TaskViewHolder taskViewHolder, int pos) {
final int position = pos;
Task currTask = taskList.get(pos);
taskViewHolder.taskTV.setText(currTask.getDescription());
**taskViewHolder.closeBtn.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
Log.d("TRACE", "Closing task at position " + position);
// delete from SQLite DB
Task taskToDel = taskList.get(position);
taskToDel.delete();
// updating UI
taskList.remove(position);
thisAdapter.notifyItemRemoved(position);
}
});**
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
//Log.d("TRACE", taskList.size() + " tasks in DB");
return taskList.size();
}
// inflates row to create a viewHolder
#Override
public TaskViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int pos) {
View itemView = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).
inflate(R.layout.list_item, parent, false);
Task currTask = taskList.get(pos);
//itemView.setBackgroundColor(Color.parseColor(currTask.getColor()));
return new TaskViewHolder(itemView);
}
}
Deleting from my recyclerview gives unexpected results sometimes. Sometimes the element ahead of the one clicked is deleted, other times an indexOutOfBounds exception occurs at "taskList.get(position)".
Reading https://developer.android.com/reference/android/support/v7/widget/RecyclerView.Adapter.html and https://developer.android.com/training/material/lists-cards.html did not give me any more insight into why this was happening and how to fix it.
It looks like RecyclerView recycles the rows, but I wouldn't expect an indexoutofbounds exception using a smaller subset of numbers to index my list.
RecyclerView does not rebind views when their positions change (for obvious performance reasons).
For example, if your data set looks like this:
A B C D
and you add item X via
mItems.add(1, X);
notifyItemInserted(1, 1);
to get
A X B C D
RecyclerView will only bind X and run the animation.
There is a getPosition method in ViewHolder but that may not match adapter position if you call it in the middle of an animation.
If you need the adapter position, your safest option is getting the position from the Adapter.
update for your comment
Add a Task field to the ViewHolder.
Change onCreateViewHolder as follows to avoid creating a listener object on each rebind.
// inflates row to create a viewHolder
#Override
public TaskViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int type) {
View itemView = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).
inflate(R.layout.list_item, parent, false);
final TaskViewHolder vh = new TaskViewHolder(itemView);
taskViewHolder.closeBtn.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
// delete from SQLite DB
Task taskToDel = vh.getTask();
final int pos = taskList.indexOf(taskToDel);
if (pos == -1) return;
taskToDel.delete();
// updating UI
taskList.remove(pos);
thisAdapter.notifyItemRemoved(pos);
}
});
}
so in your on bind method, you do
// onBindViewHolder binds a model to a viewholder
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(TaskViewHolder taskViewHolder, int pos) {
Task currTask = taskList.get(pos);
taskViewHolder.setTask(currTask);
taskViewHolder.taskTV.setText(currTask.getDescription());
}
Like yigit said, RecyclerView works like that:
A B C D
and you add item X via
mItems.add(1, X);
notifyItemInserted(1, 1);
you get
A X B C D
Using holder.getAdapterPosition() in onClickListener() will give you the right item from dataset to be removed, not the "static" view position. Here's the doc about it onBindViewHolder
Why dont you use a public interface for the button click and controle the action in the MainActivity.
In your adapter add:
public interface OnItemClickListener {
void onItemClick(View view, int position, List<Task> mTaskList);
}
and
public OnItemClickListener mItemClickListener;
// Provide a suitable constructor (depends on the kind of dataset)
public TaskAdapter (List<Task> myDataset, OnItemClickListener mItemClickListener) {
this.mItemClickListener = mItemClickListener;
this.mDataset = mDataset;
}
plus the call in the ViewHolder class
public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener {
public ViewHolder(View v) {
super(v);
...
closeBtn = (ImageView)v.findViewById(R.id.xImg);
closeBtn.setOnClickListener(this);
}
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
// If not long clicked, pass last variable as false.
mItemClickListener.onItemClick(v, getAdapterPosition(), mDataset);
}
}
In your MainActivity change your adapter to handle the call
// set Adapter
mAdapter = new TaskAdapter(taskList, new TaskAdapter.OnItemClickListener() {
#Override
public void onItemClick(View v, int position) {
if (v.getId() == R.id.xImg) {
Task taskToDel = taskList.get(position);
// updating UI
taskList.remove(position);
thisAdapter.notifyItemRemoved(position);
// remove from db with unique id to use delete query
// dont use the position but something like taskToDel.getId()
taskToDel.delete();
}
}
});
Thanks to #yigit for his answer, his solution mainly worked, I just tweaked it a little bit so as to avoid using vh.getTask() which I was not sure how to implement.
final ViewHolder vh = new ViewHolder(customView);
final KittyAdapter final_copy_of_this = this;
// We attach a CheckChange Listener here instead of onBindViewHolder
// to avoid creating a listener object on each rebind
// Note Rebind is only called if animation must be called on view (for efficiency)
// It does not call on the removed if the last item is checked
vh.done.setChecked(false);
vh.done.setOnCheckedChangeListener(null);
vh.done.setOnCheckedChangeListener(new CompoundButton.OnCheckedChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onCheckedChanged(CompoundButton buttonView, boolean isChecked) {
buttonView.setEnabled(false);
final int pos2 = vh.getAdapterPosition(); // THIS IS HOW TO GET THE UPDATED POSITION
// YOU MUST UPDATE THE DATABASE, removed by Title
DatabaseHandler db = new DatabaseHandler(mContext);
db.remove(mDataSet.get(pos2).getTitle(), fp);
db.close();
// Update UI
mDataSet.remove(pos2);
final_copy_of_this.notifyItemRemoved(pos2);
}
});
Notice instead to get the updated position, you can call vh.getAdapterPosition(), which is the line that will give you the updated position from the underlying dataset rather than the fake view.
This is working for me as of now, if someone knows of a drawback to using this please let me know. Hope this helps someone.
Personally, I don't like this concept of RecyclerViews. Seems like it wasn't thought of completely.
As it was said when removing an item the Recycler view just hides an item. But usually you don't want to leave that item in your collection. When deleting an item from the collection "it shifts its elements towards 0" whereas recyclerView keeps the same size.
If you are calling taskList.remove(position); your position must be evaluated again:
int position = recyclerView.getChildAdapterPosition(taskViewHolder.itemView);