I have implemented RecyclerView show some realm table data. I've created adapter by extending from RealmRecyclerViewAdapter. Even thought I have 3 rows in table (Which I checked by result debugging) nothing showing up in the list. I'm using 'io.realm:android-adapters:2.1.0' adapter and Realm 3.7.2
Here's my code.
Adapter class.
public class UserListAdapter extends RealmRecyclerViewAdapter<User,UserListAdapter.ViewHolder> {
public UserListAdapter(#Nullable OrderedRealmCollection<User> data, boolean autoUpdate) {
super(data, autoUpdate);
setHasStableIds(true);
}
#Override
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
LayoutInflater inflater = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext());
View view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.user_list_layout, parent, false);
return new ViewHolder(view);
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
User user = getItem(position);
holder.home.setText(user.getUid());
holder.name.setText(user.getName());
holder.home.setText(user.getHouse().getName());
if(user.isStatus()) {
holder.status.setText("Active");
}else{
holder.status.setText("Inactive");
}
}
#Override
public long getItemId(int index) {
return getItem(index).getUid();
}
public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener {
#BindView(R.id.column_id)
TextView id;
#BindView(R.id.column_name)
TextView name;
#BindView(R.id.column_house)
TextView home;
#BindView(R.id.status_button)
Button status;
public ViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
ButterKnife.bind(this, itemView);
itemView.setOnClickListener(this);
status.setOnClickListener(this);
}
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
if(v.getId() == R.id.status){
//TODO: create interface and add method tho trigger when status click
}else{
//TODO: create interface and add method tho trigger when item click
}
}
}
}
code fragment for setting adapter
try(Realm realm = Realm.getDefaultInstance()){
RealmResults<User> users = realm.where(User.class).findAll();
listAdapter = new UserListAdapter(users,true);
recyclerView.setAdapter(listAdapter);
recyclerView.addItemDecoration(new RecyclerViewDividerVertical(2));
recyclerView.setLayoutManager(new LinearLayoutManager(getActivity()));
}
I could have conver RealmResults<User> in to ArrayList<User> and implement normal RecyclerView Adapter and get it done. But As I've understand RealmRecyclerViewAdapter will result auto update result data in case of data change. But i'm not 100% clear on that too. Can any one explain how that works ? Thanks.
try(Realm realm = Realm.getDefaultInstance()){
RealmResults<User> users = realm.where(User.class).findAll();
listAdapter = new UserListAdapter(users,true);
recyclerView.setAdapter(listAdapter);
recyclerView.addItemDecoration(new RecyclerViewDividerVertical(2));
recyclerView.setLayoutManager(new LinearLayoutManager(getActivity()));
} // <--- auto-close!
If you close the Realm instance then the results bound to it become invalidated, and RealmRecyclerViewAdapter checks against isValid() which will return false because you've closed the Realm, so it will be shown with 0 element count.
Refer to proper lifecycle management for UI thread Realm instance (onCreate() open, onDestroy() close) in the documentation.
Looks like your data is invalid and getItemCount() method which is implemented in RealmRecyclerViewAdapter returns 0.
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've a strange problem with my recyclerView adapter, I just want to show/hide ImageView depending of the selection but when I call the notifyItemChanged(selection) in my click listener, it call onCreateViewHolder and take a delay to refresh de view, I don't know why and I didn't find another solution to perform what I need.
This is my adapter:
public class ChannelAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<ChannelAdapter.ChannelHolder> {
private ArrayList<Integer> channelList;
private Integer selection = 0;
public ChannelAdapter(ArrayList<Integer> channelList) {
this.channelList = channelList;
}
#NotNull
#Override
public ChannelHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
Log.d(TAG, "onCreateViewHolder: ");
View view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.adapter_channel_item_selected, parent, false);
ChannelHolder holder = new ChannelHolder(view);
return holder;
}
#SuppressLint("SetTextI18n")
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ChannelHolder holder, int position) {
Log.d(TAG, "onBindViewHolder: "+position);
holder.textViewChannelId.setText("#"+channelList.get(position));
holder.textViewChannel.setText(channelList.get(position).toString());
if(position==selection){
holder.imageViewSelectorLeft.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
holder.imageViewSelectorRight.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
}
else{
holder.imageViewSelectorLeft.setVisibility(View.INVISIBLE);
holder.imageViewSelectorRight.setVisibility(View.INVISIBLE);
}
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return channelList.size();
}
public class ChannelHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
TextView textViewChannel, textViewChannelId;
ImageView imageViewSelectorLeft, imageViewSelectorRight;
public ChannelHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
textViewChannelId = itemView.findViewById(R.id.textViewChannelId);
textViewChannel = itemView.findViewById(R.id.textViewChannel);
imageViewSelectorLeft = itemView.findViewById(R.id.imageViewSelectorLeft);
imageViewSelectorRight = itemView.findViewById(R.id.imageViewSelectorRight);
itemView.setOnClickListener(v -> {
notifyItemChanged(selection);
selection=getAdapterPosition();
notifyItemChanged(selection);
});
}
}
}
Do I miss something or am I doing it by the wrong way?
Thanks in advance for any help
Edit :
I tried to use notifyItemChanged with a payload set to 1 and override onBindViewHolder to get the payload but it still call onCreateViewHolder, even when mSupportsChangeAnimations is set to false
By default, your RecyclerView will have a DefaultItemAnimator attached to it. When you call notifyItemChanged() on your adapter, the system will eventually call through to the DefaultItemAnimator to find out whether it needs to create a new ViewHolder or if it can "re-use" the existing one.
#Override
public boolean canReuseUpdatedViewHolder(#NonNull ViewHolder viewHolder,
#NonNull List<Object> payloads) {
return !payloads.isEmpty() || super.canReuseUpdatedViewHolder(viewHolder, payloads);
}
The superclass implementation:
#Override
public boolean canReuseUpdatedViewHolder(#NonNull RecyclerView.ViewHolder viewHolder) {
return !mSupportsChangeAnimations || viewHolder.isInvalid();
}
These suggest that there are two easy ways to make sure that the ViewHolder is reused instead of recreated:
Make sure that the payloads list is not empty. This is done by calling adapter.notifyItemChanged(position, payload). It doesn't matter what the payload is, as long as it is non-null.
Set mSupportsChangeAnimations to false for your DefaultItemAnimator.
DefaultItemAnimator animator = (DefaultItemAnimator) recyclerView.getItemAnimator();
animator.setSupportsChangeAnimations(false);
You can call your adapter like this
YourAdapter adapter = new YourAdapter(yourList, yourActivity.this);
recyclerView.setAdapter(adapter);
adapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
and then you can put this code on itemClick in adapter
if(position==getAdapterPosition()){
holder.imageViewSelectorLeft.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
holder.imageViewSelectorRight.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
}
else{
holder.imageViewSelectorLeft.setVisibility(View.INVISIBLE);
holder.imageViewSelectorRight.setVisibility(View.INVISIBLE);
}
I have implemented my RecyclerView with it's Custom Adapter as follows
Global Declarations as follows
private LinearLayoutManager linearLayoutManager;
private int pastVisibleItems, visibleItemCount, totalItemCount;
private CustomRecyclerViewAdapter customRecyclerViewAdapter;
First I created Adapter Instance inside onCreate() method which has Empty Array inside it and set it to recyclerView
linearLayoutManager = new LinearLayoutManager(getActivity());
recyclerView.setLayoutManager(linearLayoutManager);
DividerItemDecoration dividerItemDecoration = new DividerItemDecoration(
Utility.ItemDecorationConst);
recyclerView.addItemDecoration(dividerItemDecoration);
customRecyclerViewAdapter = new CustomRecyclerViewAdapter(getActivity());
recyclerView.setAdapter(customRecyclerViewAdapter);
recyclerView.addOnScrollListener(new RecyclerView.OnScrollListener() {
#Override
public void onScrolled(RecyclerView recyclerView, int dx, int dy) {
visibleItemCount = linearLayoutManager.getChildCount();
totalItemCount = linearLayoutManager.getItemCount();
pastVisibleItems = linearLayoutManager.findFirstVisibleItemPosition();
if (loading) {
if ((visibleItemCount + pastVisibleItems) >= totalItemCount) {
loading = false;
customRecyclerViewAdapter.addProgressBarEntry();
controller.getNextPage(PublisherAppContainerFragment.this);
}
}
}
});
After rendering complete View when I get data from AsyncTask for filling in recyclerView
I call following method of the Adapter to fill data
customRecyclerViewAdapter.addAll(myArray);
note : addAll() is not any overridden method
following is code of my CustomRecyclerViewAdapter
class CustomRecyclerViewAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<CustomRecyclerViewAdapter.ViewHolder> {
ArrayList<MyModel> arrayList = new ArrayList<>();
Context context;
public CustomRecyclerViewAdapter(Context context) {
this.context = context;
}
#Override
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
ViewHolder viewHolder = null;
//inflated some view
return viewHolder;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
//binded data to holder
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return arrayList.size();
}
public void addAll(ArrayList myArray) {
this.arrayList.addAll(myArray)
}
public void clear() {
arrayList.clear();
}
public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener {
public CardView cardView;
public ViewHolder(View view) {
super(view);
this.cardView = (CardView) view.findViewById(R.id.card_view);
this.cardView.setOnClickListener(this);
}
#Override
public void onClick(View view) {
//handle operations
}
}
}
So whenever I get data from AsynTask I call method addAll() and recyclerView works like charm.
Now, My question is how it's working very well even though I have never called notifyDataSetChanged() on the adapter. Are there any previously registered Observers for the adapter? who observes if the dataset which has been returned in public int getItemCount() has been changed?
As I have read from documentation
void notifyDataSetChanged ()
Notify any registered observers that the data set has changed.
that means even though there are some observers registered you need to notify them using notifyDataSetChanged(). Right?
I also called
boolean flag = customRecyclerViewAdapter.hasObservers();
to know if there are any observers registered? Flag is True.
So anyone would please help me understand how exactly these things work?
If you look at the source of RecyclerView setAdapter call you will find a method setAdapterInternal(adapter, false, true);which is responsible for
Replaces the current adapter with the new one and triggers listeners.
This method is responsible for swapping the old adapter with the new one and internally it also registers for the custom Data Observer. This is the reason you are getting the flag as true
Based on what I can see of your code, I would say that there are not any observers attached to your RecyclerView that are picking up changes and keeping the list updated. What is more likely is that you are just getting "lucky" as when you scroll through the list the layout manager is continually calling getItemCount() on the adapter to determine if it should show more items. Whenever you call addAll(), you silently update the item count and it just happens to appear that observers were notified of the changes.
This is definitely a bug, and you would more likely see its effects in your implementation if you were dependent on a particular observer to monitor some aspect of the list, or doing more than just appending new items to the bottom (for example altering or inserting between existing items). The correct implementation as you pointed out is to call notifyDataSetChanged() whenever the list is updated, or even better be more specific with what changed if you can. For example, you can use:
public void addAll(ArrayList myArray) {
int positionStart = getItemCount() - 1;
this.arrayList.addAll(myArray);
notifyItemRangeInserted(positionStart, myArray.size());
}
public void clear() {
int oldSize = getItemCount();
arrayList.clear();
notifyItemRangeRemoved(0, oldSize);
}
My question is how it's working very well even though I have never called notifyDataSetChanged() on the adapter
It's because the addAll method by default calls the notifyDataSetChanged().
public void addAll(T ... items) {
synchronized (mLock) {
if (mOriginalValues != null) {
Collections.addAll(mOriginalValues, items);
} else {
Collections.addAll(mObjects, items);
}
}
if (mNotifyOnChange) notifyDataSetChanged();
}
And
public void addAll(#NonNull Collection<? extends T> collection) {
synchronized (mLock) {
if (mOriginalValues != null) {
mOriginalValues.addAll(collection);
} else {
mObjects.addAll(collection);
}
}
if (mNotifyOnChange) notifyDataSetChanged();
}
Here's the link - https://github.com/android/platform_frameworks_base/blob/master/core/java/android/widget/ArrayAdapter.java
EDIT - I see that you have your own addAll method which is calling addAll method of ArrayList.
This is how addAll method works -
private ArrayList<String> ex1 = new ArrayList();
private ArrayList<String> ex2 = new ArrayList();
private ArrayList<String> ex3 = new ArrayList();
ex1.add("one");
ex2.add("two");
ex3.addAll(ex1);
ex3.addAll(ex2);
System.out.println(ex3);
OUTPUT - [one, two]
This is what happening in your case.
I have shown progress bar and once I fetch data I hide the progress bar and make recyclerView visible - If in layout or code you set RecyclerView visibility GONE then layout will not happen and that is why Adapter.getItemsCount() not get called. So if you fetch data and populate adapter array with it and then change RecyclerView visibility from GONE to VISIBLE it will trigger update.
In case you don't call notifyDataSetChanged() RecyclerView will not know about update. I guess there is something else in your code that trigger RecyclerView update. To clarify this behavior let's use some dummy adapter:
private class DummyViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public DummyViewHolder (View itemView) {
super(itemView);
}
}
private class Adapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<DummyViewHolder> {
private int mDummySize = 5;
#Override
public DummyViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
View view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.dummy_view, parent, false);
return new DummyViewHolder(view);
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(DummyViewHolder holder, int position) {
}
void setSize(int size) { this.mDummySize = size; }
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return mDummySize;
}
}
And in onCraete() :
ViewHolder v = ...
final Adapter adapter = ..
...
//postpone adapter update
(new Handler()).postDelayed(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
adapter.setSize(10);//and nothing happend only 5 items on screen
}
}, 5000);
Overview: I'm having a chat application. Till now, I was using CursorAdapter with a Listview to load my chat items in the list. But now, I'm planning to refactor the code to use RecyclerView with RecyclerView.Adapter and a "Load More" functionality like whatsapp.
Issue: Memory consumption. With CursorAdapter, items not in viewable area were getting Garbage Collected, but now since I'm using an ArrayList of my CustomModal, once you load all the items in the list (by clicking on the "Load More" button) I'm seeing high memory consumption in the memory logs (No Garbage Collection).
My guess is now, I'm loading all the items in an ArrayList and that is causing the issue. Is that it?
Is there a way to avoid the issue or optimize the problem?
EDIT:
Can't post the complete code here, but here is a snippet of the kind of Adapter that I've implemented:
public class MessageAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<MessageAdapter.MyViewHolder> {
private ArrayList<MyModal> mMyModals;
public MessageAdapter(ArrayList<MyModal> mMyModals) {
this.mMyModals = mMyModals;
//... Some fields initialization here
}
public void changeList(ArrayList<MyModal> myModals, boolean isLoadMoreEnabled){
this.mMyModals = myModals;
//... Some fields initialization here
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
public void toggleLoadMore(boolean isLoadMoreEnabled){
if(isLoadMoreEnabled){
//..Checks if load more is already enabled or not
//..If not then enables it by adding an item at 0th poition of MyModal list
//..Then notifyDataSetChanged()
}else{
//..Checks if load more is already disabled or not
//..If not then disables it by removing an item at 0th poition of MyModal list
//..Then notifyDataSetChanged()
}
}
#Override
public MyViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
MyViewHolder messageViewHolder = null;
View itemLayoutView = null;
MyModal.MessageType messageType = MyModal.MessageType.getMessageTypeFromValue(viewType);
switch (messageType){
case MESSAGE_TYPE1:
itemLayoutView = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext())
.inflate(R.layout.layout1, null);
messageViewHolder = new Type1ViewHolder(itemLayoutView);
break;
case MESSAGE_TYPE2:
itemLayoutView = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext())
.inflate(R.layout.layout2, null);
messageViewHolder = new Type2ViewHolder(itemLayoutView);
break;
}
return messageViewHolder;
}
#Override
public void onBindViewHolder(MyViewHolder holder, int position) {
final MyModal myModal = mMyModals.get(position);
MyModal.MessageType messageType = myModal.getMessageType();
holder.initialize(myModal);
}
#Override
public int getItemCount() {
return (mMyModals != null)?mMyModals.size():0;
}
#Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
return mMyModals.get(position).getMessageType().getValue();
}
public abstract class MyViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public MyViewHolder(View itemLayoutView) {
super(itemLayoutView);
}
public abstract void initialize(MyModal myModal);
}
class Type1ViewHolder extends MyViewHolder {
//...Variables
public Type1ViewHolder(View itemLayoutView) {
super(itemLayoutView);
//...variables initialization here
}
#Override
public void initialize(MyModal myModal) {
//...Setting values in view using myModal
}
}
class Type2ViewHolder extends MyViewHolder {
//...Variables
public TextViewHolder(View itemLayoutView) {
super(itemLayoutView);
//...variables initialization here
}
#Override
public void initialize(MyModal myModal) {
//...Setting values in view using myModal
}
}
}
First of all :
public void changeList(ArrayList<MyModal> myModals, boolean isLoadMoreEnabled){
this.mMyModals = myModals;
//... Some fields initialization here
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
Here you are creating a new arraylist and assigning it to your mMyModals. This means there are 2 arraylists at this point and they take up twice the amount of space than required. GC doesnt work the way you expect it to. Since the arraylist is initialized in your activity it will persist as long as the arraylist persists and so will the initial arraylist.
Instead of creating a new arraylist in your activity and passing it to changeList. Just clear your old arraylist and pass that.And also in adapter changeList method you can do the below
public void changeList(ArrayList<MyModal> myModals, boolean isLoadMoreEnabled){
this.mMyModals.clear();
this.mMyModels.addAll(myModels);
//... Some fields initialization here
notifyDataSetChanged();
}
Please let me know if i am not clear. Also show your activity code if this does not work.
Instead of replacing the whole ArrayList and calling notifyDataSetChanged, try adding the items to the ArrayList and then call notifyItemRangeInserted(int positionStart, int itemCount), maybe that could work. Also, you dont have to replace the Adapter's ArrayList. Your Activity/Fragment probably has the same ArrayList, just editing this list in your Activity/Fragment and then calling notifyItemRangeInserted(int positionStart, int itemCount) should do the trick. Also, instead of retrieving all the messages, you could also try to only get the next X amount of messages, so you wont retrieve the messages you already retrieved before (if you didn't do that already).
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)