I've written up a dummy activity that switches between two fragments. When you go from FragmentA to FragmentB, FragmentA gets added to the back stack. However, when I return to FragmentA (by pressing back), a totally new FragmentA is created and the state it was in is lost. I get the feeling I'm after the same thing as this question, but I've included a complete code sample to help root out the issue:
public class FooActivity extends Activity {
#Override public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
final FragmentTransaction transaction = getFragmentManager().beginTransaction();
transaction.replace(android.R.id.content, new FragmentA());
transaction.commit();
}
public void nextFragment() {
final FragmentTransaction transaction = getFragmentManager().beginTransaction();
transaction.replace(android.R.id.content, new FragmentB());
transaction.addToBackStack(null);
transaction.commit();
}
public static class FragmentA extends Fragment {
#Override public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container,
Bundle savedInstanceState) {
final View main = inflater.inflate(R.layout.main, container, false);
main.findViewById(R.id.next_fragment_button).setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(View v) {
((FooActivity) getActivity()).nextFragment();
}
});
return main;
}
#Override public void onSaveInstanceState(Bundle outState) {
super.onSaveInstanceState(outState);
// Save some state!
}
}
public static class FragmentB extends Fragment {
#Override public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container,
Bundle savedInstanceState) {
return inflater.inflate(R.layout.b, container, false);
}
}
}
With some log messages added:
07-05 14:28:59.722 D/OMG ( 1260): FooActivity.onCreate
07-05 14:28:59.742 D/OMG ( 1260): FragmentA.onCreateView
07-05 14:28:59.742 D/OMG ( 1260): FooActivity.onResume
<Tap Button on FragmentA>
07-05 14:29:12.842 D/OMG ( 1260): FooActivity.nextFragment
07-05 14:29:12.852 D/OMG ( 1260): FragmentB.onCreateView
<Tap 'Back'>
07-05 14:29:16.792 D/OMG ( 1260): FragmentA.onCreateView
It's never calling FragmentA.onSaveInstanceState and it creates a new FragmentA when you hit back. However, if I'm on FragmentA and I lock the screen, FragmentA.onSaveInstanceState does get called. So weird...am I wrong in expecting a fragment added to the back stack to not need re-creation? Here's what the docs say:
Whereas, if you do call addToBackStack() when removing a fragment,
then the fragment is stopped and will be resumed if the user navigates
back.
If you return to a fragment from the back stack it does not re-create the fragment but re-uses the same instance and starts with onCreateView() in the fragment lifecycle, see Fragment lifecycle.
So if you want to store state you should use instance variables and not rely on onSaveInstanceState().
Comparing to Apple's UINavigationController and UIViewController, Google does not do well in Android software architecture. And Android's document about Fragment does not help much.
When you enter FragmentB from FragmentA, the existing FragmentA instance is not destroyed. When you press Back in FragmentB and return to FragmentA, we don't create a new FragmentA instance. The existing FragmentA instance's onCreateView() will be called.
The key thing is we should not inflate view again in FragmentA's onCreateView(), because we are using the existing FragmentA's instance. We need to save and reuse the rootView.
The following code works well. It does not only keep fragment state, but also reduces the RAM and CPU load (because we only inflate layout if necessary). I can't believe Google's sample code and document never mention it but always inflate layout.
Version 1(Don't use version 1. Use version 2)
public class FragmentA extends Fragment {
View _rootView;
public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container,
Bundle savedInstanceState) {
if (_rootView == null) {
// Inflate the layout for this fragment
_rootView = inflater.inflate(R.layout.fragment_a, container, false);
// Find and setup subviews
_listView = (ListView)_rootView.findViewById(R.id.listView);
...
} else {
// Do not inflate the layout again.
// The returned View of onCreateView will be added into the fragment.
// However it is not allowed to be added twice even if the parent is same.
// So we must remove _rootView from the existing parent view group
// (it will be added back).
((ViewGroup)_rootView.getParent()).removeView(_rootView);
}
return _rootView;
}
}
------Update on May 3 2005:-------
As the comments mentioned, sometimes _rootView.getParent() is null in onCreateView, which causes the crash. Version 2 removes _rootView in onDestroyView(), as dell116 suggested. Tested on Android 4.0.3, 4.4.4, 5.1.0.
Version 2
public class FragmentA extends Fragment {
View _rootView;
public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container,
Bundle savedInstanceState) {
if (_rootView == null) {
// Inflate the layout for this fragment
_rootView = inflater.inflate(R.layout.fragment_a, container, false);
// Find and setup subviews
_listView = (ListView)_rootView.findViewById(R.id.listView);
...
} else {
// Do not inflate the layout again.
// The returned View of onCreateView will be added into the fragment.
// However it is not allowed to be added twice even if the parent is same.
// So we must remove _rootView from the existing parent view group
// in onDestroyView() (it will be added back).
}
return _rootView;
}
#Override
public void onDestroyView() {
if (_rootView.getParent() != null) {
((ViewGroup)_rootView.getParent()).removeView(_rootView);
}
super.onDestroyView();
}
}
WARNING!!!
This is a HACK! Though I am using it in my app, you need to test and read comments carefully.
I guess there is an alternative way to achieve what you are looking for.
I don't say its a complete solution but it served the purpose in my case.
What I did is instead of replacing the fragment I just added target fragment.
So basically you will be going to use add() method instead replace().
What else I did.
I hide my current fragment and also add it to backstack.
Hence it overlaps new fragment over the current fragment without destroying its view.(check that its onDestroyView() method is not being called. Plus adding it to backstate gives me the advantage of resuming the fragment.
Here is the code :
Fragment fragment=new DestinationFragment();
FragmentManager fragmentManager = getFragmentManager();
android.app.FragmentTransaction ft=fragmentManager.beginTransaction();
ft.add(R.id.content_frame, fragment);
ft.hide(SourceFragment.this);
ft.addToBackStack(SourceFragment.class.getName());
ft.commit();
AFAIK System only calls onCreateView() if the view is destroyed or not created.
But here we have saved the view by not removing it from memory. So it will not create a new view.
And when you get back from Destination Fragment it will pop the last FragmentTransaction removing top fragment which will make the topmost(SourceFragment's) view to appear over the screen.
COMMENT: As I said it is not a complete solution as it doesn't remove the view of Source fragment and hence occupying more memory than usual. But still, serve the purpose. Also, we are using a totally different mechanism of hiding view instead of replacing it which is non traditional.
So it's not really for how you maintain the state, but for how you maintain the view.
I would suggest a very simple solution.
Take the View reference variable and set view in OnCreateView. Check if view already exists in this variable, then return same view.
private View fragmentView;
public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, #Nullable ViewGroup container, #Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreateView(inflater, container, savedInstanceState);
if (fragmentView != null) {
return fragmentView;
}
View view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.yourfragment, container, false);
fragmentView = view;
return view;
}
I came across this problem in a Fragment containing a map, which has too many setup details to save/reload.
My solution was to basically keep this Fragment active the whole time (similar to what #kaushal mentioned).
Say you have current Fragment A and wants to display Fragment B.
Summarizing the consequences:
replace() - remove Fragment A and replace it with Fragment B. Fragment A will be recreated once brought to the front again
add() - (create and) add a Fragment B and it overlap Fragment A, which is still active in the background
remove() - can be used to remove Fragment B and return to A. Fragment B will be recreated when called later on
Hence, if you want to keep both Fragments "saved", just toggle them using hide()/show().
Pros: easy and simple method to keep multiple Fragments running
Cons: you use a lot more memory to keep all of them running. May run into problems, e.g. displaying many large bitmaps
onSaveInstanceState() is only called if there is configuration change.
Since changing from one fragment to another there is no configuration change so no call to onSaveInstanceState() is there. What state is not being save? Can you specify?
If you enter some text in EditText it will be saved automatically. Any UI item without any ID is the item whose view state shall not be saved.
first: just use add method instead of replace method of FragmentTransaction class then you have to add secondFragment to stack by addToBackStack method
second :on back click you have to call popBackStackImmediate()
Fragment sourceFragment = new SourceFragment ();
final Fragment secondFragment = new SecondFragment();
final FragmentTransaction ft = getChildFragmentManager().beginTransaction();
ft.add(R.id.child_fragment_container, secondFragment );
ft.hide(sourceFragment );
ft.addToBackStack(NewsShow.class.getName());
ft.commit();
((SecondFragment)secondFragment).backFragmentInstanceClick = new SecondFragment.backFragmentNewsResult()
{
#Override
public void backFragmentNewsResult()
{
getChildFragmentManager().popBackStackImmediate();
}
};
Kotlin and ViewBinding Solution
I am using replace() and backstack() method for FragmentTransaction. The problem is that the backstack() method calls the onCreateView of the Previous Fragment which causes in re-built of Fragment UI. Here is a solution for that:
private lateinit var binding: FragmentAdRelevantDetailsBinding
override fun onCreateView(
inflater: LayoutInflater, container: ViewGroup?,savedInstanceState: Bundle?
): View {
if (!this::binding.isInitialized)
binding = FragmentAdRelevantDetailsBinding.inflate(layoutInflater, container, false)
return binding.root
}
Here, since onSaveInstanceState in fragment does not call when you add fragment into backstack. The fragment lifecycle in backstack when restored start onCreateView and end onDestroyView while onSaveInstanceState is called between onDestroyView and onDestroy. My solution is create instance variable and init in onCreate. Sample code:
private boolean isDataLoading = true;
private ArrayList<String> listData;
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState){
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
isDataLoading = false;
// init list at once when create fragment
listData = new ArrayList();
}
And check it in onActivityCreated:
public void onViewCreated(View view, #Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onViewCreated(view, savedInstanceState);
if(isDataLoading){
fetchData();
}else{
//get saved instance variable listData()
}
}
private void fetchData(){
// do fetch data into listData
}
getSupportFragmentManager().addOnBackStackChangedListener(new FragmentManager.OnBackStackChangedListener()
{
#Override
public void onBackStackChanged()
{
if (getSupportFragmentManager().getBackStackEntryCount() == 0)
{
//setToolbarTitle("Main Activity");
}
else
{
Log.e("fragment_replace11111", "replace");
}
}
});
YourActivity.java
#Override
public void onBackPressed()
{
Fragment fragment = getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentById(R.id.Fragment_content);
if (fragment instanceof YourFragmentName)
{
fragmentReplace(new HomeFragment(),"Home Fragment");
txt_toolbar_title.setText("Your Fragment");
}
else{
super.onBackPressed();
}
}
public void fragmentReplace(Fragment fragment, String fragment_name)
{
try
{
fragmentTransaction = fragmentManager.beginTransaction();
fragmentTransaction.replace(R.id.Fragment_content, fragment, fragment_name);
fragmentTransaction.setCustomAnimations(R.anim.enter_from_right, R.anim.exit_to_left, R.anim.enter_from_left, R.anim.exit_to_right);
fragmentTransaction.addToBackStack(fragment_name);
fragmentTransaction.commitAllowingStateLoss();
}
catch (Exception e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
My problem was similar but I overcame me without keeping the fragment alive. Suppose you have an activity that has 2 fragments - F1 and F2. F1 is started initially and lets say in contains some user info and then upon some condition F2 pops on asking user to fill in additional attribute - their phone number. Next, you want that phone number to pop back to F1 and complete signup but you realize all previous user info is lost and you don't have their previous data. The fragment is recreated from scratch and even if you saved this information in onSaveInstanceState the bundle comes back null in onActivityCreated.
Solution:
Save required information as an instance variable in calling activity. Then pass that instance variable into your fragment.
#Override
public void onActivityCreated(#Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onActivityCreated(savedInstanceState);
Bundle args = getArguments();
// this will be null the first time F1 is created.
// it will be populated once you replace fragment and provide bundle data
if (args != null) {
if (args.get("your_info") != null) {
// do what you want with restored information
}
}
}
So following on with my example: before I display F2 I save user data in the instance variable using a callback. Then I start F2, user fills in phone number and presses save. I use another callback in activity, collect this information and replace my fragment F1, this time it has bundle data that I can use.
#Override
public void onPhoneAdded(String phone) {
//replace fragment
F1 f1 = new F1 ();
Bundle args = new Bundle();
yourInfo.setPhone(phone);
args.putSerializable("you_info", yourInfo);
f1.setArguments(args);
getFragmentManager().beginTransaction()
.replace(R.id.fragmentContainer, f1).addToBackStack(null).commit();
}
}
More information about callbacks can be found here: https://developer.android.com/training/basics/fragments/communicating.html
Replace a Fragment using following code:
Fragment fragment = new AddPaymentFragment();
getSupportFragmentManager().beginTransaction().replace(R.id.frame, fragment, "Tag_AddPayment")
.addToBackStack("Tag_AddPayment")
.commit();
Activity's onBackPressed() is :
#Override
public void onBackPressed() {
android.support.v4.app.FragmentManager fm = getSupportFragmentManager();
if (fm.getBackStackEntryCount() > 1) {
fm.popBackStack();
} else {
finish();
}
Log.e("popping BACKSTRACK===> ",""+fm.getBackStackEntryCount());
}
Public void replaceFragment(Fragment mFragment, int id, String tag, boolean addToStack) {
FragmentTransaction mTransaction = getSupportFragmentManager().beginTransaction();
mTransaction.replace(id, mFragment);
hideKeyboard();
if (addToStack) {
mTransaction.addToBackStack(tag);
}
mTransaction.commitAllowingStateLoss();
}
replaceFragment(new Splash_Fragment(), R.id.container, null, false);
Perfect solution that find old fragment in stack and load it if exist in stack.
/**
* replace or add fragment to the container
*
* #param fragment pass android.support.v4.app.Fragment
* #param bundle pass your extra bundle if any
* #param popBackStack if true it will clear back stack
* #param findInStack if true it will load old fragment if found
*/
public void replaceFragment(Fragment fragment, #Nullable Bundle bundle, boolean popBackStack, boolean findInStack) {
FragmentManager fm = getSupportFragmentManager();
FragmentTransaction ft = fm.beginTransaction();
String tag = fragment.getClass().getName();
Fragment parentFragment;
if (findInStack && fm.findFragmentByTag(tag) != null) {
parentFragment = fm.findFragmentByTag(tag);
} else {
parentFragment = fragment;
}
// if user passes the #bundle in not null, then can be added to the fragment
if (bundle != null)
parentFragment.setArguments(bundle);
else parentFragment.setArguments(null);
// this is for the very first fragment not to be added into the back stack.
if (popBackStack) {
fm.popBackStack(null, FragmentManager.POP_BACK_STACK_INCLUSIVE);
} else {
ft.addToBackStack(parentFragment.getClass().getName() + "");
}
ft.replace(R.id.contenedor_principal, parentFragment, tag);
ft.commit();
fm.executePendingTransactions();
}
use it like
Fragment f = new YourFragment();
replaceFragment(f, null, boolean true, true);
Calling the Fragment lifecycle methods properly and using onSavedInstanceState() can solve the problem.
i.e Call onCreate(), onCreateView(), onViewCreated() and onSavedInstanceState() properly and save Bundle in onSaveInstanceState() and resotre it in onCreate() method.
I don't know how but it worked for me without any error.
If anyone can explain it will very much appreciated.
public class DiagnosisFragment extends Fragment {
private static final String TITLE = "TITLE";
private String mTitle;
private List mList = null;
private ListAdapter adapter;
public DiagnosisFragment(){}
public DiagnosisFragment(List list, String title){
mList = list;
mTitle = title;
}
#Override
public void onCreate(#Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
if(savedInstanceState != null){
mList = savedInstanceState.getParcelableArrayList(HEALTH_ITEMS);
mTitle = savedInstanceState.getString(TITLE);
itemId = savedInstanceState.getInt(ID);
mChoiceMode = savedInstanceState.getInt(CHOICE_MODE);
}
getActivity().setTitle(mTitle);
adapter = (ListAdapter) new HealthAdapter(mList, getContext()).load(itemId);
}
#Nullable
#Override
public View onCreateView(#NonNull LayoutInflater inflater, #Nullable ViewGroup container, #Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
return inflater.inflate(R.layout.diagnosis_fragment, container, false);
}
#Override
public void onViewCreated(#NonNull View view, #Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onViewCreated(view, savedInstanceState);
ListView lv = view.findViewById(R.id.subLocationsSymptomsList);
lv.setAdapter(adapter);
}
#Override
public void onSaveInstanceState(#NonNull Bundle outState) {
outState.putParcelableArrayList(HEALTH_ITEMS, (ArrayList) mList);
outState.putString(TITLE, mTitle);
}
}
For who has looking for solution :
#Override
public void onDestroyView() {
Bundle savedState=new Bundle();
// put your data in bundle
// if you have object and want to restore you can use gson to convert it
//to sring
if (yourObject!=null){
savedState.putString("your_object_key",new Gson().toJson(yourObject));
}
if (getArguments()==null){
setArguments(new Bundle());
}
getArguments().putBundle("saved_state",savedState);
super.onDestroyView();
}
and in onViewCreated() method :
Bundle savedState=null;
if (getArguments()!=null){
savedState=getArguments().getBundle("saved_state");
}
if (savedState!=null){
// set your restored data to your view
}
I have simple activity and fragment transaction. What i noticed that on configuration changes oncreateView of Fragment is called twice. Why is this happening?
Activity Code Here :
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
System.out.println("Activity created");
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
FragmentManager manager = getSupportFragmentManager();
BlankFragment fragment = new BlankFragment();
addFragmentToActivity(manager,
fragment,
R.id.root_activity_create
);
}
public static void addFragmentToActivity (FragmentManager fragmentManager,
Fragment fragment,
int frameId)
{
FragmentTransaction transaction = fragmentManager.beginTransaction();
transaction.replace(frameId, fragment);
transaction.commit();
}
Fragment Code Here :
public class BlankFragment extends Fragment {
public BlankFragment() {
// Required empty public constructor
}
#Override
public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container,
Bundle savedInstanceState) {
// Inflate the layout for this fragment
return inflater.inflate(R.layout.fragment_blank, container, false);
}
}
On first load onCreateView() is called once
But onRotation onCreateView() is called twice
why ?
Because of this transaction.replace(frameId, fragment); Really? Yes,I mean because of fragment .You already have one fragment onFirst load, When you rotate onCreate() will be called once again, so now fragment manager has old fragment ,so it methods will execute(once),and next you are doing transaction replace() which will remove old fragment and replace it with new once and again(onCreateView() will be called for second time). This is repeating for every rotation.
If you use transaction.add(frameId, fragment,UNIQUE_TAG_FOR_EVERY_TRANSACTION) you would know the reason. for every rotatation, no.of onCreateView() calls will increase by 1. that means you are adding fragments while not removing old ones.
But solution is to use old fragments.
in onCreate()of activity
val fragment = fragmentmanager.findFrgmentByTag("tag")
val newFragment : BlankFragment
if(fragment==null){
newFragment = BlankFragment()
}else{
newFragment = fragment as BlankFragment()
}
//use newFragment
Hope this solves confusion
Android automatically restores the state of its views after rotation. You don't have to call addFragmentToActivity again after rotation. The fragment will automatically be restored for you!
In your case, it happens twice because:
1. Android restores the fragment, its onCreateView is called
2. You replace the restored fragment with your own fragment, the oncreateview from that fragment is called too
do this:
if (savedInstanceState == null)
{
addFragmentToActivity(manager, fragment, R.id.test);
}
In my project, I want to set visibility of fragments buttons from MainActivity. But the problem is, it gives NullPointerException(). I also maked listBtn & gridBtn as static. I used below code :
FirstFragment fragment = (FirstFragment)getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentById(R.id. <frameLayout Id>);
main_page_fragment.listBtn.setVisibility(View.GONE);
main_page_fragment.gridBtn.setVisibility(View.GONE);
You cannot access to your fragment view from Activity class because activity uses its own view (ex: R.layout.activity_main). Rather you can set visibility in your corresponding fragment class which will do the same job.
public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container,
Bundle savedInstanceState) {
View view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.details, container, false);
Button listBtn = (Button)view.findviewById(R.id.listBrn);
Button gridBtn = (Button)view.findviewById(R.id.gridBrn);
listBtn.setVisibility(View.GONE);
gridBtn.setVisibility(View.GONE);
return view;
}
Fragment onCreateView callback is called after onCreate method of activity, so i think you have tried to get access from it. That views will be accessible only after onResumeFragments callback is called, you should perform your actions with fragments there.
Another tip is that you strongly should not call views of fragments directly like you did or via static reference to views that's the worst. You should avoid such dependencies on fragments inner implementation. Instead of it, better is create some method like setInitialState (the name depends on your business logic) and just call it from activity.
So result code:
In activity:
private FirstFragment fragment;
protected void onCreate(#Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
//init fragment here
}
#Override
protected void onResumeFragments() {
super.onResumeFragments();
fragment.setInitialState();
}
In fragment:
//this will be called on fragment #onResume step, so views will be ready here.
public void setInitialState() {
listBtn.setVisibility(View.GONE);
gridBtn.setVisibility(View.GONE);
}
If you add your fragments dynamically from MainActivity like so:
YourFragment fragment = new YourFragment();
FragmentManager fragmentManager = getSupportFragmentManager();
fragmentManager.beginTransaction()
.replace(R.id.fragmentContainer, fragment, YOUR_TAG)
.commit();
Then you can define method in your fragment like so:
public void hideButtons()
{
yourBtn.setVisibility(View.GONE);
}
And call it from activity:
fragment.hideButtons();
I struggle with this for several hours and I found a much simpler solution.
Inside the fragment, simply make a public function (outside the on create view method) with the behavior that you want.
fun hideElement() {
binding.button.visibility = View.GONE
}
And then in main activity access to the fragment and call the function.
binding.bottomNavigation.setOnNavigationItemSelectedListener {
when (it.itemId){
R.id.someFragment -> someFragment.hideElement()
}
}
I am trying to add a fragment, then find a view inside said fragment, and add a view into it. However I keep getting a NullPointerException on this statement
FrameLayout container2 = (FrameLayout) fragment.getActivity().findViewById(R.id.content_frame);
Here is my code. Can someone tell me how to fix this please? thanks
FragmentManager fragmentManager = getFragmentManager();
FragmentTransaction fragmentTransaction = fragmentManager.beginTransaction();
Fragment fragment = new FragmentNavigationDrawer();
ViewGroup decor = (ViewGroup) getActivity().getWindow().getDecorView();
View child = decor.getChildAt(0);
decor.removeView(child);
fragmentTransaction.add(decor.getId(), fragment);
fragmentTransaction.commit();
FrameLayout container2 = (FrameLayout) fragment.getActivity().findViewById(R.id.content_frame);
container2.addView(child);
Just use a getter. Set a tag on your fragment so you can access it later, then either call getView() on your fragment to return its root view, or use a getter to access a specific View:
public class MainActivity extends AppCompatActivity {
//In onCreate
if (getFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(FragmentNavigationDrawer.TAG) == null) {
getFragmentManager()
.beginTransaction()
.add(android.R.id.content, new FragmentNavigationDrawer(), FragmentNavigationDrawer.TAG)
.commit();
}
//Later, when you want to add said View:
FragmentNavigationDrawer frag =
(FragmentNavigationDrawer) getFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(FragmentNavigationDrawer.TAG)
//Return the root view:
View fragRootView = frag.getView();
//Return a specific view:
frag.getUpdatableViewGroup().addView(newViewToAdd):
}
For your Fragment:
public class FragmentNavigationDrawer extends Fragment {
public static final String TAG = FragmentNavigationDrawer.class.getSimpleName();
FrameLayout updatableViewGroup;
//Can do this inside onCreateView() whilst inflating your Fragment's Views
//That's up to you.
#Override
public void onViewCreated (View view, Bundle savedInstanceState) {
updateableViewGroup = view.findViewById(R.id.updateable_view_group);
}
public FrameLayout getUpdatableViewGroup() {
return updateableViewGroup;
}
Be conscious of the Activity and Fragment life cycles however, and be careful not to attempt to access the Fragment's Views until they have finished inflating - onStart() of your Activity and later should be ok.
Please see the javadoc for FragmentTransaction.commit(). It says it will schedule a change to the fragment back stack. It doesn't happen immediately. It looks like you're expecting the fragment and its views to be instantly available.
Also, I'm really confused why you're reaching in a decor view to make changes. Usually you call out a view by id in the host activity's layout and make changes inside it.
I have an activity containing multiple fragments. Activity initially have fragment and in it have two buttons. Upon clicking this button I have to replace the fragment by new fragment. Each fragment has various widgets and replace the current fragment as various events.
This is my problem. How can I achieve this?
Suggest me ideas.
you can replace fragment by FragmentTransaction.
Here you go.
Make an interface.
public interface FragmentChangeListener
{
public void replaceFragment(Fragment fragment);
}
implements your Fragment holding activity with this interface.
public class HomeScreen extends FragmentActivity implements
FragmentChangeListener {
#Override
public void replaceFragment(Fragment fragment) {
FragmentManager fragmentManager = getSupportFragmentManager();;
FragmentTransaction fragmentTransaction = fragmentManager.beginTransaction();
fragmentTransaction.replace(mContainerId, fragment, fragment.toString());
fragmentTransaction.addToBackStack(fragment.toString());
fragmentTransaction.commit();
}
}
Call this method from Fragments like this.
//In your fragment.
public void showOtherFragment()
{
Fragment fr=new NewDisplayingFragment();
FragmentChangeListener fc=(FragmentChangeListener)getActivity();
fc.replaceFragment(fr);
}
Hope this will work!
NOTE: mContainerId is id of the view who is holding the fragments inside.
You should override Fragment's onString() method as well.
Well even I am learning android...
I solved same problem recently, "How to Change Fragment On button's click event".
buttonName.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
FragmentTransaction fragmentTransaction = getActivity()
.getSupportFragmentManager().beginTransaction();
fragmentTransaction.replace(R.id.frame1, new Homefragment());
fragmentTransaction.commit();
}
});
Here frame1 is id of FrameLayout which have define in my DrawerLayer's XML.
So now whenever I want fragment transaction I use this code. Each time it will replace frame1 instated of your last fragment.
FragmentTransaction fragmentTransaction = getActivity()
.getSupportFragmentManager().beginTransaction();
fragmentTransaction.replace(R.id.frame1, new newfragment());
fragmentTransaction.commit()
Hope this will help..
You can use the following to replace a fragment on button click of that fragment:
getFragmentManager().beginTransaction().replace(R.id.main_content, new insertFragmentNameHere()).addToBackStack(null).commit();
Define an interface and call it IChangeListener (or something like that) and define a method inside which will do the work (ex, changeFragment()) (or call another method which will do the work) for changing the fragment).
Make your activity implement the interface, or make an anonymous class within the activity implement it.
Make a paramerized constructor of your fragment, which accepts a IChangeListener parameter.
When initializing the fragment, pass your IChangeListener implementation (the anonymous class or the activity, implementing it)
Make the onClick listener of the button call the changing method of the IChangeListener.
From the future 2017 and after, there exists different libraries that triggers Events using Bus and now you can use it to tell the activity when an event is trigger in a fragment that it owns.
Refer to:
RxBus with RxJava
You can check new architectures suggested by Google
ViewModel
Don't use the approach in the accepted answer, get really ugly with more than 3 different events from fragments
you can try this code it's work fine with me , inflate the layout to view , Define the buton and on click ,
Button btn_unstable;
#Nullable
#Override
public View onCreateView(#NonNull LayoutInflater inflater, #Nullable ViewGroup container, #Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
View view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.fragment_home,container,false);
btn_unstable = (Button)view.findViewById(R.id.btn_unstable);
btn_unstable.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
getActivity().getSupportFragmentManager().beginTransaction().replace(R.id.fragment_replace, new UnstableFragment()).commit();
}
});
return view;
}