Choose among activity only and fragment with hosting activity - android

Currently, when I click on a row of a list view, I would like to have a new screen for user to edit the detail of the selected row.
I realize I can merely implement the "detailed window" using Activity. However, in the future, I may / or may not need to support Tablet UI. Hence, I was wondering, in that case, should I implement all my logic and UI within a fragment, with another dedicated FragmentActivity to host the fragment?
I found there are good and bad
Good
Easier code reusing and UI reusing, to cater different layout requirement, like new Tablet UI layout.
Bad
Need to take care 2 classes (FragmentActivity and Fragment), instead of Activity only.
Personally, I'm more incline toward FragmnetActivity + Fragment design. But, I'm not sure whether there is any catch in my chosen design?

You got it partially wrong - if all is done done right, your FragmentActivity is almost dummy host with interface to let fragments communicate their needs and all the code should stay in Fragment. And if you want the advice - go for fragments - it's much more flexible and not complicated.

Related

Best way to develop for different layouts when using NavigationDrawer and Fragments?

With the NavigationDrawer and the recommended way to implement it according to google it should be with fragments. Which creates a lot of nesting which does not seem to be too supported. And kind of messes up the idea of having activities with fragments for supporting different layouts.
So I wonder what the best suggestion would be if you have have a layout, that on a phone will be a list on the whole display, and on tablet you will have a list on the left side and detailed information about the item clicked on the right side? Ses images attached as links. It would have felt more natural to have activities instead of Fragment A, different for each layout.
Fragment A is the fragment that your navigating to. Fragment B in both variants should be the same except for what's gonna happen when you click on an item. In the phone example the Fragment B should be an expandable list and on the tablet it should show the details in Fragment C.
What do you mean by "Which creates a lot of nesting which does not seem to be too supported."? Nested Fragments do have some different behaviour (e.g. the "for result" stuff is a bit trickier to do), but it's not that much different from an Activity with Fragments. Just always make sure that your Fragments are correctly attached and detached, then you can use them however you want.
Some people don't like Fragments, because of their "lazy loadingness" and they're sometimes harder to see through, but that's just the cost for having a more flexible way to structure your components. It really depends what you want to do and how fit you are with the Android Framework.

When would you reuse a fragment?

I am planning an app and trying to explore all the possible development options/methods I have available. One thing I'm struggling to get my head around is Fragments. I see a lot of people praising them as you can "resuse" fragments throughout the app but I can't think of an example situation.
From some example apps I have looked at (all been tabular layouts) the code for each fragment has one layout, so why not have a seperate activity instead?
I am hoping to implement a tabular layout in my app. If anyone can give me an example of a fragment being reused within an app I hope it will give me a better understanding of the benefits.
"Reuse" is overrated. Of course - you can put this same fragment (with this same features) in different places of your application - let's say that you can use a fragment in different, horizontal and vertical layouts (as you probably saw in Google's tutorial).
But at the end using fragments simplifies your project - for example - you can switch fragments inside one activity and get benefits of much easier navigation and in app communication.
Using fragments gives you one more thing - flexibility. It's much easier to move some view from one place to another, or just remove from application. All that because fragment encapsulates logic and usually a view, still offering power of externally managed lifecycle.
(Thanks for comment from Richard Le Mesurier)
Fragment is not a View neither a ViewGroup. It is not a visual element at all. Fragment inherits directly from Object.
One should think of a Fragment as a unity of a reusable code, reusable in various Activities (the Activities consist of visible elements).
Thus if you can think of any code you can reuse through several Activities (even the same Activity with different layout) and that code somehow depends on Activity lifecycle, then you probably should make this code a Fragment.

Use View or Fragment in ViewPager

I have a question about whether to use View or Fragment with ViewPager.
Background:
I have an Activity A that contains a ListView. Each ListView item opens Activity B. Activity B shows different content depending on which ListView item is tapped in Activity A.
Activity B's content is shown inside a ListView.
Question:
Now, instead of going back and forth between Activity A and B to switch contents, I have a requirement to implement horizontal view swiping to switch contents all within Activity B.
One solution I found (tried it and it works) is to create many instances of Activity B's ListView and use it with ViewPager + PagerAdapter.
Another potential solution found on the doc (haven't tried it) is to bring that ListView into a Fragment, create many instances of the fragment and use it with ViewPager + FragmentPagerAdapter or FragmentStatePagerAdapter.
My question is, what's the benefit of using each approach? Should I go through all the trouble of bringing the ListView into Fragment or just simply use ListView with ViewPager?
Thanks
A Fragment is a useful approach, I think, when you want to tie some UI business logic to a particular View (or group of). As you know, that individual Fragment has its own lifecycle callbacks and so forth, just as an Activity would.
Rather than having a single Activity host many ListViews through a single PagerAdapter, it may be cleaner to use the Fragment approach because the Fragment only needs to deal with the logic behind driving a single ListView.
This is a very similar situation to one I've just been facing. I'm showing various vertically scrolling forms (consisting of lots of input fields) within a ViewPager. In my case I have gone for the Fragment approach because in my case, it's possible that the ViewPager will actually need to display a completely different kind of view on certain pages. For example, on the first few pages, user input forms might be displayed. But on the final page, a graph will be displayed. A whole separate set of logic is required to drive that graph. To drive those input forms and one graph from a single Activity would get a bit messy, and I would probably need to contain the business logic in several delegate classes or something. So for me, Fragments were the obvious choice in the end. I have my InputFormFragment and a GraphFragment, and they each contain only the applicable logic for the Views that they supply.
Another thing to consider is that in the near future you too may want to display a different kind of View in your ViewPager. Or, you might want to have another UI layout altogether, perhaps one that doesn't use the ViewPager but displays them all side-to-side (e.g. a layout used on a large tablet in landscape mode). With Fragments, things are just far more modular and you could factor the code to do this quicker. If on the other hand you achieved your objective by using a single Activity that contains a simple PagerAdapter and all the logic for the ListViews within, you might find it takes more work in the future to support new kinds of Views or special tablet layouts.
One thing I will say is having implemented Fragments in a ViewPager myself through FragmentPagerAdapter and FragmentStatePagerAdapter, things can get a bit awkward if you have any special requirements; managing Fragments can be tricky sometimes. For example, for my UI I needed to be able to programmatically add and remove the ViewPager containing the Fragments. I also needed to ensure that the adapter in use didn't destroy Fragments once they had been shown, because I needed to collect data from all Fragments simultaneously at a certain point. Furthermore, I had to extend and modify FragmentPagerAdatper to make sure that the Fragments go through their onDestroy() properly and are removed from the FragmentManager when the ViewPager was removed.
Fragments enable a very modular way of constructing UIs for various screen sizes and orientations, and are excellent in how they allow you to encapsulate business logic and lifecycles for individual UI elements. However if your scenario really is just as simple as several ListViews in a ViewPager and you know that you will never need the modularity, then the overhead of Fragments could be an overkill.

Why use Fragments? [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
What is the benefit of using Fragments in Android, rather than Views?
(6 answers)
Closed 10 years ago.
What is the advantage to using Fragments over using custom Views that are reused in different layouts?
In the original blog post introducing fragments, Dianne Hackborn says that
[Fragments] make it easier for developers to write applications that can scale
across a variety of screen sizes, beyond the facilities already
available in the platform.
and she goes on to explain Fragments in the context of making a tablet layout for an app that combines the UI of two activities from the phone version of the same app.
But it seems that the same reuse could be achieved using custom Views. The main different between Fragments and Views seems to be that they have differing lifecycles...
The Fragment lifecycle is:
onAttach(), onCreate(), onCreateView(), onActivityCreated(), onStart(), onResume(), onPause(), onStop(), onDestroyView(), onDestroy(), onDetatch().
The View lifecycle is:
ctor, onFinishInflate(), onAttachedToWindow(), onMeasure(), onLayout(), onDetatchedFromWindow()
I'd like to hear from developers with experience writing large apps about what benefits (if any) they've seen in using Fragments vs custom Views to divide up the UI into reusable pieces.
The main reason is that fragments are more reusable than custom views.
Sometimes you can't create a fully encapsulated UI component relying on views alone. This is because there are things you would want to put into your view but can't because only an Activity can handle them, thus forcing tight coupling between an Activity and a View.
Here is one such example. Lets say you want to create a reusable UI component that, among many things, want to capture a photo and do something with it. Traditionally you would fire an intent that starts the camera and returns with the captured image.
Notice that your custom UI component can't fully encapsulate this functionality because it will have to rely on hosting Activity's startActivityForResult because views don't accept activity results (they can indirectly fire an intent through context).
Now if you wanted to reuse your custom UI component in different activities you would be repeating the code for Activity.startActivityForResult.
Fragment on the other hand cleanly solve this problem.
Similarly your fragment can contribute items to your options menu, something traditionally only an Activity could do. Again this could be important if the state of your custom view dictates what goes in the menu.
A fragment is way more than just a view. In fact it can even be totally without a view. It can have all sorts of stuff in it including AsyncTasks, various Listeners, file and database access and so on and so on.
Think of it as a small activity, but you can have multiple of them on the screen and work with them all including communicating with each other while they are visible.
E.g. you could have a list of shopping cart displayed in one fragment and the currently selected cart in detail in another fragment. You then e.g. change the quantity of an item in the detail view and the list view could be notified about it and update the total price in the list view. You can totally orchestrate interactions like that nicely while e.g. still having only one of them visible on a smaller screen device.
I have refactored a large business app (>15 activities) from activities to fragments to get good tablet support and I would never start a new app without fragments.
Update Feb 2016: While the above still holds true, there are complexities with fragments that caused many people to entirely avoid using them. Newer patterns such as usage of MVC approaches and more powerful views provide alternatives. As they say .. YMMV.
Some description:
Imagine Activity as a plate that hold one big cake.
Fragment would be a container that slices the same cake into pieces.
Each slice contains it own logics (listeners, etc).
And in total they are almost no different with the one big cake.
The benefit:
When you plate can't hold a big cake. (Screen is small) You can easily use a a few plates (Activity) to hold each of them WITHOUT the need to move your logics into the new activity.
Better re-usability. I have some instances where I could reuse a fragment entirely in another App. You might claim that a custom view could does that too. But refer to point 1, I could reuse it with just few lines of layout changes but for a custom view, it have to find a way to plug it into both layout and code.
It is, in some sense, a more OO ways of organising your UI logics in Android programming. When you have a feature (A new partition on the screen for example), you create a new Fragment class, with minor modification to existing activity class. However if you are programming only with activity, you will need to add logics and make big modification on tested class.
Just my 2 cents. :)
The lifecycle methods are probably your biggest hint. If you think about it, they correlate closely to the activity lifecycle (with some hooks into the activity and views). In fact, in the article you linked, Hackborn says:
In some ways you can think of a Fragment as a mini-Activity
As with many things in software design/development, there are a multitude of ways to do things. There are many different places you could put your code. Yes, you could probably put a lot into a view, but keeping different concerns separated in different classes is a good thing though. The classic pattern of this is MVC and it applies in this scenario. You don't want to bake in too much controller logic into your view. It's better to keep it in controller-like classes which are the activity and now the fragment. This is why the fragment's lifecycle is more like the activity's than the view's--it was made to facilitate this kind of organization.
I touched Fragments once and found them not very useful (see this post). From what I have read, A Fragment is really a fancy word for an Object with access to Activity Context. I like to ignore Fragments in my work, and just create these Objects myself. I have created very large, very demanding apps by passing an Activity to constructors, instead of Context. One major benefit, however, for using Fragments is that they are supported by the View layout system - so you can easily add them to Android xml (if you use it for your layouts).
Custom views are much more work than just using fragments in place of your activities. if you decide to use Activities and custom Views, you have to create your custom view, and then you have to implement the same activity lifecycle methods in your activity (a very similar lifecycle is used for fragments).
Using Fragments also allows you to separate components into their own classes (Fragments), rather than having too much logic in a single Activity. Let me ground that with an example:
Say you're implementing a magazine reader application. using fragments, you could create a fragment: ArticleList, which displays a list of articles, and another fragment: ArticleDisplay, which handles the logic for displaying content. you can then specify how these fragments should interact using the fragments tools, so that on a handset, you can use the full screen real-estate for ArticleDisplay, while on a tablet, you can display the fragments side by side.
If you were to attempt this with an Activity/custom view, you'd have the logic for both Fragments in your monolithic Activity, you'd have to write a custom view, and you'd have to debug this unwieldy monster.
Fragments are, in general, a more sophisticated and powerful way to write your applications. They can do everything an Activity can do, and more. If you don't need the extra functionality, the defaults will probably get you where you need to go, and with less work.

Converting Multiple Activites into a Single Fragment

I've recently decided to update my app to support the new fragments feature in honeycomb 3.0.
My Application currently works on a list view that opens different activities depending on which list item is clicked.
Using an adaptation of the code in this tutorial I have created an app that consists of only two activities, but depending on which list item is clicked the second "viewer" activity launches using a different layout xml.
Unfortunately I haven't been able to figure out how to call the old methods that had all the functionality. Should I Import all of my old activities and then call the methods into the viewer activity (I may need some advice on how exactly to do this) or should I just put all the methods directly into the same viewer activity (please consider the size of these methods(which is very large by the way)).
Once everything is working with two activities upfront then it will be a pretty simple task of "fragmenting" the app as demonstrated here
Although I haven't considered that there might be a way to allow multiple fragments to occupy the same space in an activity(If this is the case then please let me know how it's done)
Thanks
As James has pointed out you will have to move the business logic from your Activities to your Fragments.
To handle events you can create a listener Interface. The CONTAINER activity/ies will implement this interface. As fragments has access to the container activity you will be able to delegate to the container Activity the "logic" for the desired events. For this events the activity will decide whether to launch a new activity, show/hide new fragments or whatever.
I had a similar question, take a look to the question and answer: here
Although I haven't considered that there might be a way to allow multiple fragments to occupy the same space in an activity(If this is the case then please let me know how it's done)
I think its possible to allow multiple fragments to occupy the same space in an activity. Again, take a look to the answer here ... I think the concept/scope of Activity has change a bit and now an Activity can contain different Fragments which every one will allow user to do a single focused thing.
I'm not sure what you mean by "call the old methods that had all the functionality". You'll want to rewrite all of your activity classes as fragments. Check out this tutorial here (it's very concise). Basically, you'll want an activity that consists of a ListFragment and a FrameLayout. Your ListFragment will update the FrameLayout by changing to the appropriate Fragment based on which row was selected.

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