Orientation change with viewPager inside FragmentActivity - android

I'm trying to build an app that shows a book in portrait and landscape mode. So obviously there's 1 page showed in portrait and 2 in landscape. Each of the mode works pretty good but when i change the orientation from portrait to landscape the viewPager try to get 2 pages from the portrait mode instead of trying to get 2 double pages from the landscape mode ...
In fact FragmentStatePagerAdapter keeps The 2 fragments created in portrait and uses them before creating 2 double page for the landscape mode. If i switch again in portrait mode, FragmentStatePagerAdapter uses the 2 fragments previously created in landscape mode so i see again 1 double page instead of 1 single page etc.. if i continue switching orientation, i get an OutOfMemoryError due to the fact that FragmentStatePagerAdapter never flush it's fragments on orientation change.
Here's 2 use cases for easier understanding :
i launch viewPager in portrait mode
i see page 1 ok
i swipe to right and i see page 2 ok
i swipe to right and i see page 3 ok
i rotate the screen to landscape mode
i see page 3 wrong
i swipe to right and i see page 4 wrong
i swipe to right and i see page 5 and 6 ok
i launch viewPager in portrait mode
i see page 1 ok
i swipe to right and i see page 2 ok
i swipe to right and i see page 3 ok
i swipe to right and i see page 4 ok
i swipe to right and i see page 5 ok
i rotate the screen to landscape mode
i see page 5 wrong
i swipe to left and i see page 4 wrong
i swipe to left and i see page 2 and 3 ok
public class PlayerFragmentActivity extends FragmentActivity {
private Intent mIntent;
private ViewPager mPortraitPager;
private ViewPager mLandscapePager;
private Boolean mIsLandscape;
private String mKey;
private int mNbPages;
private int mNbDoublePages;
private PageFactory mPageFactory;
private DoublePageFactory mDoublePageFactory;
private PagerAdapter mPagerAdapter;
#Override
protected void onStop(){
super.onStop();
mPagerAdapter = null;
mDoublePageFactory = null;
mPageFactory = null;
}
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.fragment_activity_player);
mIntent = getIntent();
mKey = mIntent.getStringExtra("key");
mNbPages = mIntent.getIntExtra("nbPages", 0);
mNbDoublePages = DoublePageFactory.getDoublePageNumFromPageNum(mNbPages);
Resources res = getResources();
mIsLandscape = (res.getConfiguration().orientation == 1) ? false : true;
mPortraitPager = (ViewPager) findViewById(R.id.portraitPager);
mLandscapePager = (ViewPager) findViewById(R.id.landscapePager);
mPagerAdapter = new MyPagerAdapter(getSupportFragmentManager());
if (mIsLandscape) {
mDoublePageFactory = new DoublePageFactory(this, mKey, mNbPages, res.getInteger(R.integer.nb_page_columns), res.getInteger(R.integer.nb_page_columns));
mPortraitPager.setVisibility(View.GONE);
mLandscapePager.setAdapter(mPagerAdapter);
mPortraitPager.setAdapter(null);
} else {
mPageFactory = new PageFactory(this, mKey, this.mNbPages, res.getInteger(R.integer.nb_page_columns), res.getInteger(R.integer.nb_page_columns));
mLandscapePager.setVisibility(View.GONE);
mPortraitPager.setAdapter(mPagerAdapter);
mLandscapePager.setAdapter(null);
}
}
public class MyPagerAdapter extends FragmentStatePagerAdapter {
public MyPagerAdapter(FragmentManager fm) {
super(fm);
}
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
Bundle args = new Bundle();
if(mIsLandscape){
Fragment doublePageFragment = new DoublePageFragment();
args.putInt(DoublePageFragment.ARG_DOUBLEPAGE_NUM, position + 1);
doublePageFragment.setArguments(args);
return doublePageFragment;
}else{
Fragment pageFragment = new PageFragment();
args.putInt(PageFragment.ARG_PAGE_NUM, position + 1);
pageFragment.setArguments(args);
return pageFragment;
}
}
#Override
public int getCount() {
return (mIsLandscape) ? mNbDoublePages:mNbPages;
}
/* j'ai essayé cette méthode mais ça ne fonctionne pas :( */
#Override
public void destroyItem(ViewGroup container, int position, Object object) {
FragmentManager manager = ((Fragment) object).getFragmentManager();
FragmentTransaction trans = manager.beginTransaction();
trans.remove((Fragment) object);
trans.commit();
super.destroyItem(container, position, object);
}
#Override
public int getItemPosition(Object object){
return PagerAdapter.POSITION_NONE;
}
#Override
public CharSequence getPageTitle(int position) {
return "p." + position + 1;
}
}
public boolean isLandscape() {
return mIsLandscape;
}
public ImageView getSinglePage(int position) {
return mPageFactory.getPage(position);
}
public LinearLayout getDoublePage(int position) {
return mDoublePageFactory.getDoublePage(position);
}
}
public class PageFragment extends Fragment {
private PlayerFragmentActivity mPlayerFragmentActivity;
public static final String ARG_PAGE_NUM = "page_number";
public static final String ARG_WOBOOK_DIRECTORY = "book_directory";
public static final String ARG_NB_PAGE_COLUMNS = "nb_page_columns";
public static final String ARG_NB_PAGE_ROWS = "nb_page_rows";
#Override
public ImageView onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container,
Bundle savedInstanceState) {
mPlayerFragmentActivity = ((PlayerFragmentActivity) getActivity());
return mPlayerFragmentActivity.getSinglePage(getArguments().getInt(ARG_PAGE_NUM));
}
#Override
public void onStop(){
super.onStop();
mPlayerFragmentActivity = null;
}
}
public class DoublePageFragment extends Fragment {
private PlayerFragmentActivity mPlayerFragmentActivity;
public static final String ARG_DOUBLEPAGE_NUM = "double_page_number";
public static final String ARG_WOBOOK_DIRECTORY = "book_directory";
public static final String ARG_NB_PAGE_COLUMNS = "nb_page_columns";
public static final String ARG_NB_PAGE_ROWS = "nb_page_rows";
#Override
public LinearLayout onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container,
Bundle savedInstanceState) {
mPlayerFragmentActivity = ((PlayerFragmentActivity) getActivity());
return mPlayerFragmentActivity.getDoublePage(getArguments().getInt(ARG_DOUBLEPAGE_NUM));
}
#Override
public void onStop(){
super.onStop();
mPlayerFragmentActivity = null;
}
}
i've read that the FragmentManager in the framework takes care of saving the state and restore any active fragments that the pager has made. So i guess that when the orientation changes, the FragmentManager says
Hey ! I already have 2 items created so i don't need to create news,
lets get them
But in fact it gets the 2 items (page/double page) from the old orientation mode. So i need to fnd a way to delete the fragments saved by the FragmentManager when the orientation change occurs.
I've also tested this method. The problem seems to be related to this one
Best regards

Try to limit orientation to either portrait or Landscape mode.Because we can use view pager only in exact mode.

Related

TabLayout or DatePicker - Switching Tab doesn't update, same with DatePicker

I've written a small Android app which'll collect data from a JSON API, displays a graph from that data and calculates the total of the data in the graph (the data is the output of a PV installation).
The app uses a TabLayout to display graphs for daily, monthly, yearly and total overview.
My idea is to have a datepicker to change the date for which the data is retrieved and displayed. For this I use a TextView with a coupled DatePicker.
The new data is retrieved and calculated as I can see the sum being updated when changing the reference date.
However, when picking a different date, the graph doesn't immediately update with the new data and the graph is cleared/empty.
I have to 2 tabs further and then return to the correct tab or rotate the device to get the graph in that Tab to display the correct data.
Once the new data is visualised in the Tab, changing the data again clears the graph. Returning to the same data shows the correct graph.
The date also isn't shared across the Tabs. Changing date on 1 Tab doesn't change it on the next.
I notice'd while logging getItem in MyPagerAdapter that switching from tab 0 to tab 1 causes tab 2 to be requested, and going from tab 3 to tab 2 loads tab 1. I guess this is some sort of pre-load? Perhaps this causes the effect that changing dates in tab 0 doesn't reflect in tab 1 but does in tab 2 and that I have to go from tab 0 over tab 3 back to tab 1 to get that one to update it's date?
Following code snippets are modified slightly for readability. I.e. I reuse the Tab Fragment for the different data view (day/month/year/total) and use some switch or if/else's to e.g. set the correct labels. There are also some more methods in each class, which I don't think are relevant for this issue.
MainActivity.java
Links TabLayout/Pager in View to MyPagerAdapter
public class MainActivity extends AppCompatActivity {
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
final ViewPager viewPager = findViewById(R.id.pager);
MyPagerAdapter myPagerAdapter = new MyPagerAdapter(getSupportFragmentManager(), this, new Date());
viewPager.setAdapter(myPagerAdapter);
TabLayout tabLayout = findViewById(R.id.tablayout);
tabLayout.setupWithViewPager(viewPager);
Toolbar toolbar = findViewById(R.id.toolbar);
setSupportActionBar(toolbar);
}
#Override
public boolean onCreateOptionsMenu(Menu menu) {...}
#Override
public boolean onOptionsItemSelected(MenuItem item) {...}
}
MyPagerAdapter.java
Returns Fragment object with frequency (day/month/year/total) and serialized Calendar Object passed as param.
public class MyPagerAdapter extends FragmentStatePagerAdapter {
private final int NUM_TABS = 4;
private String classtag = this.getClass().getSimpleName();
private Context _context;
private Calendar mCal;
MyPagerAdapter(FragmentManager fm, Context c, Date d) {
super(fm); // TODO: deprecated
_context = c;
mCal = Calendar.getInstance();
mCal.setTime(d);
}
#Override
public int getCount() {
return NUM_TABS;
}
#NonNull
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
Log.d(classtag, "DEBUG: getItem(position=" + position + ")");
Bundle args = new Bundle();
Fragment chartFragment = new Tab();
args.putSerializable("calendar", mCal);
switch (position) {
default:
case 0:
args.putInt("frequency", Misc.FREQ_DAILY);
break;
case 1:
args.putInt("frequency", Misc.FREQ_MONTHLY);
break;
case 2:
args.putInt("frequency", Misc.FREQ_YEARLY);
break;
case 3:
args.putInt("frequency", Misc.FREQ_TOTAL);
break;
}
chartFragment.setArguments(args);
return chartFragment;
}
#NonNull
#Override
public CharSequence getPageTitle(int position) {
Log.d(classtag, "DEBUG: getPageTitle(position=" + position + ")");
switch (position) {
default:
case 0:
return _context.getString(R.string.day);
case 1:
return _context.getString(R.string.week);
case 2:
return _context.getString(R.string.year);
case 3:
return _context.getString(R.string.total);
}
}
}
Tab.java
onCreateView creates references to the objects in the Fragment/View, calls createGraph and then updateTab
createGraph prepares the graph and the initial Serie (data)
updateTab is called after the graph creation, or when changing dates (through the Prev/Next button or the DatePicker). here resetData is called
public class Tab extends Fragment {
private String classtag = this.getClass().getSimpleName();
private Resources resources;
private Calendar mCal;
private int mFreq;
private View rootView;
private BaseSeries<DataPoint> mSeries;
private TextView customerInfo;
private TextView totalProduction;
private TextView datepicker;
private GraphView graph;
#Override
public View onCreateView(#NonNull LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container, Bundle savedInstanceState) {
rootView = inflater.inflate(R.layout.fragment_tab, container, false);
assert getArguments() != null;
mFreq = getArguments().getInt("frequency", 0);
mCal = (Calendar) getArguments().getSerializable("calendar");
resources = rootView.getResources();
customerInfo = rootView.findViewById(R.id.lbl_customer_info);
totalProduction = rootView.findViewById(R.id.lbl_total);
datepicker = rootView.findViewById(R.id.lbl_datepicker);
graph = rootView.findViewById(R.id.graph);
Button btnPrev = rootView.findViewById(R.id.btn_prev);
Button btnNext = rootView.findViewById(R.id.btn_next);
// Custom configs for certain tabs omitted here >>>
btnPrev.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
btnNext.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
datepicker.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
// Change date with frequency according to tab (hop 1 month in Month Tab)
btnPrev.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
Date _curDate = mCal.getTime();
mCal.setTime(Misc.getPrevDate(_curDate, mFreq));
updateTab();
}
});
btnNext.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
Date _curDate = mCal.getTime();
mCal.setTime(Misc.getNextDate(_curDate, mFreq));
updateTab();
}
});
datepicker.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
new DatePickerDialog(rootView.getContext(), new DatePickerDialog.OnDateSetListener() {
#Override
public void onDateSet(DatePicker view, int year, int month, int dayOfMonth) {
mCal.set(Calendar.YEAR, year);
mCal.set(Calendar.MONTH, month);
mCal.set(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH, dayOfMonth);
updateTab();
}
}, mCal.get(Calendar.YEAR), mCal.get(Calendar.MONTH), mCal.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH)).show();
}
});
// >>> Custom configs for certain tabs omitted here
createGraph();
updateTab();
return rootView;
}
#Override
public void onResume() {
super.onResume();
updateTab();
}
private void createGraph() {
GridLabelRenderer gridLabel = graph.getGridLabelRenderer();
Viewport viewport = graph.getViewport();
LegendRenderer legend = graph.getLegendRenderer();
// [...] Ommitted some irrelevant code here
mSeries = new LineGraphSeries<>(getDataPoints());
// [...] Ommitted some irrelevant code here
graph.addSeries(mSeries);
// [...] Ommitted some irrelevant code here
}
private void updateTab() {
DataPoint[] dp;
datepicker.setText(Misc.getDate(mCal.getTime()));
// [...] Ommitted some irrelevant code here
double totalProd = Misc.sumDataPoints(dp);
totalProduction.setText(String.format(Locale.getDefault(), "%.1f", totalProd));
mSeries.resetData(dp); // This should update the graph series with the new data
graph.onDataChanged(false, false);
}
private Map<String, String> getCustomerInfo() {...}
private DataPoint[] getDataPoints() {...}
}
This is the Tab Fragment Layout. This Fragment is loaded in a Pager in the Main Activity Layout (which consists out of a toolbar, tablayout and a pager).
I thought about making seperate classed for the different frequencies, I.e. TabDay, TabMonth, TabYear, TabTotal as to not create multiple instances of the same Object, but I don't think that would have any effect and would cause lots of code duplicated.
In the same line I considered making a "master Tab" and extending it for the different frequencies, thorugh which I'd probably be able to keep the Calendar Object in the "master Tab" and hope it'd keep the Tabs synced on the displaying the date part.
On the redrawing the graph part, I have the feeling I need to force some redrawing to happen somehow, but I don't know how or where. The onResume method calls that of it's upper class, which I'd think does the redrawing at least when switching tabs.

How to make ViewPager destroy items right after I've scrolled to next page

If we have 4 pages in a View pager and swipe from positions 0 do 3
Item at position 0 is destroyed when we get to position 2, item at position 1 is destroyed when we get to position 4.
I need them to be destroyed right away, because I want the view to be recreated if I go back to it, which doesnt happen at the moment.
public class ViewPagerTutorialAdapter extends FragmentStatePagerAdapter {
public ViewPagerTutorialAdapter(FragmentManager fm) {
super(fm);
}
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
Bundle args = new Bundle();
args.putInt("page", position);
TutorialPageFragment fragment = new TutorialPageFragment();
fragment.setArguments(args);
return fragment;
}
#Override
public int getCount() {
return 4;
}
}
public class TutorialPageFragment extends android.support.v4.app.Fragment {
private ImageView ivTutorialPage;
private TransitionDrawable myTransitionDrawable;
private View rootView;
public TutorialPageFragment() {
}
#Nullable
#Override
public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container, Bundle savedInstanceState) {
rootView = inflater.inflate(R.layout.fragment_tutorial_page, container, false);
return rootView;
}
#Override
public void onResume() {
super.onResume();
ivTutorialPage = (ImageView) rootView.findViewById(R.id.ivTutorialPage);
ivTutorialPage.setImageResource(R.drawable.fadein);
myTransitionDrawable = (TransitionDrawable) ivTutorialPage.getDrawable();
new Timer().schedule(new TimerTask() {
#Override
public void run() {
getActivity().runOnUiThread(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
myTransitionDrawable.startTransition(1000);
}
});
}
}, 1000);
}
}
While this is not exactly answer to asked question, a better practice is not recreate Views if not necessary because it can be expensive to do on more complicated layouts + cause stuttering / extra lag which makes user experience worse.
In this case (running animations when fragment becomes visible) it's better to override setUserVisibleHint in fragment with code to run animation which will trigger when user visits the screen. The main advantage is of course no need to recreate Views and allows Android to perform it's internal optimization naturally.
Try viewPager.setOffscreenPageLimit(1);. This should save only one page near selected one. There is not way to only load selected item at a time according to this.

WebView: load image and fit to screen width

I've already read several threads about this problem but I got another strange misbehavior:
I've created a ViewPager that has an initial Page count of 5. If the page count-2 is reached,
pagerAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
gets called.
The fragments all get their own id, counting up from 1. So the first fragment got the number one, second one the number two and so on.
Each fragment loads an image out of a webserver, depending on their id:
webView.loadUrl("http://myserver/" + id + ".jpg");
Now it appears, that sometimes the images are larger than the device's screen width. That's why I added these lines:
webView.getSettings().setLoadWithOverviewMode(true);
webView.getSettings().setUseWideViewPort(true);
The first 5 elements seem fitted perfectly, but when trying to swipe to the next fragment, you've got to first swipe the webview about 3px to the left, after that swipe again, to get to the next fragment.
I don't know why this is happening , but after the initial 5 images, it works correctly. Maybe it has something to do with the fact that in the beginning I tell the pageradapter that there are 5 fragments to show, and after scrolling more fragments are added. These following fragments are not affected by this problem.
This was the first problem.
The second problem is, when swiping through the completely correctly shown images, sometimes an image wil not be fitted to the screen. I've got to turn the screen to landscape and back to portrait, only then the image is fitted correctly.
How can this happen, why does it work when the screen gets redrawn, but not on the first try? And it only appears to happen sometimes.
These are my two problems, the first one with the minimal wron fitting of the first 5 fragments and the second one the sometimes non-fitting images when swiping, but fit when screen gets redrawn
Here's my main activity:
public class MyActivity extends ActionBarActivity {
public static int NUM_PAGES = 5;
private ViewPager viewPager;
private CustomPagerAdapter pagerAdapter;
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_my);
viewPager = (ViewPager)findViewById(R.id.activity_my_viewpager);
pagerAdapter = new CustomPagerAdapter(getSupportFragmentManager());
viewPager.setAdapter(pagerAdapter);
viewPager.setOnPageChangeListener(new ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onPageScrolled(int i, float v, int i2) {
}
#Override
public void onPageSelected(int i) {
if(NUM_PAGES - i <= 2) {
NUM_PAGES+=3;
}
pagerAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
}
#Override
public void onPageScrollStateChanged(int i) {
}
});
}
private class CustomPagerAdapter extends FragmentStatePagerAdapter {
public CustomPagerAdapter(FragmentManager fm) {
super(fm);
}
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
return ScreenFragment.create(position);
}
#Override
public int getCount() {
return NUM_PAGES;
}
}
}
And here's the fragment class:
public class ScreenFragment extends Fragment {
public static final String ARG_PAGE = "ARG_PAGE";
private int pageNumber;
public static ScreenFragment create(int pageNumber) {
ScreenFragment fragment = new ScreenFragment();
Bundle args = new Bundle();
args.putInt(ARG_PAGE, pageNumber);
fragment.setArguments(args);
return fragment;
}
#Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
pageNumber = getArguments().getInt(ARG_PAGE)+1;
}
#Override
public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, #Nullable ViewGroup container, #Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
ViewGroup viewGroup = (ViewGroup)inflater.inflate(R.layout.fragment_screen, container, false);
WebView webView = (WebView)viewGroup.findViewById(R.id.fragment_screen_webview);
webView.setWebViewClient(new WebViewClient());
webView.getSettings().setLoadWithOverviewMode(true);
webView.getSettings().setUseWideViewPort(true);
webView.loadUrl("http://someserver/" + Integer.toString(number) + ".jpg");
return viewGroup;
}
}
Thanks in advance
You should try inflating an ImageView layout instead of using a WebView.
When inflating a ImageView for each page you can use a AsyncTask to download the image for every page.
See here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/2472175/3064486
You can have a layout holding only an ImageView that has android:scaleType="fitXY" or "fitCenter" then in your onCreateView inside your adapter you can just inflate this layout and find the ImageView inside it using findViewById. Then you can use img.setImageBitmap just as this answer suggests.
maybe this will help you,
getWindow().setFlags(
WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_FULLSCREEN,
WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_FULLSCREEN
);

ViewPager.setOffscreenPageLimit(0) doesn't work as expected

The fragments I use in my ViewPager instance are quite resource intensive, so I'd only like to load one at a time. When I try the following:
mViewPager.setOffscreenPageLimit(0);
mViewPager.setAdapter(mPagerAdapter);
My FragmentStatePagerAdapter.getItem(int position) override function is called 3 times, which is what happens when I call mViewPager.setOffscreenPageLimit(1). I would expect it to only be called once, because I specified 0 offscreen pages.
I believe I'm calling everything correctly, because if I call mViewPager.setOffscreenPageLimit(2), FragmentStatePagerAdapter.getItem(int position) is called 5 times as I would expect.
Does ViewPager require a minimum of 1 offscreen pages, or am I doing something wrong here?
The best way that I found was setUserVisibleHint
add this to your fragment
#Override
public void setUserVisibleHint(boolean isVisibleToUser) {
super.setUserVisibleHint(isVisibleToUser);
if (isVisibleToUser) {
// load data here
}else{
// fragment is no longer visible
}
}
Does ViewPager require a minimum of 1 offscreen pages
Yes. If I am reading the source code correctly, you should be getting a warning about this in LogCat, something like:
Requested offscreen page limit 0 too small; defaulting to 1
You can try like this :
public abstract class LazyFragment extends Fragment {
protected boolean isVisible;
/**
* 在这里实现Fragment数据的缓加载.
* #param isVisibleToUser
*/
#Override
public void setUserVisibleHint(boolean isVisibleToUser) {
super.setUserVisibleHint(isVisibleToUser);
if(getUserVisibleHint()) {
isVisible = true;
onVisible();
} else {
isVisible = false;
onInvisible();
}
}
protected void onVisible(){
lazyLoad();
}
protected abstract void lazyLoad();
protected void onInvisible(){}
protected abstract void lazyLoad();
protected void onInvisible(){}
First Add
boolean isFragmentLoaded = false;
than
#Override
public void setUserVisibleHint(boolean isVisibleToUser) {
super.setUserVisibleHint(isVisibleToUser);
if (isVisibleToUser && !isFragmentLoaded) {
//Load Your Data Here like.... new GetContacts().execute();
isFragmentLoaded = true;
}
else{
}
}
this may be old thread but this seems to work for me. Override this function :
#Override
public void setMenuVisibility(boolean menuVisible) {
super.setMenuVisibility(menuVisible);
if ( menuVisible ) {
/**
* Load your stuffs here.
*/
} else {
/**
* Fragment not currently Visible.
*/
}
}
happy codings...
ViewPager is default to load the next page(Fragment) which you can't change by setOffscreenPageLimit(0). But you can do something to hack.
You can implement onPageSelected function in Activity containing the ViewPager. In the next Fragment(which you don't want to load), you write a function let's say showViewContent() where you put in all resource consuming init code and do nothing before onResume() method. Then call showViewContent() function inside onPageSelected. Hope this will help.
in my case i wanted to start some animations in views, but with setUserVisibleHint got some issues ...
my solution is :
1/ addOnPageChangeListener for your adapter :
mViewPager.addOnPageChangeListener(this);
2/ implement OnPageChangeListener :
public class PagesFragment extends Fragment implements ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener
3/ override the 3 methodes :
#Override
public void onPageScrolled(int position, float positionOffset, int positionOffsetPixels)
{
}
#Override
public void onPageSelected(int position)
{
}
#Override
public void onPageScrollStateChanged(int state)
{
}
4/ declare and initialize this variable on your class
private static int mTabState = 1;
notice : i have three fragments in my adapter, and use mTabState for setCurrentItem and current position of adapter which recognize which fragment is show to user in time ...
5/ in onPageSelected method add this codes :
if (mTabState == 0 || position == 0)
{
Intent intent = new Intent("animation");
intent.putExtra("current_position", position);
LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(mContext).sendBroadcast(intent);
}
if previous page or current page is page 0(fragment in position 0) then do this stuff
6/ now in your fragment class (fragment in position 0 of adapter), you must create broadcast receiver and register it in onResume method and unregister it onPause methos :
BroadcastReceiver broadcastReceiver = new BroadcastReceiver()
{
#Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent)
{
if (Objects.equals(intent.getAction(), "animation"))
{
int currentPosition = intent.getIntExtra("current_position", 0);
if (currentPosition == 0)
{
startAnimation();
setViewsVisible();
} else
{
setViewsInvisible();
}
}
}
};
#Override
public void onResume()
{
super.onResume();
LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(mContext).registerReceiver(broadcastReceiver, new IntentFilter("animation"));
}
#Override
public void onPause()
{
super.onPause();
LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(mContext).unregisterReceiver(broadcastReceiver);
}
summary : i have Fragment Pager Adapter witch shows Three Fragments in it, I want show some Animations on Views in Fragment in Position 0 of Adapter, For this I use BroadcastReceiver. When Fragment is Picked I start the Animation method and shows the Views to User, When Fragment is not Showing to User I try to Invisible Views...
View Pager With only one Page :
This is February 2021: I have able to add only one page with viewPager. The approach is with ViewPager, FragmentPagerAdapter, Tablayout, and a fragment. In my case, I can populate many Pages with many tabs, or only one Page with one Tab. When one tab and one page, on swipe left or right, I can manage to change the chapter of my document (which I want to show next). And when many pages and many tabs, I can change the entire book of documents.
In main Activity Oncreate: (Here is my working code approach, I have changed nothing here from my working code):
if(getIntent()!=null){
if(getIntent().getStringExtra("ONLY_TAFHEEM")!=null)
sectionsPagerAdapter = new SectionsPagerAdapter(this, getSupportFragmentManager(), suraName, suraId, ayatId, true);
else
sectionsPagerAdapter = new SectionsPagerAdapter(this, getSupportFragmentManager(), suraName, suraId, ayatId, false);
}else {
sectionsPagerAdapter = new SectionsPagerAdapter(this, getSupportFragmentManager(), suraName, suraId, ayatId, false);
}
final ViewPager viewPager = findViewById(R.id.view_pager);
viewPager.setAdapter(sectionsPagerAdapter);
tabsLayout = findViewById(R.id.tabs);
tabsLayout.animate();
tabsLayout.setupWithViewPager(viewPager);
In Adapter :
#NonNull
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
// getItem is called to instantiate the fragment for the given page.
// Return a PlaceholderFragment (defined as a static inner class below).
return PlaceholderFragment.sendData(mContext, postion, suraName, suraId, ayahId, ARABIC_AYAH, BENGALI_AYAH, actualDbNames[position], tafsirDisplayNames[position]);
}
#Nullable
#Override
public CharSequence getPageTitle(int position) {
return tafsirDisplayNames[position];
}
#Override
public int getCount() {
// this is the tricky part // Show pages according to array length. // this may only one // this is the tricky part :
return tafsirDisplayNames.length;
}
And at last the fragments public constructor :
public static PlaceholderFragment sendData(Context mContext, int tabIndex, String suraName, String suraId, String ayahNumber, String arabicAyah, String bengaliAyah, String actualDbName, String displayDbName) {
Log.i("PlaceHolder", "Tafhim sendData: " + bengaliAyah);
PlaceholderFragment fragment = new PlaceholderFragment();
Bundle bundle = new Bundle();
mContext_ = mContext;
BENGALI_AYAH = bengaliAyah;
_DISPLAY_DB_NAME = displayDbName;
bundle.putInt(ARG_SECTION_NUMBER, tabIndex);
bundle.putString(SURA_NAME, suraName);
bundle.putString(SURA_ID, suraId);
bundle.putString(AYAH_NUMBER, ayahNumber);
bundle.putString(ARABIC_AYAH, arabicAyah);
bundle.putString(ACTUAL_DB_NAME, actualDbName);
bundle.putString(DISPLAY_DB_NAME, displayDbName);
fragment.setArguments(bundle);
return fragment;
}
That's all, just passing the array (of Tab Labels) to the adapter, (it may only one element, in case, for one page), with my need, I can populate one page or more page, and according to this it populate one tab or many tabs : in the above code the array is: tafsirDisplayNames. I can also create the array manually in adapter, when the adapter first called, Or, recreate the array with +-elements, on recreate the MainActivity.
Please Try This Code for resolve issue of refreshing view in Viewpager....
/* DO NOT FORGET! The ViewPager requires at least “1” minimum OffscreenPageLimit */
int limit = (mAdapter.getCount() > 1 ? mAdapter.getCount() - 1 : 1);
mViewPager.setOffscreenPageLimit(limit);
for the "instantiateItem" function, just prepare the fragment, but don't load the heavy content.
Use "onPageChangeListener" , so that each time you go to a specific page, you load its heavy content and show it.
I kind of have the same problem. I found some useful code on this site and transform it.
The min int for mViewPager.setOffscreenPageLimit(...); is 1, so even if you change it to 0 you will still have 2 pages loaded.
First thing to do is to create a static int we will call maxPageCount and override FragmentStatePagerAdapter method getCount() to return maxPageCount:
#Override
public int getCount() {
return maxPageCount;
}
Create then a static method accessible from any where in the program that will allow you to change this maxCount:
public static void addPage(){
maxPageCount++; //or maxPageCount = fragmentPosition+2
mFragmentStatePagerAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged(); //notifyDataSetChanged is important here.
}
Now initialize maxPageCount to 1. When ever you want you can add another page.
In my case when I needed the user to treat the current page first before generated the other. He do it and then, without problem can swipe to the next page.
Hope it help someone.
Use This
// create boolean for fetching data
private boolean isViewShown = false;
#Override
public void setUserVisibleHint(boolean isVisibleToUser) {
super.setUserVisibleHint(isVisibleToUser);
if (getView() != null) {
isViewShown = true;
// fetchdata() contains logic to show data when page is selected mostly asynctask to fill the data
fetchData();
} else {
isViewShown = false;
}
}
// step 1: add BEHAVIOR_RESUME_ONLY_CURRENT_FRAGMENT FragmentPagerAdapter contractor
public class BottomTabViewPager extends FragmentPagerAdapter {
private final List<Fragment> mFragmentList = new ArrayList<>();
private final List<String> mFragmentTitleList = new ArrayList<>();
public BottomTabViewPager(FragmentManager manager) {
super(manager, BEHAVIOR_RESUME_ONLY_CURRENT_FRAGMENT);
}
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
return mFragmentList.get(position);
}
#Override
public int getCount() {
return mFragmentList.size();
}
public void addFragment(Fragment fragment, String title) {
mFragmentList.add(fragment);
mFragmentTitleList.add(title);
}
public void addTabs(String title) {
mFragmentTitleList.add(title);
}
#Override
public CharSequence getPageTitle(int position) {
return mFragmentTitleList.get(position);
// return null;
}
}
// step 2: You can try like this :
public class MyFragment extends Fragment {
public MyFragment() {
// Required empty public constructor
}
#Override
public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container,
Bundle savedInstanceState) {
// Inflate the layout for this fragment
View view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.fragment_ui, container, false);
return view;
}
#Override
public void onResume() {
super.onResume();
/**
* Load your stuffs here.
*/
}
}

support FragmentPagerAdapter holds reference to old fragments

I have narrowed my problem down to being a problem with the FragmentManager retaining instances of old fragments and my viewpager being out of sync with my FragmentManager. See this issue: http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=19211#makechanges. I still have no clue how to solve this. Any suggestions?
I have tried to debug this for a long time and any help would be greatly appreciated. I am using a FragmentPagerAdapter which accepts a list of fragments like so:
List<Fragment> fragments = new Vector<Fragment>();
fragments.add(Fragment.instantiate(this, Fragment1.class.getName()));
...
new PagerAdapter(getSupportFragmentManager(), fragments);
The implementation is standard. I am using ActionBarSherlock and v4 computability library for Fragments.
My problem is that after leaving the app and opening several other applications and coming back, the fragments lose their reference back to the FragmentActivity (ie. getActivity() == null). I can not figure out why this is happening. I tried to manually set setRetainInstance(true); but this does not help. I figured that this happens when my FragmentActivity gets destroyed, however this still happens if I open the app before I get the log message. Are there any ideas?
#Override
protected void onDestroy(){
Log.w(TAG, "DESTROYDESTROYDESTROYDESTROYDESTROYDESTROYDESTROY");
super.onDestroy();
}
The adapter:
public class PagerAdapter extends FragmentPagerAdapter {
private List<Fragment> fragments;
public PagerAdapter(FragmentManager fm, List<Fragment> fragments) {
super(fm);
this.fragments = fragments;
}
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
return this.fragments.get(position);
}
#Override
public int getCount() {
return this.fragments.size();
}
}
One of my Fragments stripped but I commented everything out that's stripped and it still doesn't work.
public class MyFragment extends Fragment implements MyFragmentInterface, OnScrollListener {
...
#Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState){
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
handler = new Handler();
setHasOptionsMenu(true);
}
#Override
public void onAttach(Activity activity) {
super.onAttach(activity);
Log.w(TAG,"ATTACHATTACHATTACHATTACHATTACH");
context = activity;
if(context== null){
Log.e("IS NULL", "NULLNULLNULLNULLNULLNULLNULLNULLNULLNULLNULL");
}else{
Log.d("IS NOT NULL", "NOTNOTNOTNOTNOTNOTNOTNOT");
}
}
#Override
public void onActivityCreated(Bundle savedState) {
super.onActivityCreated(savedState);
}
#Override
public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container, Bundle savedInstanceState) {
View v = inflater.inflate(R.layout.my_fragment,container, false);
return v;
}
#Override
public void onResume(){
super.onResume();
}
private void callService(){
// do not call another service is already running
if(startLoad || !canSet) return;
// set flag
startLoad = true;
canSet = false;
// show the bottom spinner
addFooter();
Intent intent = new Intent(context, MyService.class);
intent.putExtra(MyService.STATUS_RECEIVER, resultReceiver);
context.startService(intent);
}
private ResultReceiver resultReceiver = new ResultReceiver(null) {
#Override
protected void onReceiveResult(int resultCode, final Bundle resultData) {
boolean isSet = false;
if(resultData!=null)
if(resultData.containsKey(MyService.STATUS_FINISHED_GET)){
if(resultData.getBoolean(MyService.STATUS_FINISHED_GET)){
removeFooter();
startLoad = false;
isSet = true;
}
}
switch(resultCode){
case MyService.STATUS_FINISHED:
stopSpinning();
break;
case SyncService.STATUS_RUNNING:
break;
case SyncService.STATUS_ERROR:
break;
}
}
};
public void onCreateOptionsMenu(Menu menu, MenuInflater inflater) {
menu.clear();
inflater.inflate(R.menu.activity, menu);
}
#Override
public void onPause(){
super.onPause();
}
public void onScroll(AbsListView arg0, int firstVisible, int visibleCount, int totalCount) {
boolean loadMore = /* maybe add a padding */
firstVisible + visibleCount >= totalCount;
boolean away = firstVisible+ visibleCount <= totalCount - visibleCount;
if(away){
// startLoad can now be set again
canSet = true;
}
if(loadMore)
}
public void onScrollStateChanged(AbsListView arg0, int state) {
switch(state){
case OnScrollListener.SCROLL_STATE_FLING:
adapter.setLoad(false);
lastState = OnScrollListener.SCROLL_STATE_FLING;
break;
case OnScrollListener.SCROLL_STATE_IDLE:
adapter.setLoad(true);
if(lastState == SCROLL_STATE_FLING){
// load the images on screen
}
lastState = OnScrollListener.SCROLL_STATE_IDLE;
break;
case OnScrollListener.SCROLL_STATE_TOUCH_SCROLL:
adapter.setLoad(true);
if(lastState == SCROLL_STATE_FLING){
// load the images on screen
}
lastState = OnScrollListener.SCROLL_STATE_TOUCH_SCROLL;
break;
}
}
#Override
public void onDetach(){
super.onDetach();
if(this.adapter!=null)
this.adapter.clearContext();
Log.w(TAG, "DETACHEDDETACHEDDETACHEDDETACHEDDETACHEDDETACHED");
}
public void update(final int id, String name) {
if(name!=null){
getActivity().getSupportActionBar().setTitle(name);
}
}
}
The update method is called when a user interacts with a different fragment and the getActivity is returning null. Here is the method the other fragment is calling:
((MyFragment) pagerAdapter.getItem(1)).update(id, name);
I believe that when the app is destroyed then created again instead of just starting the app up to the default fragment the app starts up and then viewpager navigates to the last known page. This seems strange, shouldn't the app just load to the default fragment?
You are running into a problem because you are instantiating and keeping references to your fragments outside of PagerAdapter.getItem, and are trying to use those references independently of the ViewPager. As Seraph says, you do have guarantees that a fragment has been instantiated/added in a ViewPager at a particular time - this should be considered an implementation detail. A ViewPager does lazy loading of its pages; by default it only loads the current page, and the one to the left and right.
If you put your app into the background, the fragments that have been added to the fragment manager are saved automatically. Even if your app is killed, this information is restored when you relaunch your app.
Now consider that you have viewed a few pages, Fragments A, B and C. You know that these have been added to the fragment manager. Because you are using FragmentPagerAdapter and not FragmentStatePagerAdapter, these fragments will still be added (but potentially detached) when you scroll to other pages.
Consider that you then background your application, and then it gets killed. When you come back, Android will remember that you used to have Fragments A, B and C in the fragment manager and so it recreates them for you and then adds them. However, the ones that are added to the fragment manager now are NOT the ones you have in your fragments list in your Activity.
The FragmentPagerAdapter will not try to call getPosition if there is already a fragment added for that particular page position. In fact, since the fragment recreated by Android will never be removed, you have no hope of replacing it with a call to getPosition. Getting a handle on it is also pretty difficult to obtain a reference to it because it was added with a tag that is unknown to you. This is by design; you are discouraged from messing with the fragments that the view pager is managing. You should be performing all your actions within a fragment, communicating with the activity, and requesting to switch to a particular page, if necessary.
Now, back to your problem with the missing activity. Calling pagerAdapter.getItem(1)).update(id, name) after all of this has happened returns you the fragment in your list, which has yet to be added to the fragment manager, and so it will not have an Activity reference. I would that suggest your update method should modify some shared data structure (possibly managed by the activity), and then when you move to a particular page it can draw itself based on this updated data.
I found simple solution which worked for me.
Make your fragment adapter extends FragmentStatePagerAdapter instead of FragmentPagerAdapter and override method onSave to return null
#Override
public Parcelable saveState()
{
return null;
}
This prevent android from recreating fragment
One day later I found another and better solution.
Call setRetainInstance(true) for all your fragments and save references to them somewhere. I did that in static variable in my activity, because it's declared as singleTask and fragments can stay the same all the time.
This way android not recreate fragments but use same instances.
I solved this issue by accessing my fragments directly through the FragmentManager instead of via the FragmentPagerAdapter like so. First I need to figure out the tag of the fragment auto generated by the FragmentPagerAdapter...
private String getFragmentTag(int pos){
return "android:switcher:"+R.id.viewpager+":"+pos;
}
Then I simply get a reference to that fragment and do what I need like so...
Fragment f = this.getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(getFragmentTag(1));
((MyFragmentInterface) f).update(id, name);
viewPager.setCurrentItem(1, true);
Inside my fragments I set the setRetainInstance(false); so that I can manually add values to the savedInstanceState bundle.
#Override
public void onSaveInstanceState(Bundle outState) {
if(this.my !=null)
outState.putInt("myId", this.my.getId());
super.onSaveInstanceState(outState);
}
and then in the OnCreate i grab that key and restore the state of the fragment as necessary. An easy solution which was hard (for me at least) to figure out.
Global working tested solution.
getSupportFragmentManager() keeps the null reference some times and View pager does not create new since it find reference to same fragment. So to over come this use getChildFragmentManager() solves problem in simple way.
Don't do this:
new PagerAdapter(getSupportFragmentManager(), fragments);
Do this:
new PagerAdapter(getChildFragmentManager() , fragments);
Do not try to interact between fragments in ViewPager. You cannot guarantee that other fragment attached or even exists. Istead of changing actionbar title from fragment, you can do it from your activity. Use standart interface pattern for this:
public interface UpdateCallback
{
void update(String name);
}
public class MyActivity extends FragmentActivity implements UpdateCallback
{
#Override
public void update(String name)
{
getSupportActionBar().setTitle(name);
}
}
public class MyFragment extends Fragment
{
private UpdateCallback callback;
#Override
public void onAttach(SupportActivity activity)
{
super.onAttach(activity);
callback = (UpdateCallback) activity;
}
#Override
public void onDetach()
{
super.onDetach();
callback = null;
}
public void updateActionbar(String name)
{
if(callback != null)
callback.update(name);
}
}
You can remove the fragments when destroy the viewpager, in my case, I removed them on onDestroyView() of my fragment:
#Override
public void onDestroyView() {
if (getChildFragmentManager().getFragments() != null) {
for (Fragment fragment : getChildFragmentManager().getFragments()) {
getChildFragmentManager().beginTransaction().remove(fragment).commitAllowingStateLoss();
}
}
super.onDestroyView();
}
After a few hours of looking for a similar issue I think a have another solution. This one at least it worked for me and I only have to changed a couple of lines.
This is the problem I had, I have an activity with a view pager that uses a FragmentStatePagerAdapter with two Fragments. Everything works fine until I force the activity to get destroyed (developer options) or I rotate the screen. I do keep a reference to the two fragments after they get created inside the method getItem.
At that point the activity will be created again and everything works fine at this point but I have lost the reference to my fragmetns as getItem doesn't' get called again.
This is how I fixed that problem, inside the FragmentStatePagerAdapter:
#Override
public Object instantiateItem(ViewGroup container, int position) {
Object aux = super.instantiateItem(container, position);
//Update the references to the Fragments we have on the view pager
if(position==0){
fragTabOne = (FragOffersList)aux;
}
else{
fragTabTwo = (FragOffersList) aux;
}
return aux;
}
You won't get a call on getItem again if the adapter already has a reference to it internally, and you shouldn't change that. Instead you can get the fragment it's being used by looking at this other method instantiateItem() which will be called for each of your fragments.
Hope that helps anyone.
Since people don't tend to read comments, here is an answer that mostly duplicates what I wrote here:
the root cause of the issue is the fact that android system does not call getItem to obtain fragments that are actually displayed, but instantiateItem. This method first tries to lookup and reuse a fragment instance for a given tab in FragmentManager. Only if this lookup fails (which happens only the first time when FragmentManager is newly created) then getItem is called. It is for obvious reasons not to recreate fragments (that may be heavy) for example each time a user rotates his device.
To solve this, instead of creating fragments with Fragment.instantiate in your activity, you should do it with pagerAdapter.instantiateItem and all these calls should be surrounded by startUpdate/finishUpdate method calls that start/commit fragment transaction respectively. getItem should be the place where fragments are really created using their respective constructors.
List<Fragment> fragments = new Vector<Fragment>();
#Override protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.myLayout);
ViewPager viewPager = (ViewPager) findViewById(R.id.myViewPager);
MyPagerAdapter adapter = new MyPagerAdapter(getSupportFragmentManager());
viewPager.setAdapter(adapter);
((TabLayout) findViewById(R.id.tabs)).setupWithViewPager(viewPager);
adapter.startUpdate(viewPager);
fragments.add(adapter.instantiateItem(viewPager, 0));
fragments.add(adapter.instantiateItem(viewPager, 1));
// and so on if you have more tabs...
adapter.finishUpdate(viewPager);
}
class MyPagerAdapter extends FragmentPagerAdapter {
public MyPagerAdapter(FragmentManager manager) {super(manager);}
#Override public int getCount() {return 2;}
#Override public Fragment getItem(int position) {
if (position == 0) return new Fragment0();
if (position == 1) return new Fragment1();
return null; // or throw some exception
}
#Override public CharSequence getPageTitle(int position) {
if (position == 0) return getString(R.string.tab0);
if (position == 1) return getString(R.string.tab1);
return null; // or throw some exception
}
}
Since the FragmentManager will take care of restoring your Fragments for you as soon as the onResume() method is called I have the fragment call out to the activity and add itself to a list. In my instance I am storing all of this in my PagerAdapter implementation. Each fragment knows it's position because it is added to the fragment arguments on creation. Now whenever I need to manipulate a fragment at a specific index all I have to do is use the list from my adapter.
The following is an example of an Adapter for a custom ViewPager that will grow the fragment as it moves into focus, and scale it down as it moves out of focus. Besides the Adapter and Fragment classes I have here all you need is for the parent activity to be able to reference the adapter variable and you are set.
Adapter
public class GrowPagerAdapter extends FragmentPagerAdapter implements OnPageChangeListener, OnScrollChangedListener {
public final String TAG = this.getClass().getSimpleName();
private final int COUNT = 4;
public static final float BASE_SIZE = 0.8f;
public static final float BASE_ALPHA = 0.8f;
private int mCurrentPage = 0;
private boolean mScrollingLeft;
private List<SummaryTabletFragment> mFragments;
public int getCurrentPage() {
return mCurrentPage;
}
public void addFragment(SummaryTabletFragment fragment) {
mFragments.add(fragment.getPosition(), fragment);
}
public GrowPagerAdapter(FragmentManager fm) {
super(fm);
mFragments = new ArrayList<SummaryTabletFragment>();
}
#Override
public int getCount() {
return COUNT;
}
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
return SummaryTabletFragment.newInstance(position);
}
#Override
public void onPageScrollStateChanged(int state) {}
#Override
public void onPageScrolled(int position, float positionOffset, int positionOffsetPixels) {
adjustSize(position, positionOffset);
}
#Override
public void onPageSelected(int position) {
mCurrentPage = position;
}
/**
* Used to adjust the size of each view in the viewpager as the user
* scrolls. This provides the effect of children scaling down as they
* are moved out and back to full size as they come into focus.
*
* #param position
* #param percent
*/
private void adjustSize(int position, float percent) {
position += (mScrollingLeft ? 1 : 0);
int secondary = position + (mScrollingLeft ? -1 : 1);
int tertiary = position + (mScrollingLeft ? 1 : -1);
float scaleUp = mScrollingLeft ? percent : 1.0f - percent;
float scaleDown = mScrollingLeft ? 1.0f - percent : percent;
float percentOut = scaleUp > BASE_ALPHA ? BASE_ALPHA : scaleUp;
float percentIn = scaleDown > BASE_ALPHA ? BASE_ALPHA : scaleDown;
if (scaleUp < BASE_SIZE)
scaleUp = BASE_SIZE;
if (scaleDown < BASE_SIZE)
scaleDown = BASE_SIZE;
// Adjust the fragments that are, or will be, on screen
SummaryTabletFragment current = (position < mFragments.size()) ? mFragments.get(position) : null;
SummaryTabletFragment next = (secondary < mFragments.size() && secondary > -1) ? mFragments.get(secondary) : null;
SummaryTabletFragment afterNext = (tertiary < mFragments.size() && tertiary > -1) ? mFragments.get(tertiary) : null;
if (current != null && next != null) {
// Apply the adjustments to each fragment
current.transitionFragment(percentIn, scaleUp);
next.transitionFragment(percentOut, scaleDown);
if (afterNext != null) {
afterNext.transitionFragment(BASE_ALPHA, BASE_SIZE);
}
}
}
#Override
public void onScrollChanged(int l, int t, int oldl, int oldt) {
// Keep track of which direction we are scrolling
mScrollingLeft = (oldl - l) < 0;
}
}
Fragment
public class SummaryTabletFragment extends BaseTabletFragment {
public final String TAG = this.getClass().getSimpleName();
private final float SCALE_SIZE = 0.8f;
private RelativeLayout mBackground, mCover;
private TextView mTitle;
private VerticalTextView mLeft, mRight;
private String mTitleText;
private Integer mColor;
private boolean mInit = false;
private Float mScale, mPercent;
private GrowPagerAdapter mAdapter;
private int mCurrentPosition = 0;
public String getTitleText() {
return mTitleText;
}
public void setTitleText(String titleText) {
this.mTitleText = titleText;
}
public static SummaryTabletFragment newInstance(int position) {
SummaryTabletFragment fragment = new SummaryTabletFragment();
fragment.setRetainInstance(true);
Bundle args = new Bundle();
args.putInt("position", position);
fragment.setArguments(args);
return fragment;
}
#Override
public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container, Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreateView(inflater, container, savedInstanceState);
mRoot = inflater.inflate(R.layout.tablet_dummy_view, null);
setupViews();
configureView();
return mRoot;
}
#Override
public void onViewStateRestored(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onViewStateRestored(savedInstanceState);
if (savedInstanceState != null) {
mColor = savedInstanceState.getInt("color", Color.BLACK);
}
configureView();
}
#Override
public void onSaveInstanceState(Bundle outState) {
outState.putInt("color", mColor);
super.onSaveInstanceState(outState);
}
#Override
public int getPosition() {
return getArguments().getInt("position", -1);
}
#Override
public void setPosition(int position) {
getArguments().putInt("position", position);
}
public void onResume() {
super.onResume();
mAdapter = mActivity.getPagerAdapter();
mAdapter.addFragment(this);
mCurrentPosition = mAdapter.getCurrentPage();
if ((getPosition() == (mCurrentPosition + 1) || getPosition() == (mCurrentPosition - 1)) && !mInit) {
mInit = true;
transitionFragment(GrowPagerAdapter.BASE_ALPHA, GrowPagerAdapter.BASE_SIZE);
return;
}
if (getPosition() == mCurrentPosition && !mInit) {
mInit = true;
transitionFragment(0.00f, 1.0f);
}
}
private void setupViews() {
mCover = (RelativeLayout) mRoot.findViewById(R.id.cover);
mLeft = (VerticalTextView) mRoot.findViewById(R.id.title_left);
mRight = (VerticalTextView) mRoot.findViewById(R.id.title_right);
mBackground = (RelativeLayout) mRoot.findViewById(R.id.root);
mTitle = (TextView) mRoot.findViewById(R.id.title);
}
private void configureView() {
Fonts.applyPrimaryBoldFont(mLeft, 15);
Fonts.applyPrimaryBoldFont(mRight, 15);
float[] size = UiUtils.getScreenMeasurements(mActivity);
int width = (int) (size[0] * SCALE_SIZE);
int height = (int) (size[1] * SCALE_SIZE);
RelativeLayout.LayoutParams params = new RelativeLayout.LayoutParams(width, height);
mBackground.setLayoutParams(params);
if (mScale != null)
transitionFragment(mPercent, mScale);
setRandomBackground();
setTitleText("Fragment " + getPosition());
mTitle.setText(getTitleText().toUpperCase());
mLeft.setText(getTitleText().toUpperCase());
mRight.setText(getTitleText().toUpperCase());
mLeft.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
mActivity.showNextPage();
}
});
mRight.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
mActivity.showPrevPage();
}
});
}
private void setRandomBackground() {
if (mColor == null) {
Random r = new Random();
mColor = Color.rgb(r.nextInt(255), r.nextInt(255), r.nextInt(255));
}
mBackground.setBackgroundColor(mColor);
}
public void transitionFragment(float percent, float scale) {
this.mScale = scale;
this.mPercent = percent;
if (getView() != null && mCover != null) {
getView().setScaleX(scale);
getView().setScaleY(scale);
mCover.setAlpha(percent);
mCover.setVisibility((percent <= 0.05f) ? View.GONE : View.VISIBLE);
}
}
#Override
public String getFragmentTitle() {
return null;
}
}
My solution: I set almost every View as static. Now my app interacts perfect. Being able to call the static methods from everywhere is maybe not a good style, but why to play around with code that doesn't work? I read a lot of questions and their answers here on SO and no solution brought success (for me).
I know it can leak the memory, and waste heap, and my code will not be fit on other projects, but I don't feel scared about this - I tested the app on different devices and conditions, no problems at all, the Android Platform seems to be able handle this. The UI gets refreshed every second and even on a S2 ICS (4.0.3) device the app is able to handle thousands of geo-markers.
I faced the same issue but my ViewPager was inside a TopFragment which created and set an adapter using setAdapter(new FragmentPagerAdapter(getChildFragmentManager())).
I fixed this issue by overriding onAttachFragment(Fragment childFragment) in the TopFragment like this:
#Override
public void onAttachFragment(Fragment childFragment) {
if (childFragment instanceof OnboardingDiamondsFragment) {
mChildFragment = (ChildFragment) childFragment;
}
super.onAttachFragment(childFragment);
}
As known already (see answers above), when the childFragmentManager recreate itself, it also create the fragments which were inside the viewPager.
The important part is that after that, he calls onAttachFragment and now we have a reference to the new recreated fragment!
Hope this will help anyone getting this old Q like me :)
I solved the problem by saving the fragments in SparceArray:
public abstract class SaveFragmentsPagerAdapter extends FragmentPagerAdapter {
SparseArray<Fragment> fragments = new SparseArray<>();
public SaveFragmentsPagerAdapter(FragmentManager fm) {
super(fm);
}
#Override
public Object instantiateItem(ViewGroup container, int position) {
Fragment fragment = (Fragment) super.instantiateItem(container, position);
fragments.append(position, fragment);
return fragment;
}
#Nullable
public Fragment getFragmentByPosition(int position){
return fragments.get(position);
}
}
Just so you know...
Adding to the litany of woes with these classes, there is a rather interesting bug that's worth sharing.
I'm using a ViewPager to navigate a tree of items (select an item and the view pager animates scrolling to the right, and the next branch appears, navigate back, and the ViewPager scrolls in the opposite direction to return to the previous node).
The problem arises when I push and pop fragments off the end of the FragmentStatePagerAdapter. It's smart enough to notice that the items change, and smart enough to create and replace a fragment when the item has changed. But not smart enough to discard the fragment state, or smart enough to trim the internally saved fragment states when the adapter size changes. So when you pop an item, and push a new one onto the end, the fragment for the new item gets the saved state of the fragment for the old item, which caused absolute havoc in my code. My fragments carry data that may require a lot of work to refetch from the internet, so not saving state really wasn't an option.
I don't have a clean workaround. I used something like this:
public void onSaveInstanceState(Bundle outState) {
IFragmentListener listener = (IFragmentListener)getActivity();
if (listener!= null)
{
if (!listener.isStillInTheAdapter(this.getAdapterItem()))
{
return; // return empty state.
}
}
super.onSaveInstanceState(outState);
// normal saving of state for flips and
// paging out of the activity follows
....
}
An imperfect solution because the new fragment instance still gets a savedState Bundle, but at least it doesn't carry stale data.

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