I am using a tabbed Activity provided by Android with android.support.v7.app.ActionBar.TabListener,ViewPager and FragmentPagerAdapter. The parent Activty cointains and manages three Fragment. In addition, the parent Activity has a method to save the data provided by the fragments. In order to get the data defined in them (and not sended by the parent Activity) I am wrote the following code:
MyFragment frag = (MyFragment) mSectionsPagerAdapter.getActiveFragment(mViewPager,1,getSupportFragmentManager());
Where getActiveFragment() is
public Fragment getActiveFragment(ViewPager container, int position, FragmentManager mFragmentManager) {
String name = makeFragmentName(container.getId(), position);
return mFragmentManager.findFragmentByTag(name);
}
private String makeFragmentName(int viewId, int index) {
return "android:switcher:" + viewId + ":" + index;
}
Actually, I have the following problem: when I try to save data provided by the three fragment, I have a java.lang.NullPointerException caused by the third fragment which is null. This happens only if I do not display on my device the second or third fragment.
I do not understand how to avoid and fix this behaviour.
Any suggestion?
This is due to the third fragment not being created if only the first tab/fragment is shown.
The ViewPager per default internally prepares the visible fragment, the one left to it and the one right to it.
Try
viewpager.setOffscreenPageLimit(2)
I'm using a ViewPager together with a FragmentStatePagerAdapter to host three different fragments:
[Fragment1]
[Fragment2]
[Fragment3]
When I want to get Fragment1 from the ViewPager in the FragmentActivity.
What is the problem, and how do I fix it?
The main answer relies on a name being generated by the framework. If that ever changes, then it will no longer work.
What about this solution, overriding instantiateItem() and destroyItem() of your Fragment(State)PagerAdapter:
public class MyPagerAdapter extends FragmentStatePagerAdapter {
SparseArray<Fragment> registeredFragments = new SparseArray<Fragment>();
public MyPagerAdapter(FragmentManager fm) {
super(fm);
}
#Override
public int getCount() {
return ...;
}
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
return MyFragment.newInstance(...);
}
#Override
public Object instantiateItem(ViewGroup container, int position) {
Fragment fragment = (Fragment) super.instantiateItem(container, position);
registeredFragments.put(position, fragment);
return fragment;
}
#Override
public void destroyItem(ViewGroup container, int position, Object object) {
registeredFragments.remove(position);
super.destroyItem(container, position, object);
}
public Fragment getRegisteredFragment(int position) {
return registeredFragments.get(position);
}
}
This seems to work for me when dealing with Fragments that are available. Fragments that have not yet been instantiated, will return null when calling getRegisteredFragment. But I've been using this mostly to get the current Fragment out of the ViewPager: adapater.getRegisteredFragment(viewPager.getCurrentItem()) and this won't return null.
I'm not aware of any other drawbacks of this solution. If there are any, I'd like to know.
For grabbing fragments out of a ViewPager there are a lot of answers on here and on other related SO threads / blogs. Everyone I have seen is broken, and they generally seem to fall into one of the two types listed below. There are some other valid solutions if you only want to grab the current fragment, like this other answer on this thread.
If using FragmentPagerAdapter see below. If using FragmentStatePagerAdapter its worth looking at this. Grabbing indexes that are not the current one in a FragmentStateAdapter is not as useful as by the nature of it these will be completely torn down went out of view / out of offScreenLimit bounds.
THE UNHAPPY PATHS
Wrong: Maintain your own internal list of fragments, added to when FragmentPagerAdapter.getItem() is called
Usually using a SparseArray or Map
Not one of the many examples I have seen accounts for lifecycle events so this solution is fragile. As getItem is only called the first time a page is scrolled to (or obtained if your ViewPager.setOffscreenPageLimit(x) > 0) in the ViewPager, if the hosting Activity / Fragment is killed or restarted then the internal SpaseArray will be wiped out when the custom FragmentPagerActivity is recreated, but behind the scenes the ViewPagers internal fragments will be recreated, and getItem will NOT be called for any of the indexes, so the ability to get a fragment from index will be lost forever. You can account for this by saving out and restoring these fragment references via FragmentManager.getFragment() and putFragment but this starts to get messy IMHO.
Wrong: Construct your own tag id matching what is used under the hood in FragmentPagerAdapter and use this to retrieve the page Fragments from the FragmentManager
This is better insomuch as it copes with the losing-fragment-references problem in the first internal-array solution, but as rightly pointed out in the answers above and elsewhere on the net - it feels hacky as its a private method internal to ViewPager that could change at any time or for any OS version.
The method thats recreated for this solution is
private static String makeFragmentName(int viewId, long id) {
return "android:switcher:" + viewId + ":" + id;
}
A HAPPY PATH: ViewPager.instantiateItem()
A similar approach to getItem() above but non-lifecycle-breaking is to this is to hook into instantiateItem() instead of getItem() as the former will be called everytime that index is created / accessed. See this answer
A HAPPY PATH: Construct your own FragmentViewPager
Construct your own FragmentViewPager class from the source of the latest support lib and change the method used internally to generate the fragment tags. You can replace it with the below. This has the advantage that you know the tag creation will never change and your not relying on a private api / method, which is always dangerous.
/**
* #param containerViewId the ViewPager this adapter is being supplied to
* #param id pass in getItemId(position) as this is whats used internally in this class
* #return the tag used for this pages fragment
*/
public static String makeFragmentName(int containerViewId, long id) {
return "android:switcher:" + containerViewId + ":" + id;
}
Then as the doc says, when you want to grab a fragment used for an index just call something like this method (which you can put in the custom FragmentPagerAdapter or a subclass) being aware the result may be null if getItem has not yet been called for that page i.e. its not been created yet.
/**
* #return may return null if the fragment has not been instantiated yet for that position - this depends on if the fragment has been viewed
* yet OR is a sibling covered by {#link android.support.v4.view.ViewPager#setOffscreenPageLimit(int)}. Can use this to call methods on
* the current positions fragment.
*/
public #Nullable Fragment getFragmentForPosition(int position)
{
String tag = makeFragmentName(mViewPager.getId(), getItemId(position));
Fragment fragment = getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(tag);
return fragment;
}
This is a simple solution and solves the issues in the other two solutions found everywhere on the web
Add next methods to your FragmentPagerAdapter:
public Fragment getActiveFragment(ViewPager container, int position) {
String name = makeFragmentName(container.getId(), position);
return mFragmentManager.findFragmentByTag(name);
}
private static String makeFragmentName(int viewId, int index) {
return "android:switcher:" + viewId + ":" + index;
}
getActiveFragment(0) has to work.
Here is the solution implemented into ViewPager https://gist.github.com/jacek-marchwicki/d6320ba9a910c514424d. If something fail you will see good crash log.
Another simple solution:
public class MyPagerAdapter extends FragmentPagerAdapter {
private Fragment mCurrentFragment;
public Fragment getCurrentFragment() {
return mCurrentFragment;
}
//...
#Override
public void setPrimaryItem(ViewGroup container, int position, Object object) {
if (getCurrentFragment() != object) {
mCurrentFragment = ((Fragment) object);
}
super.setPrimaryItem(container, position, object);
}
}
I know this has a few answers, but maybe this will help someone. I have used a relatively simple solution when I needed to get a Fragment from my ViewPager. In your Activity or Fragment holding the ViewPager, you can use this code to cycle through every Fragment it holds.
FragmentPagerAdapter fragmentPagerAdapter = (FragmentPagerAdapter) mViewPager.getAdapter();
for(int i = 0; i < fragmentPagerAdapter.getCount(); i++) {
Fragment viewPagerFragment = fragmentPagerAdapter.getItem(i);
if(viewPagerFragment != null) {
// Do something with your Fragment
// Check viewPagerFragment.isResumed() if you intend on interacting with any views.
}
}
If you know the position of your Fragment in the ViewPager, you can just call getItem(knownPosition).
If you don't know the position of your Fragment in the ViewPager, you can have your children Fragments implement an interface with a method like getUniqueId(), and use that to differentiate them. Or you can cycle through all Fragments and check the class type, such as if(viewPagerFragment instanceof FragmentClassYouWant)
!!! EDIT !!!
I have discovered that getItem only gets called by a FragmentPagerAdapter when each Fragment needs to be created the first time, after that, it appears the the Fragments are recycled using the FragmentManager. This way, many implementations of FragmentPagerAdapter create new Fragments in getItem. Using my above method, this means we will create new Fragments each time getItem is called as we go through all the items in the FragmentPagerAdapter. Due to this, I have found a better approach, using the FragmentManager to get each Fragment instead (using the accepted answer). This is a more complete solution, and has been working well for me.
FragmentPagerAdapter fragmentPagerAdapter = (FragmentPagerAdapter) mViewPager.getAdapter();
for(int i = 0; i < fragmentPagerAdapter.getCount(); i++) {
String name = makeFragmentName(mViewPager.getId(), i);
Fragment viewPagerFragment = getChildFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(name);
// OR Fragment viewPagerFragment = getFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(name);
if(viewPagerFragment != null) {
// Do something with your Fragment
if (viewPagerFragment.isResumed()) {
// Interact with any views/data that must be alive
}
else {
// Flag something for update later, when this viewPagerFragment
// returns to onResume
}
}
}
And you will need this method.
private static String makeFragmentName(int viewId, int position) {
return "android:switcher:" + viewId + ":" + position;
}
For my case, none of the above solutions worked.
However since I am using the Child Fragment Manager in a Fragment, the following was used:
Fragment f = getChildFragmentManager().getFragments().get(viewPager.getCurrentItem());
This will only work if your fragments in the Manager correspond to the viewpager item.
In order to get current Visible fragment from ViewPager. I am using this simple statement and it's working fine.
public Fragment getFragmentFromViewpager()
{
return ((Fragment) (mAdapter.instantiateItem(mViewPager, mViewPager.getCurrentItem())));
}
I handled it by first making a list of all the fragments (List<Fragment> fragments;) that I was going to use then added them to the pager making it easier to handle the currently viewed fragment.
So:
#Override
onCreate(){
//initialise the list of fragments
fragments = new Vector<Fragment>();
//fill up the list with out fragments
fragments.add(Fragment.instantiate(this, MainFragment.class.getName()));
fragments.add(Fragment.instantiate(this, MenuFragment.class.getName()));
fragments.add(Fragment.instantiate(this, StoresFragment.class.getName()));
fragments.add(Fragment.instantiate(this, AboutFragment.class.getName()));
fragments.add(Fragment.instantiate(this, ContactFragment.class.getName()));
//Set up the pager
pager = (ViewPager)findViewById(R.id.pager);
pager.setAdapter(new MyFragmentPagerAdapter(getSupportFragmentManager(), fragments));
pager.setOffscreenPageLimit(4);
}
so then this can be called:
public Fragment getFragment(ViewPager pager){
Fragment theFragment = fragments.get(pager.getCurrentItem());
return theFragment;
}
so then i could chuck it in an if statement that would only run if it was on the correct fragment
Fragment tempFragment = getFragment();
if(tempFragment == MyFragmentNo2.class){
MyFragmentNo2 theFrag = (MyFragmentNo2) tempFragment;
//then you can do whatever with the fragment
theFrag.costomFunction();
}
but thats just my hack and slash approach but it worked for me, I use it do do relevent changes to my currently displayed fragment when the back button is pushed.
This is based on Steven's answer above. This will return actual instance of the fragment which is already attached to the parent activity.
FragmentPagerAdapter fragmentPagerAdapter = (FragmentPagerAdapter) mViewPager.getAdapter();
for(int i = 0; i < fragmentPagerAdapter.getCount(); i++) {
Fragment viewPagerFragment = (Fragment) mViewPager.getAdapter().instantiateItem(mViewPager, i);
if(viewPagerFragment != null && viewPagerFragment.isAdded()) {
if (viewPagerFragment instanceof FragmentOne){
FragmentOne oneFragment = (FragmentOne) viewPagerFragment;
if (oneFragment != null){
oneFragment.update(); // your custom method
}
} else if (viewPagerFragment instanceof FragmentTwo){
FragmentTwo twoFragment = (FragmentTwo) viewPagerFragment;
if (twoFragment != null){
twoFragment.update(); // your custom method
}
}
}
}
I couldn't find a simple, clean way to do this. However, the ViewPager widget is just another ViewGroup , which hosts your fragments. The ViewPager has these fragments as immediate children. So you could just iterate over them (using .getChildCount() and .getChildAt() ), and see if the fragment instance that you're looking for is currently loaded into the ViewPager and get a reference to it. E.g. you could use some static unique ID field to tell the fragments apart.
Note that the ViewPager may not have loaded the fragment you're looking for since it's a virtualizing container like ListView.
FragmentPagerAdapter is the factory of the fragments. To find a fragment based on its position if still in memory use this:
public Fragment findFragmentByPosition(int position) {
FragmentPagerAdapter fragmentPagerAdapter = getFragmentPagerAdapter();
return getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(
"android:switcher:" + getViewPager().getId() + ":"
+ fragmentPagerAdapter.getItemId(position));
}
Sample code for v4 support api.
You don't need to call getItem() or some other method at later stage to get the reference of a Fragment hosted inside ViewPager. If you want to update some data inside Fragment then use this approach: Update ViewPager dynamically?
Key is to set new data inside Adaper and call notifyDataSetChanged() which in turn will call getItemPosition(), passing you a reference of your Fragment and giving you a chance to update it. All other ways require you to keep reference to yourself or some other hack which is not a good solution.
#Override
public int getItemPosition(Object object) {
if (object instanceof UpdateableFragment) {
((UpdateableFragment) object).update(xyzData);
}
//don't return POSITION_NONE, avoid fragment recreation.
return super.getItemPosition(object);
}
Must extends FragmentPagerAdapter into your ViewPager adapter class.
If you use FragmentStatePagerAdapter then you will not able to find your Fragment by its ID
public static String makeFragmentName(int viewPagerId, int index) {
return "android:switcher:" + viewPagerId + ":" + index;
}
How to use this method :-
Fragment mFragment = ((FragmentActivity) getContext()).getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(
AppMethodUtils.makeFragmentName(mViewPager.getId(), i)
);
InterestViewFragment newFragment = (InterestViewFragment) mFragment;
Hey I have answered this question here. Basically, you need to override
public Object instantiateItem(ViewGroup container, int position)
method of FragmentStatePagerAdapter.
Best solution is to use the extension we created at CodePath called SmartFragmentStatePagerAdapter. Following that guide, this makes retrieving fragments and the currently selected fragment from a ViewPager significantly easier. It also does a better job of managing the memory of the fragments embedded within the adapter.
The easiest and the most concise way. If all your fragments in ViewPager are of different classes you may retrieve and distinguish them as following:
public class MyActivity extends Activity
{
#Override
public void onAttachFragment(Fragment fragment) {
super.onAttachFragment(fragment);
if (fragment.getClass() == MyFragment.class) {
mMyFragment = (MyFragment) fragment;
}
}
}
I implemented this easy with a bit different approach.
My custom FragmentAdapter.getItem method returned not new MyFragment(), but the instance of MyFragment that was created in FragmentAdapter constructor.
In my activity I then got the fragment from the adapter, check if it is instanceOf needed Fragment, then cast and use needed methods.
Create integer resource id in /values/integers.xml
<integer name="page1">1</integer>
<integer name="page2">2</integer>
<integer name="page3">3</integer>
Then in PagerAdapter getItem function:
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
Fragment fragment = null;
if (position == 0) {
fragment = FragmentOne.newInstance();
mViewPager.setTag(R.integer.page1,fragment);
}
else if (position == 1) {
fragment = FragmentTwo.newInstance();
mViewPager.setTag(R.integer.page2,fragment);
} else if (position == 2) {
fragment = FragmentThree.newInstance();
mViewPager.setTag(R.integer.page3,fragment);
}
return fragment;
}
Then in activity write this function to get fragment reference:
private Fragment getFragmentByPosition(int position) {
Fragment fragment = null;
switch (position) {
case 0:
fragment = (Fragment) mViewPager.getTag(R.integer.page1);
break;
case 1:
fragment = (Fragment) mViewPager.getTag(R.integer.page2);
break;
case 2:
fragment = (Fragment) mViewPager.getTag(R.integer.page3);
break;
}
return fragment;
}
Get the fragment reference by calling the above function and then cast it to your custom fragment:
Fragment fragment = getFragmentByPosition(position);
if (fragment != null) {
FragmentOne fragmentOne = (FragmentOne) fragment;
}
Easy way to iterate over fragments in fragment manager. Find viewpager, that has section position argument, placed in public static PlaceholderFragment newInstance(int sectionNumber).
public PlaceholderFragment getFragmentByPosition(Integer pos){
for(Fragment f:getChildFragmentManager().getFragments()){
if(f.getId()==R.id.viewpager && f.getArguments().getInt("SECTNUM") - 1 == pos) {
return (PlaceholderFragment) f;
}
}
return null;
}
In Fragment
public int getArgument(){
return mPage;
{
public void update(){
}
In FragmentActivity
List<Fragment> fragments = getSupportFragmentManager().getFragments();
for(Fragment f:fragments){
if((f instanceof PageFragment)&&(!f.isDetached())){
PageFragment pf = (PageFragment)f;
if(pf.getArgument()==pager.getCurrentItem())pf.update();
}
}
in TabLayout there are multiple tab for Fragment. you can find the fragment by Tag using the index of the fragment.
For ex. the index for Fragment1 is 0, so in findFragmentByTag() method, pass the tag for the Viewpager.after using fragmentTransaction you can add,replace the fragment.
String tag = "android:switcher:" + R.id.viewPager + ":" + 0;
Fragment1 f = (Fragment1) getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(tag);
Ok for the adapter FragmentStatePagerAdapter I fund a solution :
in your FragmentActivity :
ActionBar mActionBar = getSupportActionBar();
mActionBar.addTab(mActionBar.newTab().setText("TAB1").setTabListener(this).setTag(Fragment.instantiate(this, MyFragment1.class.getName())));
mActionBar.addTab(mActionBar.newTab().setText("TAB2").setTabListener(this).setTag(Fragment.instantiate(this, MyFragment2.class.getName())));
mActionBar.addTab(mActionBar.newTab().setText("TAB3").setTabListener(this).setTag(Fragment.instantiate(this, MyFragment3.class.getName())));
viewPager = (STViewPager) super.findViewById(R.id.viewpager);
mPagerAdapter = new MyPagerAdapter(getSupportFragmentManager(), mActionBar);
viewPager.setAdapter(this.mPagerAdapter);
and create a methode in your class FragmentActivity - So that method give you access to your Fragment, you just need to give it the position of the fragment you want:
public Fragment getActiveFragment(int position) {
String name = MyPagerAdapter.makeFragmentName(position);
return getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(name);
}
in your Adapter :
public class MyPagerAdapter extends FragmentStatePagerAdapter {
private final ActionBar actionBar;
private final FragmentManager fragmentManager;
public MyPagerAdapter(FragmentManager fragmentManager, com.actionbarsherlock.app.ActionBarActionBar mActionBar) {super(fragmentManager);
this.actionBar = mActionBar;
this.fragmentManager = fragmentManager;
}
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
getSupportFragmentManager().beginTransaction().add(mTchatDetailsFragment, makeFragmentName(position)).commit();
return (Fragment)this.actionBar.getTabAt(position);
}
#Override
public int getCount() {
return this.actionBar.getTabCount();
}
#Override
public CharSequence getPageTitle(int position) {
return this.actionBar.getTabAt(position).getText();
}
private static String makeFragmentName(int viewId, int index) {
return "android:fragment:" + index;
}
}
Fragment yourFragment = yourviewpageradapter.getItem(int index);
index is the place of fragment in adapter like you added fragment1 first so retreive fragment1 pass index as 0 and so on for rest
I have a viewpager that pages through fragments. My FragmentPagerAdapter subclass creates a new fragment in the getItem method which seems wasteful. Is there a FragmentPagerAdapter equivalent to the convertView in the listAdapter that will enable me to reuse fragments that have already been created? My code is below.
public class ProfilePagerAdapter extends FragmentPagerAdapter {
ArrayList<Profile> mProfiles = new ArrayList<Profile>();
public ProfilePagerAdapter(FragmentManager fm) {
super(fm);
}
/**
* Adding a new profile object created a new page in the pager this adapter is set to.
* #param profile
*/
public void addProfile(Profile profile){
mProfiles.add(profile);
}
#Override
public int getCount() {
return mProfiles.size();
}
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
return new ProfileFragment(mProfiles.get(position));
}
}
The FragmentPagerAdapter already caches the Fragments for you. Each fragment is assigned a tag, and then the FragmentPagerAdapter tries to call findFragmentByTag. It only calls getItem if the result from findFragmentByTag is null. So you shouldn't have to cache the fragments yourself.
Appendix for Geoff's post:
You can get reference to your Fragment in FragmentPagerAdapter using findFragmentByTag(). The name of the tag is generated this way:
private static String makeFragmentName(int viewId, int index)
{
return "android:switcher:" + viewId + ":" + index;
}
where viewId is id of ViewPager
Look at this link: http://code.google.com/p/openintents/source/browse/trunk/compatibility/AndroidSupportV2/src/android/support/v2/app/FragmentPagerAdapter.java#104
Seems a lot of the people viewing this question are looking for a way to reference the Fragments created by FragmentPagerAdapter/FragmentStatePagerAdapter. I would like to offer my solution to this without relying on the internally created tags that the other answers on here use.
As a bonus this method should also work with FragmentStatePagerAdapter. See notes below for more detail.
Problem with current solutions: relying on internal code
A lot of the solutions I've seen on this and similar questions rely on getting a reference to the existing Fragment by calling FragmentManager.findFragmentByTag() and mimicking the internally created tag: "android:switcher:" + viewId + ":" + id. The problem with this is that you're relying on internal source code, which as we all know is not guaranteed to remain the same forever. The Android engineers at Google could easily decide to change the tag structure which would break your code leaving you unable to find a reference to the existing Fragments.
Alternate solution without relying on internal tag
Here's a simple example of how to get a reference to the Fragments returned by FragmentPagerAdapter that doesn't rely on the internal tags set on the Fragments. The key is to override instantiateItem() and save references in there instead of in getItem().
public class SomeActivity extends Activity {
private FragmentA m1stFragment;
private FragmentB m2ndFragment;
// other code in your Activity...
private class CustomPagerAdapter extends FragmentPagerAdapter {
// other code in your custom FragmentPagerAdapter...
public CustomPagerAdapter(FragmentManager fm) {
super(fm);
}
#Override
public Fragment getItem(int position) {
// Do NOT try to save references to the Fragments in getItem(),
// because getItem() is not always called. If the Fragment
// was already created then it will be retrieved from the FragmentManger
// and not here (i.e. getItem() won't be called again).
switch (position) {
case 0:
return new FragmentA();
case 1:
return new FragmentB();
default:
// This should never happen. Always account for each position above
return null;
}
}
// Here we can finally safely save a reference to the created
// Fragment, no matter where it came from (either getItem() or
// FragmentManger). Simply save the returned Fragment from
// super.instantiateItem() into an appropriate reference depending
// on the ViewPager position.
#Override
public Object instantiateItem(ViewGroup container, int position) {
Fragment createdFragment = (Fragment) super.instantiateItem(container, position);
// save the appropriate reference depending on position
switch (position) {
case 0:
m1stFragment = (FragmentA) createdFragment;
break;
case 1:
m2ndFragment = (FragmentB) createdFragment;
break;
}
return createdFragment;
}
}
public void someMethod() {
// do work on the referenced Fragments, but first check if they
// even exist yet, otherwise you'll get an NPE.
if (m1stFragment != null) {
// m1stFragment.doWork();
}
if (m2ndFragment != null) {
// m2ndFragment.doSomeWorkToo();
}
}
}
or if you prefer to work with tags instead of class member variables/references to the Fragments you can also grab the tags set by FragmentPagerAdapter in the same manner:
NOTE: this doesn't apply to FragmentStatePagerAdapter since it doesn't set tags when creating its Fragments.
#Override
public Object instantiateItem(ViewGroup container, int position) {
Fragment createdFragment = (Fragment) super.instantiateItem(container, position);
// get the tags set by FragmentPagerAdapter
switch (position) {
case 0:
String firstTag = createdFragment.getTag();
break;
case 1:
String secondTag = createdFragment.getTag();
break;
}
// ... save the tags somewhere so you can reference them later
return createdFragment;
}
Note that this method does NOT rely on mimicking the internal tag set by FragmentPagerAdapter and instead uses proper APIs for retrieving them. This way even if the tag changes in future versions of the SupportLibrary you'll still be safe.
Don't forget that depending on the design of your Activity, the Fragments you're trying to work on may or may not exist yet, so you have to account for that by doing null checks before using your references.
Also, if instead you're working with FragmentStatePagerAdapter, then you don't want to keep hard references to your Fragments because you might have many of them and hard references would unnecessarily keep them in memory. Instead save the Fragment references in WeakReference variables instead of standard ones. Like this:
WeakReference<Fragment> m1stFragment = new WeakReference<Fragment>(createdFragment);
// ...and access them like so
Fragment firstFragment = m1stFragment.get();
if (firstFragment != null) {
// reference hasn't been cleared yet; do work...
}
If the fragment still in memory you can find it with this function.
public Fragment findFragmentByPosition(int position) {
FragmentPagerAdapter fragmentPagerAdapter = getFragmentPagerAdapter();
return getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(
"android:switcher:" + getViewPager().getId() + ":"
+ fragmentPagerAdapter.getItemId(position));
}
Sample code for v4 support api.
For future readers!
If you are thinking of reusing fragments with viewpager, best solution is to use ViewPager 2, since View Pager 2 make use of RecyclerView.
Medium article - Exploring the View Pager 2
Docs
Samples repo
Release notes
I know this is (theoretically) not an answer to the question, but a different approach.
I had an issue where I needed to refresh the visible fragments. Whatever I tried, failed and failed miserably...
After trying so many different things, I have finally finish this using BroadCastReceiver. Simply send a broadcast when you need to do something with the visible fragments and capture it in the fragment.
If you need some kind of a response as well, you can also send it via broadcast.
cheers