How to add elements from one array to another? - android

I have a class called people that has its own name, id etc...
I have a full list of people in an array list public ArrayList<people> pList;
When I click on some names I want to add the people in pList to public ArrayList<people> followList; Doing followList.add(pList.get(position)) doesn't work. What is the proper way to do this.
Also, on another click I would like to remove the particular object from the followList so I tried doing followList.remove(pList.get(position)) but obviously it doesn't work as well.
Im basically trying to have a list of people from the original list.

The followList seems to be not initialized. You should call initialize it with new ArrayList<people>() before adding to or removing from it.

Are you sure that you have instantiated the ArrayList followList, and that there is in fact a element at pList[position]?

Related

How to modify a ListView item in Android?

I'm starting learning Android and I want to know if there is some option in Android that let you modify each item or view (I don't know how it's named exactly, I mean each of the items from an ArrayList that you show in a ListView).
Well, I made a ListView that is going to show some books that were located in an ArrayList named "books".
I made a custom adapter that I associate to the ListView to show each item with the corresponding layout in the application. I also have a class "book" for each item that is going to be shown in the ListView.
Further, I made an Intent that I call from MainActivity with startForActivityResult(), that I process in Book class and that I return to MainActivity with all data of a book with the method setResult and got the information with onActivityResult() and the requestCode.
So I don't have any problem to add items to the ListView, just I have the problems if I want to modify some of the items (or views) that are located in the ListView (for example if I have title and author of a book, if I put some wrong information, I want have the option to change it).
I have that, in the same moment that you click on some of the items of the ListView, a new layout will be show to modify the information that it's wrong so I use the method setOnItemClickListener with onItemClick event on the custom adapter that I created before. Here it's where I call the new Intent to modify the wrong information with the method startActivityForResult().
I made the same as before to add a new item but, instead of add a new item with custom_adapter.addBook(title,author) I want to know if there is some option to made something like this: custom_adapter.modify(title,author) or custom_adapter.update(title,author), I mean, when you have modify all the items that were wrong of a book (for example an EditText that were "title") and you have all the information in the MainActivity class (because you returned it with setResult), how to put it again in the same item updating it in the custom_adapter and also in the ArrayList.
I searched it on the Internet but I didn't find anything.
I'm sorry if I have a poor English, but I expect that it can be understand.
Thank you very much!
If I am understanding your problem correctly - you could simply modify the ArrayList of type Book that is backing your ArrayAdapter.
So if you know what Book object you want to modify then you can simply make your changes to the Book object itself. As long as this Book is a reference to the same object that you originally added to the ArrayList you instantiated your ArrayAdapter with then you can then call custom_adapter.notifyDataSetChanged() to tell the adapter to redraw its childviews with the new data.
There are some good code samples on the Internet but you have to understand the code for your purposes. So...here is a start, look at Using an ArrayAdapter with ListView. The code shows the use of ArrayAdapter with getView() method. And I hope it shows how to define the listeners, which you need.
How about that for a start? Have fun...
Thank you very much for all help you gave to me. I'm very pleased with you. :)
Finally, I just send the info with a Bundle when I started the Intent, also with the position. And after, I just used this position to set the new info to my items (in my case, books).
Again, thank you very much ;)

How to add/remove data from a list view (Android)?

I'm using a list view to displace names. The user needs to be able to add a name to the bottom of the list view and to be able to delete names within. The names are saved using SharedPreferences and loaded into an original string array which I then load to an ArrayAdapter. The problem with this method is that, unless I fill up the entire string array, I get a NPE for the ArrayAdapter. So my solution was to set the string array to only be as big as the number of names. This means, however, that I cannot add a name to the list, as the list is only so long.
What's the best way to be able to add and remove strings from a list view and still be able to tell what they are?
After changing values of listview data please put code
notifyDataSetChanged();
Use the List<T> overload rather than the static array for the ArrayAdapter constructor. Then you can add or remove items to your List<T> and call notifyDataSetChanged() once you are done. Using a dynamic data structure like a List<T> will avoid any NPE.

Flex ActionScript - ArrayList Issues

I am banging my head for the last couple days in order to get this done but Im unable to. Someone please help me out!
Let me not tell u the whole thing and will try to explain it simply n clearly.
Im having 1 ArrayList. I am trying to replicate that into another one and trying to delete an item at a particular index. But this not only deletes the item in the replicated ArrayList but also the original ArrayList.
For ex:
var DuplicateList:ArrayList = new ArrayList();
DuplicateList = OriginalList;
DuplicateList.removeItemAt(2);
The above not only deletes the "Item 3" at Index-2 in the DuplicateList but also in the OriginalList.
I just need some workaround with this approach as this is the only way by which whatever I typed inside the controls present in an ItemRenderer of a FLEX List control that uses the OriginalList as a dataProvider is RETAINED, when I change the dataProvider of the List Control from OriginalList to DuplicateList. The following approach does not retain all the data.
var DuplicateList:ArrayList = new ArrayList();
DuplicateList.addAll(OriginalList);
DuplicateList.removeItemAt(2);
ListCntrl.dataProvider = DuplicateList;
Thanks for your help in advance...
A very, very important thing to understand:
ActionScript3 uses references to objects. Because of that, the two variables in this line of code refer to the exact same instance of an ArrayList:
DuplicateList = OriginalList;
So, when you remove an item from one reference, it is gone from the next. If you want two separate instances of ArrayList, then you need to clone it like you are suggesting later in your code.
So far, so good... but why is your ListCntrl retaining the data from the OriginalList? That doesn't make any sense at all. If you remove an item from DuplicateList and then use it as the data provider, then that item shouldn't be there. I think there is more to this story...

Setting tags to each item in a ListView in Android?

I have a ListView where I want each item to have an ID number attached to it (not the same as the position number). I was hoping this could be done by setting a tag to each View item in the ListView using setTag() when these Views are being created.
Right now I'm creating the ListView like this:
final ListView listview = (ListView) findViewById(R.id.listView1);
ArrayAdapter<String> adapter = new ArrayAdapter<String>(this, android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1, android.R.id.text1, names);
listview.setAdapter(adapter);
The names variable in the ArrayAdapter parameters above is an ArrayList, and each string value in this list also has a unique ID that I want to link to this string somehow.
Is there any way I can get access to and modify each of the Views with a tag? One idea was to create my own extended class of ArrayAdapter and override the getView() method, but I don't really understand how it works and how I would go about doing this.
Or is there a better way to link IDs with each string like this than adding tags like I'm trying to do?
Create a ViewBinder and set the tags as the ListView is being populated with whatever you need. You can check all properties of the view to determine what tag goes where, so this should be what you're looking for.
myAdapter.setViewBinder(new MyViewBinder());
public class MyViewBinder implements ViewBinder {
#Override
public boolean setViewValue(View view, Object data, String text){
//Since it iterates through all the views of the item, change accordingly
if(view instanceof TextView){
((TextView)view).setTag("whatever you want");
}
}
}
I just used this exact same answer on another question (albeit slightly different) yesterday.
about getView , it works by using a method of recycling views. i will try to explain it in a simple way.
suppose you have tons of items that can be viewed . you don't want to really create tons of views too , since that would take a lot of memory . google thought of it and provide you the means to update only the views that need to be shown at any specific time.
so , if there is an empty space on the listview , it will be filled with a new view . if the user scrolls , the view that becomes hidden is recycled and given back to you on the getView , to be updated with the data of the one that is shown instead .
for example , if you scroll down , the upper view becomes hidden for the end user , but in fact it becomes the exact same view that is on the bottom .
in order to understand how to make the listview have the best performance and see in practice how and why it works as i've talked about , watch this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wDBM6wVEO70
as for tags , i think you want to do something else , since the data itself (usually some sort of collection, like an arrayList) already knows where to update , because you get the position via the getView . if you want a specific view to update , you might be able to do so by using a hashmap that keeps upadting , which its key is the position in the collection , and the value is the associated view . on each time you go to getView , you need to remove the entry that belong to the view (if exists) and assign the new position with the view that you got/created .
Thanks for the answers. thisMayhem's answer would probably have been easier in the end, but on my quest to learn more I ended up making my own adapter according to this tutorial. I pass down the names and the IDs into the adapter and set the names as the text of the TextViews and the IDs as the tags.
I would rather go with the solution discussed in this thread. It is always the easiest to have all related data in same place and in this case you just create a class to hold all the information you will need for every item.

Android: Map of ArrayList's

I use a custom list adapter and ArrayList for my ListView. This solution was good enough but now I need to use Map of ArrayLists, something like this:
TreeMap<String, ArrayList<ItemsModel>>
where ItemsModel is a Java bean. Earlier I used to populate this ArrayList it that way:
itemsDataArrayList.add(itemModel)
Now I faced some difficulties with Map interface. First, I don't know how to populate my new Map structure: I suppose this
mapInstance.put(itemModel.getItemName.toString(), itemsDataArrayList)
won't work because itemsDataArrayList is the list of elements, not a certain element.
Second, I'm not sure how to properly declare this map instance in my ItemsAdapter class. When I was using just ArrayList it was very simple. Some examples would be very helpful.
What I recommend you look into / try is creating your own BaseAdapter. When you override this class it will give you all the functions you need to override to populate the list view.
This has the advantage of giving you complete control of what is put into the listview and how each view is created.
Then after you get it working I recommend looking into the ViewHolder design pattern along with recycling views which is a great way of improving efficiency when scrolling the listview.
What you are really looking for seem to be a MultiMap. To your first Question - your attemp was quite good, you can only put ArrayLists as values into your TreeMap.
The Problem with this might be, that if you want to add some ItemsModel to your Map, you first need to get the List of the key, and then add the ItemsModel to that list. Additionally you need to ensure, that this list for this particular key exist, and if not, create it.
Example:
String key = "hi";
ArrayList keyList = mapInstance.get(key);
if (keyList == null) {
keyList = new ArrayList();
mapInstance.put(key, keyList);
}
keyList.add(itemsModelInstance);
A get()/contains() and so on may be somehow equal. I'd suggest you build your own Multimap<?,?> Implementation or just take an existing one, like the one from Guava (link above).
Kind regards,
avi

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