Related
First of all: yes, I read all the other threads on this topic. And not only those from this site... (you see, I'm a little frustrated)
Most of them come with the advice to use android:id instead of just id in the XML file. I did.
From others, I learned, that View.findViewById works different than Activity.findViewById. I handled that, too.
In my location_layout.xml, I use:
<FrameLayout .... >
<some.package.MyCustomView ... />
<LinearLayout ... >
<TextView ...
android:id="#+id/txtLat" />
...
</LinearLayout>
</FrameLayout>
In my Activity I do:
...
setContentView( R.layout.location_layout );
and in my custom view class:
...
TextView tv = (TextView) findViewById( R.id.txtLat );
which returns null. Doing this, my Activity works fine. So maybe it's because of the Activity.findViewById and View.findViewById differences. So I stored the context passed to the customs view constructor locally and tried:
...
TextView tv = (TextView) ((Activity) context).findViewById( R.id.txtLat );
which also returned null.
Then, I changed my custom view to extend ViewGroup instead View and changed the location_layout.xml to let the TextView be a direct child of my custom view, so that the View.findViewById should work as supposed. Suprise: it didn't solve anything.
So what the heck am I doing wrong?
I'll appreciate any comments.
which returns null
Possibly because you are calling it too early. Wait until onFinishInflate(). Here is a sample project demonstrating a custom View accessing its contents.
Possibly, you are calling findViewById before calling setContentView?
If that's the case, try calling findViewById AFTER calling setContentView
Make sure you don't have multiple versions of your layout for different screen densities. I ran into this problem once when adding a new id to an existing layout but forgot to update the hdpi version. If you forget to update all versions of the layout file it will work for some screen densities but not others.
FindViewById can be null if you call the wrong super constructor in a custom view. The ID tag is part of attrs, so if you ignore attrs, you delete the ID.
This would be wrong
public CameraSurfaceView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context);
}
This is correct
public CameraSurfaceView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context,attrs);
}
Alongside the classic causes, mentioned elsewhere:
Make sure you've called setContentView() before findViewById()
Make sure that the id you want is in the view or layout you've given to setContentView()
Make sure that the id isn't accidentally duplicated in different layouts
There is one I have found for custom views in standard layouts, which goes against the documentation:
In theory you can create a custom view and add it to a layout (see here). However, I have found that in such situations, sometimes the id attribute works for all the views in the layout except the custom ones. The solution I use is:
Replace each custom view with a FrameLayout with the same layout properties as you would like the custom view to have. Give it an appropriate id, say frame_for_custom_view.
In onCreate:
setContentView(R.layout.my_layout);
FrameView fv = findViewById(R.id.frame_for_custom_layout);
MyCustomView cv = new MyCustomView(context);
fv.addView(cv);
which puts the custom view in the frame.
In my case, I had 2 activites in my project, main.xml and main2.xml. From the beginning, main2 was a copy of main, and everything worked well, until I added new TextView to main2, so the R.id.textview1 became available for the rest of app. Then I tried to fetch it by standard calling:
TextView tv = (TextView) findViewById( R.id.textview1 );
and it was always null. It turned out, that in onCreate constructor I was instantiating not main2, but the other one. I had:
setContentView(R.layout.main);
instead of
setContentView(R.layout.main2);
I noticed this after I arrived here, on the site.
#Override
protected void onStart() {
// use findViewById() here instead of in onCreate()
}
A answer for those using ExpandableListView and run into this question based on it's title.
I had this error attempting to work with TextViews in my child and group views as part of an ExpandableListView implementation.
You can use something like the following in your implementations of the getChildView() and getGroupView() methods.
if (convertView == null) {
LayoutInflater inflater = (LayoutInflater) myContext.getSystemService(Context.LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE);
convertView = inflater.inflate(R.layout.child_layout, null);
}
I found this here.
FWIW, I don't see that anyone solved this in quite the same way as I needed to. No complaints at compile time, but I was getting a null view at runtime, and calling things in the proper order. That is,
findViewById()
after
setContentView().
The problem turned out that my view is defined in content_main.xml, but in my activity_main.xml, I lacked this one statement:
<include layout="#layout/content_main" />
When I added that to activity_main.xml, no more NullPointer.
I'm pretty new to Android/Eclipse, by mistake I added the UI stuff to activity_main.xml instead of fragment_main.xml. Took me some hours to figure that out...
I had this same problem. I was using a third-party library that allows you to override their adapter for a GridView and to specify your own layout for each GridView cell.
I finally realized what was happening. Eclipse was still using the library's layout xml file for each cell in the GridView, even though it gave no indication of this. In my custom adapter, it indicated that it was using the xml resource from my own project even though at runtime, it wasn't.
So what I did was to make sure my custom xml layouts and ids were different from those still sitting in the library, cleaned the project and then it started reading the correct custom layouts that were in my project.
In short, be careful if you're overriding a third-party library's adapter and specifying your own layout xml for the adapter to use. If your layout inside your project has the same file name as that in the library, you might encounter a really difficult-to-find bug!
In my particular case, I was trying to add a footer to a ListView. The following call in onCreate() was returning null.
TextView footerView = (TextView) placesListView.findViewById(R.id.footer);
Changing this to inflate the footer view instead of finding it by ID solved this issue.
View footerView = ((LayoutInflater) getSystemService(Context.LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE)).inflate(R.layout.footer_view, null, false);
Just wanted to throw my specific case in here. Might help someone down the line.
I was using the directive in my Android UI XML like this:
Parent view:
<FrameLayout
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:tag="home_phone"
android:background="#color/colorPrimary">
...
<include
layout="#layout/retry_button"
android:visibility="gone" />
Child view (retry_button):
<com.foo.RetryButton
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:id="#+id/retry"
android:layout_gravity="center"
android:orientation="vertical"
android:layout_width="100dp"
android:layout_height="140dp">
.findViewById(R.id.retry) would always return null. But, if I moved the ID from the child view into the include tag, it started working.
Fixed parent:
<FrameLayout
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:tag="home_phone"
android:background="#color/colorPrimary">
...
<include
layout="#layout/retry_button"
android:id="#+id/retry"
android:visibility="gone" />
Fixed child:
<com.foo.RetryButton
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_gravity="center"
android:orientation="vertical"
android:layout_width="100dp"
android:layout_height="140dp">
In my case, I was using ExpandableListView and I had set android:transcriptMode="normal". This was causing few children in expandable group to disappear and I used to get NULL exception when ever I used scroll the list.
For me I had two xml layouts for the same activity - one in portrait mode and one in landscape. Of course I had changed the id of an object in the landscape xml but had forgotten to make the same change in the portrait version. Make sure if you change one you do the same to the other xml or you will not get an error until you run/debug it and it can't find the id you didn't change. Oh dumb mistakes, why must you punish me so?
Set the activity content from a layout resource.
ie.,setContentView(R.layout.basicXml);
In addition of the above solutions you make sure the
tools:context=".TakeMultipleImages"
in the layout is same value in the mainfest.xml file :
android:name=".TakeMultipleImages" for the same activity element.
it is occur when use copy and paste to create new activity
I have the same problem, but I think its worth sharing with you guys.
If you have to findViewById in custom layout, for example:
public class MiniPlayerControllBar extends LinearLayout {
//code
}
you cannot get the view in constructor.
You should call findViewById after view has inflated.
Their is a method you can override onFinishInflate
My case is none like above, no solutions worked. I assume my view was too deep into layout hierarchy. I moved it one level up and it was not null anymore.
INFLATE THE LAYOUT !! (which contains the id)
In my case findViewById() returned null, because the layout in which the element was written, was not inflated...
Eg.
fragment_layout.xml
<ListView
android:id="#+id/listview">
findViewById(R.id.listview) returned null, because I had not done
inflater.inflate(R.layout.fragment_layout, ..., ...);
before it.
Hope this answer helps some of y'all.
In my case I had inflated the layout but the child views were returning null. Originally I had this:
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_history);
footerView = ((LayoutInflater) getApplicationContext().getSystemService(Context.LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE)).inflate(R.layout.listview_footer, null, false);
pbSpinner = (ProgressBar) findViewById(R.id.pbListviewFooter);
tvText = (TextView) findViewById(R.id.tvListviewFooter);
...
}
However, when I changed it to the following it worked:
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_history);
footerView = ((LayoutInflater) getApplicationContext().getSystemService(Context.LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE)).inflate(R.layout.listview_footer, null, false);
pbSpinner = (ProgressBar) footerView.findViewById(R.id.pbListviewFooter);
tvText = (TextView) footerView.findViewById(R.id.tvListviewFooter);
...
}
The key was to specifically reference the already inflated layout in order to get the child views. That is, to add footerView:
footerView.findViewById...
It crashed for me because one of fields in my activity id was matching with id in an other activity. I fixed it by giving a unique id.
In my loginActivity.xml password field id was "password". In my registration activity I just fixed it by giving id r_password, then it returned not null object:
password = (EditText)findViewById(R.id.r_password);
In my experience, it seems that this can also happen when your code is called after OnDestroyView (when the fragment is on the back stack.) If you are updating the UI on input from a BroadCastReceiver, you ought to check if this is the case.
findViewById also can return null if you're inside a Fragment. As described here: findViewById in Fragment
You should call getView() to return the top level View inside a Fragment. Then you can find the layout items (buttons, textviews, etc)
In my case, findViewById returned null when I moved the call from a parent object into an adapter object instantiated by the parent. After trying tricks listed here without success, I moved the findViewById back into the parent object and passed the result as a parameter during instantiation of the adapter object.
For example, I did this in parent object:
Spinner hdSpinner = (Spinner)view.findViewById(R.id.accountsSpinner);
Then I passed the hdSpinner as a parameter during creation of the adapter object:
mTransactionAdapter = new TransactionAdapter(getActivity(),
R.layout.transactions_list_item, null, from, to, 0, hdSpinner);
I was facing a similar problem when I was trying to do a custom view for a ListView.
I solved it simply by doing this:
public View getView(int i, View view, ViewGroup viewGroup) {
// Gets the inflater
LayoutInflater inflater = LayoutInflater.from(this.contexto);
// Inflates the layout
ConstraintLayout cl2 = (ConstraintLayout)
inflater.inflate(R.layout.custom_list_view, viewGroup, false);
//Insted of calling just findViewById, I call de cl2.findViewById method. cl2 is the layout I have just inflated.
TextView tv1 = (TextView)cl2.findViewById(cl2);
Ways to debug and find the issue:
Comment out all findViewById in your activity.
Comment out everything except onCreate and setContentView
Run the project and see if any layout is set
In my case, I was using activity_main.xml in both my app module and also my library module. So when I performed the above steps, instead of the layout which I designed in the library, the layout inside app module was inflated.
So I changed the activity_main.xml file name to activity_main_lib.xml.
So make sure you do not have any duplicate layout names in your whole project.
The issue for me was that I had two layouts with the same file name activity_main.xml. (The layouts were in different libraries but in the same app) The issue was solved by renaming one of them to a unique name.
For me it returned null because the given control was (programmatically) hidden. When I put a condition to call findViewByID(id) only when the control is visible, it started working again.
For me it was only null when using Evaluate Expression or the Debug Watch View of the IDE.
I am trying to set the visibility of a button based on a certain condition in a listview.
Context : The listview has parameters for response to a post . It contains title,description etc of the response along with a voteup button.Only the user who is the owner of the parent post should be able to see the button so that he can vote up a response.
The java part of the code where i am trying to set the visibility of the button:
adapter= new SimpleAdapter(MainActivity.this, list,
R.layout.response_list, columns, mapping); //response_list is the xml layout file where response parameters are defined.
ListView listView = (ListView) findViewById(R.id.listallresponses); //listallresponses is the id of response_list layout file.
if (!parent.equals(userLoggedin)) { //"parent" is the userid of the parent post. "userLoggedin" is the current user who is viewing the parent post and its responses.
LayoutInflater li = LayoutInflater.from(this);
View v = li.inflate(R.layout.response_list, null, false);
Button upVoteButton = (Button) v
.findViewById(R.id.upvoteButton); //upvoteButton is the one whose visibility we are talking about.
upVoteButton.setVisibility(View.GONE);
}
listView.setAdapter(adapter);
The response_list.xml where i am defining the parameters for a response is below :
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<RelativeLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
xmlns:tools="http://schemas.android.com/tools"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:id="#+id/responseList"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:orientation="vertical"
android:padding="6dip" >
<!-- Other views are present here-->
<Button
android:id="#+id/upvoteButton"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:onClick="upVoteResponse"
android:text="VoteUp"/>
The problem : upvoteButton is always visible in the response list even if the user logged in is not equal to the owner of the parent post . Would like to know how i can make it work ! Thanks in advance.
Note : My familiarity with Android is only five months . I have searched quite a bit to figure out how to make this work ,but could not succeed till now.
LayoutInflater li = LayoutInflater.from(this);
View v = li.inflate(R.layout.response_list, null, false);
Button upVoteButton = (Button) v.findViewById(R.id.upvoteButton);
upVoteButton.setVisibility(View.GONE);
The view "v" & "upVoteButton" referenced here in line 2 & 3 are not visible any where. PLease note that you have inflated the view "v" and "upVoteButton" have been inflated in memory but not in User Interface.
The view and button referenced in your code are NOT AT ALL the one which you actually you want to reference.
You should not inflate any view inside your if-block, instead you must use the getView() method's parameters - View and Position to achieve your goal.
i have a row of buttins created like this
i want to change the background colour at runtime in code.
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.main);
LinearLayout track1 = (LinearLayout)findViewById(R.id.my_toggle_container);
for (int i = 0; i<32; i++) {
ToggleButton tgl = new ToggleButton(this);
tgl.setId(i);
...
track1.addView(tgl);
this names the id of the togglebuttons 1, 2, 3... (i presume?)
i have an int variable called 'xBtn' that changes 1, 2,..
this is how i get a reference to the button using xBtn
String buttonID = ""+xBtn;
int resID = getResources().getIdentifier(buttonID, "id", "com.thing");
//find the button
ToggleButton tb = (ToggleButton) findViewById(resID);
//change its colour
tb.setBackgroundColor(Color.BLUE);
it crashes on the setBackgroundColor line.
it may be obvious to someone whats wrong and thats what im hoping
any help would be totaly ace ta
thanks
main.xml
<LinearLayout android:layout_width="wrap_content" android:layout_height="match_parent" android:id="#+id/my_toggle_container" android:orientation="vertical">
The id of your togglebuttons is gonna be a number from 1 to 32... However, trying to find the toggle button by id will return null because simply instantiating a new toggle button and giving an id wont help you. findViewById looks in the parent view for a child view with the specified id. If you havent added that toggle button with that id to the view, then findViewById will return null. I am 99.99% sure even without looking at the log, that it crashes because you are calling setBackgroundColor on a null object.
In other words, the id that you set a view to is only relevant once the view is actually added to a parent view. In your case you are probably trying to add these toggle buttons to your main content view, in which case you need grab hold of that view that you used for setContentView and call addView on that view and pass in each new toggle button. Note that this will probably not look right unless you also specify layoutparams for the togglebuttons.
EDIT
If thats your entire main.xml, then you've got other issues. Post the full xml file. In any event, you still are going to have to do what I've said, which is to grab hold of the view or a child view of that view and then add the toggle buttons to it via addView (after giving the togglebuttons their proper ids). Once the button has been added, then you can find it. Note though that if you're gonna add the toggle buttons to a child view of your main view, then you'll likely have to grab hold of that child view and call findViewById on THAT.
For example, you can do a nested call like this. findViewById(1) <--- gets you the LinearLayout or whatever inside of your main content view, then once you have that you can call addView on it. So LinearLayout ll = (LinearLayout)findViewById(someNumber); ll.addView(tb);
Try to use the method setTag() , and then you can get all your ToggleButton by using : findViewByTag();
Perhaps tb is null? Could you check that out?
To expand on what LuxuryMode said... What gets an ID INTO your java is inflating it via setContentView and setting it as content. That's why it's ok to have overlapping (duplicate) IDs in different layouts. You can have #+id/submit_button in layout1.xml and in layout2.xml and the Activity will get you the object via findViewById(R.id.submit_button) based on which one you have loaded into setContentView() at any given moment.
So, we're all guessing that you're probably not setting the content view and hoping that the code will find your object in your non inflated XML, which it won't. Which would lead (as everyone has guessed) to you now dealing with a null object, which you obviously can't set a background color on.
I know it gets confusing cause you have the XML RIGHT THERE!!! But the reality is that the xml isn't "alive". It's just stuff for you to look at until you have tasked the Application with inflating it and converting all of it into Android objects of some kind. A lot of the time this is done mostly transparently to you, so, it's easy to forget that none of these things really exist.
It's very likely that tb is null, because findViewById() didn't go as you expected.
You can verify this by surrounding the erroneous line with try.. catch block:
try {
tb.setBackgroundColor(Color.BLUE);
} catch (Exception e){
}
and watch for the message of e. It's likely to be null pointer exception.
In fact, I think you should not use getResources().getIdentifier(buttonID, "id", "com.thing") in the first place. It seems to me that all these resources are continuously numbered in R file, thus you should simply get the first id (as an integer), and then increment on that.
That is, you should do things like:
// The following code is not tested; I just wrote it here on SO.
for (int resID = R.id.button1; resID <= 32; resID++) {
ToggleButton tb = (ToggleButton) findViewById(resID);
tb.setBackgroundColor(Color.BLUE);
}
this should make all 32 buttons blue.
If I have created a button in xml and i want to use this button multiple times but give them unique id's, how do i do that? I don't know how many buttons i will have, so i can't create a number of buttons in my xml-file. I want to be able to change the buttons id while running the program. I've tried to do button.setId() but then everything breaks and wont work.
You can make an independent button.xml file (or even do it as a style), then inflate that in your code as needed.
For instance, let's say you have an array of strings representing a list of countries, and you want a button for each country. This is nice because if you add or remove any, you only have to modify the array, not your xml or the for loop.
LayoutInflater inflater = (LayoutInflater) getSystemService(LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE);
String[] countries = {"US", "Canada", "UK", "Australia"};
String country;
// Don't forget to add the following layout to your xml.
LinearLayout buttonLayout = (LinearLayout) findViewById(R.id.buttonLayout);
buttonLayout.removeAllViews();
for (int i = 0; i < countries.length(); i++) {
country = countries.getString(i);
Button temp = (Button)inflater.inflate(R.layout.button);
// Don't forget that id is an int, not a string.
button.setId(id);
button.setText(country);
buttonLayout.addView(temp);
}
Bonus: you can also include this button in another xml file, and update the id in the include statement as follows:
<include layout="#layout/button"
android:id="#+id/button1"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:text="Button 1"
/>
The question is not very clear, but I think you can use dynamic button creation.
Button button = new Button();
// init it here
layout.add(button, new LayoutParams(...));
give id in xml like
<Button android:id="#+id/close"
android:layout_width="fill_parent"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:layout_alignParentBottom="true"
android:text="#string/title_close" />
When you are not sure of the instances you need in your application of a certain widget, then go for dynamic creation.
XML is mostly for static creation.
First of all: yes, I read all the other threads on this topic. And not only those from this site... (you see, I'm a little frustrated)
Most of them come with the advice to use android:id instead of just id in the XML file. I did.
From others, I learned, that View.findViewById works different than Activity.findViewById. I handled that, too.
In my location_layout.xml, I use:
<FrameLayout .... >
<some.package.MyCustomView ... />
<LinearLayout ... >
<TextView ...
android:id="#+id/txtLat" />
...
</LinearLayout>
</FrameLayout>
In my Activity I do:
...
setContentView( R.layout.location_layout );
and in my custom view class:
...
TextView tv = (TextView) findViewById( R.id.txtLat );
which returns null. Doing this, my Activity works fine. So maybe it's because of the Activity.findViewById and View.findViewById differences. So I stored the context passed to the customs view constructor locally and tried:
...
TextView tv = (TextView) ((Activity) context).findViewById( R.id.txtLat );
which also returned null.
Then, I changed my custom view to extend ViewGroup instead View and changed the location_layout.xml to let the TextView be a direct child of my custom view, so that the View.findViewById should work as supposed. Suprise: it didn't solve anything.
So what the heck am I doing wrong?
I'll appreciate any comments.
which returns null
Possibly because you are calling it too early. Wait until onFinishInflate(). Here is a sample project demonstrating a custom View accessing its contents.
Possibly, you are calling findViewById before calling setContentView?
If that's the case, try calling findViewById AFTER calling setContentView
Make sure you don't have multiple versions of your layout for different screen densities. I ran into this problem once when adding a new id to an existing layout but forgot to update the hdpi version. If you forget to update all versions of the layout file it will work for some screen densities but not others.
FindViewById can be null if you call the wrong super constructor in a custom view. The ID tag is part of attrs, so if you ignore attrs, you delete the ID.
This would be wrong
public CameraSurfaceView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context);
}
This is correct
public CameraSurfaceView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context,attrs);
}
Alongside the classic causes, mentioned elsewhere:
Make sure you've called setContentView() before findViewById()
Make sure that the id you want is in the view or layout you've given to setContentView()
Make sure that the id isn't accidentally duplicated in different layouts
There is one I have found for custom views in standard layouts, which goes against the documentation:
In theory you can create a custom view and add it to a layout (see here). However, I have found that in such situations, sometimes the id attribute works for all the views in the layout except the custom ones. The solution I use is:
Replace each custom view with a FrameLayout with the same layout properties as you would like the custom view to have. Give it an appropriate id, say frame_for_custom_view.
In onCreate:
setContentView(R.layout.my_layout);
FrameView fv = findViewById(R.id.frame_for_custom_layout);
MyCustomView cv = new MyCustomView(context);
fv.addView(cv);
which puts the custom view in the frame.
In my case, I had 2 activites in my project, main.xml and main2.xml. From the beginning, main2 was a copy of main, and everything worked well, until I added new TextView to main2, so the R.id.textview1 became available for the rest of app. Then I tried to fetch it by standard calling:
TextView tv = (TextView) findViewById( R.id.textview1 );
and it was always null. It turned out, that in onCreate constructor I was instantiating not main2, but the other one. I had:
setContentView(R.layout.main);
instead of
setContentView(R.layout.main2);
I noticed this after I arrived here, on the site.
#Override
protected void onStart() {
// use findViewById() here instead of in onCreate()
}
A answer for those using ExpandableListView and run into this question based on it's title.
I had this error attempting to work with TextViews in my child and group views as part of an ExpandableListView implementation.
You can use something like the following in your implementations of the getChildView() and getGroupView() methods.
if (convertView == null) {
LayoutInflater inflater = (LayoutInflater) myContext.getSystemService(Context.LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE);
convertView = inflater.inflate(R.layout.child_layout, null);
}
I found this here.
FWIW, I don't see that anyone solved this in quite the same way as I needed to. No complaints at compile time, but I was getting a null view at runtime, and calling things in the proper order. That is,
findViewById()
after
setContentView().
The problem turned out that my view is defined in content_main.xml, but in my activity_main.xml, I lacked this one statement:
<include layout="#layout/content_main" />
When I added that to activity_main.xml, no more NullPointer.
I'm pretty new to Android/Eclipse, by mistake I added the UI stuff to activity_main.xml instead of fragment_main.xml. Took me some hours to figure that out...
I had this same problem. I was using a third-party library that allows you to override their adapter for a GridView and to specify your own layout for each GridView cell.
I finally realized what was happening. Eclipse was still using the library's layout xml file for each cell in the GridView, even though it gave no indication of this. In my custom adapter, it indicated that it was using the xml resource from my own project even though at runtime, it wasn't.
So what I did was to make sure my custom xml layouts and ids were different from those still sitting in the library, cleaned the project and then it started reading the correct custom layouts that were in my project.
In short, be careful if you're overriding a third-party library's adapter and specifying your own layout xml for the adapter to use. If your layout inside your project has the same file name as that in the library, you might encounter a really difficult-to-find bug!
In my particular case, I was trying to add a footer to a ListView. The following call in onCreate() was returning null.
TextView footerView = (TextView) placesListView.findViewById(R.id.footer);
Changing this to inflate the footer view instead of finding it by ID solved this issue.
View footerView = ((LayoutInflater) getSystemService(Context.LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE)).inflate(R.layout.footer_view, null, false);
Just wanted to throw my specific case in here. Might help someone down the line.
I was using the directive in my Android UI XML like this:
Parent view:
<FrameLayout
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:tag="home_phone"
android:background="#color/colorPrimary">
...
<include
layout="#layout/retry_button"
android:visibility="gone" />
Child view (retry_button):
<com.foo.RetryButton
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:id="#+id/retry"
android:layout_gravity="center"
android:orientation="vertical"
android:layout_width="100dp"
android:layout_height="140dp">
.findViewById(R.id.retry) would always return null. But, if I moved the ID from the child view into the include tag, it started working.
Fixed parent:
<FrameLayout
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:tag="home_phone"
android:background="#color/colorPrimary">
...
<include
layout="#layout/retry_button"
android:id="#+id/retry"
android:visibility="gone" />
Fixed child:
<com.foo.RetryButton
xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
android:layout_gravity="center"
android:orientation="vertical"
android:layout_width="100dp"
android:layout_height="140dp">
In my case, I was using ExpandableListView and I had set android:transcriptMode="normal". This was causing few children in expandable group to disappear and I used to get NULL exception when ever I used scroll the list.
For me I had two xml layouts for the same activity - one in portrait mode and one in landscape. Of course I had changed the id of an object in the landscape xml but had forgotten to make the same change in the portrait version. Make sure if you change one you do the same to the other xml or you will not get an error until you run/debug it and it can't find the id you didn't change. Oh dumb mistakes, why must you punish me so?
Set the activity content from a layout resource.
ie.,setContentView(R.layout.basicXml);
In addition of the above solutions you make sure the
tools:context=".TakeMultipleImages"
in the layout is same value in the mainfest.xml file :
android:name=".TakeMultipleImages" for the same activity element.
it is occur when use copy and paste to create new activity
I have the same problem, but I think its worth sharing with you guys.
If you have to findViewById in custom layout, for example:
public class MiniPlayerControllBar extends LinearLayout {
//code
}
you cannot get the view in constructor.
You should call findViewById after view has inflated.
Their is a method you can override onFinishInflate
My case is none like above, no solutions worked. I assume my view was too deep into layout hierarchy. I moved it one level up and it was not null anymore.
INFLATE THE LAYOUT !! (which contains the id)
In my case findViewById() returned null, because the layout in which the element was written, was not inflated...
Eg.
fragment_layout.xml
<ListView
android:id="#+id/listview">
findViewById(R.id.listview) returned null, because I had not done
inflater.inflate(R.layout.fragment_layout, ..., ...);
before it.
Hope this answer helps some of y'all.
In my case I had inflated the layout but the child views were returning null. Originally I had this:
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_history);
footerView = ((LayoutInflater) getApplicationContext().getSystemService(Context.LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE)).inflate(R.layout.listview_footer, null, false);
pbSpinner = (ProgressBar) findViewById(R.id.pbListviewFooter);
tvText = (TextView) findViewById(R.id.tvListviewFooter);
...
}
However, when I changed it to the following it worked:
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_history);
footerView = ((LayoutInflater) getApplicationContext().getSystemService(Context.LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE)).inflate(R.layout.listview_footer, null, false);
pbSpinner = (ProgressBar) footerView.findViewById(R.id.pbListviewFooter);
tvText = (TextView) footerView.findViewById(R.id.tvListviewFooter);
...
}
The key was to specifically reference the already inflated layout in order to get the child views. That is, to add footerView:
footerView.findViewById...
It crashed for me because one of fields in my activity id was matching with id in an other activity. I fixed it by giving a unique id.
In my loginActivity.xml password field id was "password". In my registration activity I just fixed it by giving id r_password, then it returned not null object:
password = (EditText)findViewById(R.id.r_password);
In my experience, it seems that this can also happen when your code is called after OnDestroyView (when the fragment is on the back stack.) If you are updating the UI on input from a BroadCastReceiver, you ought to check if this is the case.
findViewById also can return null if you're inside a Fragment. As described here: findViewById in Fragment
You should call getView() to return the top level View inside a Fragment. Then you can find the layout items (buttons, textviews, etc)
In my case, findViewById returned null when I moved the call from a parent object into an adapter object instantiated by the parent. After trying tricks listed here without success, I moved the findViewById back into the parent object and passed the result as a parameter during instantiation of the adapter object.
For example, I did this in parent object:
Spinner hdSpinner = (Spinner)view.findViewById(R.id.accountsSpinner);
Then I passed the hdSpinner as a parameter during creation of the adapter object:
mTransactionAdapter = new TransactionAdapter(getActivity(),
R.layout.transactions_list_item, null, from, to, 0, hdSpinner);
I was facing a similar problem when I was trying to do a custom view for a ListView.
I solved it simply by doing this:
public View getView(int i, View view, ViewGroup viewGroup) {
// Gets the inflater
LayoutInflater inflater = LayoutInflater.from(this.contexto);
// Inflates the layout
ConstraintLayout cl2 = (ConstraintLayout)
inflater.inflate(R.layout.custom_list_view, viewGroup, false);
//Insted of calling just findViewById, I call de cl2.findViewById method. cl2 is the layout I have just inflated.
TextView tv1 = (TextView)cl2.findViewById(cl2);
Ways to debug and find the issue:
Comment out all findViewById in your activity.
Comment out everything except onCreate and setContentView
Run the project and see if any layout is set
In my case, I was using activity_main.xml in both my app module and also my library module. So when I performed the above steps, instead of the layout which I designed in the library, the layout inside app module was inflated.
So I changed the activity_main.xml file name to activity_main_lib.xml.
So make sure you do not have any duplicate layout names in your whole project.
The issue for me was that I had two layouts with the same file name activity_main.xml. (The layouts were in different libraries but in the same app) The issue was solved by renaming one of them to a unique name.
For me it returned null because the given control was (programmatically) hidden. When I put a condition to call findViewByID(id) only when the control is visible, it started working again.
For me it was only null when using Evaluate Expression or the Debug Watch View of the IDE.