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问题:
I have an object where the text cycles and displays status messages. When the messages change, I want the click event of the object to change to take you to the activity that the message is relating to.
So, I have a TextView mTitleView
and I'm assigning the event like this.
public void setOnTitleClickListener(OnClickListener listener) {
mTitleView.setOnClickListener(listener);
}
How do I remove that click event? There are some status messages that do not have an actionable area so I'd like to turn off the click event. I'd also like to be able to cycle through these click events and dispose of them properly, but I'm unsure of the best practice.
回答1:
mTitleView.setOnClickListener(null)
should do the trick.
A better design might be to do a check of the status in the OnClickListener and then determine whether or not the click should do something vs adding and clearing click listeners.
回答2:
Note that if a view is non-clickable (a TextView for example), setting setOnClickListener(null)
will mean the view is clickable. Use mMyView.setClickable(false)
if you don't want your view to be clickable. For example, if you use a xml drawable for the background, which shows different colours for different states, if your view is still clickable, users can click on it and the different background colour will show, which may look weird.
回答3:
Perhaps setOnClickListener(null)
?
回答4:
Setting setOnClickListener(null)
is a good idea to remove click listener at runtime.
And also someone commented that calling View.hasOnClickListeners()
after this will return true
, NO my friend.
Here is the implementation of hasOnClickListeners()
taken from android.view.View
class
public boolean hasOnClickListeners() {
ListenerInfo li = mListenerInfo;
return (li != null && li.mOnClickListener != null);
}
Thank GOD. It checks for null
.
So everything is safe. Enjoy :-)
回答5:
Just put,it has worked for me
itemView.setOnClickListener(null);
回答6:
The above answers seem flighty and unreliable. I tried doing this with an ImageView in a simple Relative Layout and it did not disable the onClick event.
What did work for me was using setEnabled.
ImageView v = (ImageView)findViewByID(R.id.layoutV);
v.setEnabled(false);
You can then check whether the View is enabled with:
boolean ImageView.isEnabled();
Another option is to use setContentDescription(String string) and
String getContentDescription() to determine the status of a view.
回答7:
/**
* Remove an onclick listener
*
* @param view
* @author malin.myemail@gmail.com
* @website https://github.com/androidmalin
* @data 2016-05-16
*/
public static void unBingListener(View view) {
if (view != null) {
try {
if (view.hasOnClickListeners()) {
view.setOnClickListener(null);
}
if (view.getOnFocusChangeListener() != null) {
view.setOnFocusChangeListener(null);
}
if (view instanceof ViewGroup && !(view instanceof AdapterView)) {
ViewGroup viewGroup = (ViewGroup) view;
int viewGroupChildCount = viewGroup.getChildCount();
for (int i = 0; i < viewGroupChildCount; i++) {
unBingListener(viewGroup.getChildAt(i));
}
}
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}