I’m working on a game for Android. To help implement it, my idea is to create a subclass of a view. I would then insert several instances of this class as children of the main view. Each instance would handle detecting when it was pressed (via OnTouchListener).
The problem I’m having now is how do I loop through all these sub-views so I can read their statuses and process them? (I.e. when they all reach a certain state something should happen).
Or is there a better way to have several objects on the screen that respond to touch and whose status I can check?
@jqpubliq Is right but if you really want to go through all Views you can simply use the getChildCount()
and getChildAt()
methods from ViewGroup
. A simple recursive method will do the rest.
I have made a small example of a recursive function:
public void recursiveLoopChildren(ViewGroup parent) {
for (int i = 0; i < parent.getChildCount(); i++) {
final View child = parent.getChildAt(i);
if (child instanceof ViewGroup) {
recursiveLoopChildren((ViewGroup) child);
// DO SOMETHING WITH VIEWGROUP, AFTER CHILDREN HAS BEEN LOOPED
} else {
if (child != null) {
// DO SOMETHING WITH VIEW
}
}
}
}
The function will start looping over al view elements inside a ViewGroup
(from first to last item), if a child is a ViewGroup
then restart the function with that child to retrieve all nested views inside that child.
Using Views
sounds like its going to be brutally difficult to render anything well if there is movement. You probably want to be drawing to a Canvas
or using OpenGL
unless you're doing something really static. Here's a great talk from last years I/O conference on making Android games. Its kind of long and you can skip about 15 minutes in. Also the source is available. That should give you a good idea of ways to go about things
The alternative
public static void recursivelyFindChildren(View view) {
if (view instanceof ViewGroup) {
//ViewGroup
ViewGroup viewGroup = (ViewGroup)view;
for (int i = 0; i < viewGroup.getChildCount(); i++) {
recursivelyFindChildren(viewGroup.getChildAt(i));
}
} else {
//View
}
}
Or you can return something you can use the next approach
@Nullable
private static WebView recursivelyFindWebView(View view) {
if (view instanceof ViewGroup) {
//ViewGroup
ViewGroup viewGroup = (ViewGroup)view;
if (!(viewGroup instanceof WebView)) {
for (int i = 0; i < viewGroup.getChildCount(); i++) {
WebView result = recursivelyFindWebView(viewGroup.getChildAt(i));
if (result != null) {
return result;
}
}
} else {
//WebView
WebView webView = (WebView)viewGroup;
return webView;
}
}
return null;
}
Try this. Takes all views inside a parent layout & returns an array list of views.
public List<View> getAllViews(ViewGroup layout){
List<View> views = new ArrayList<>();
for(int i =0; i< layout.getChildCount(); i++){
views.add(layout.getChildAt(i));
}
return views;
}