Android: onListItemClick in Activity

2019-02-02 02:21发布

问题:

Previous time I asked a question here I learned a lot so I guess it's worth a shot to try it again.

I am using the lazy list by Fedor from this link: Lazy load of images in ListView

It's working like a charm. BUT, Fedor is making his main class extend Activity instead of ListActivity. Because of this, I am no longer able to use a listItemClick listener. Eclipse declares some errors around onListItemClick(). It works when I turn

    @Override
protected void onListItemClick(ListView l, View v, int position, long id) {
    super.onListItemClick(l, v, position, id);
     // Intent launcher here
}

into

   protected void onListItemClick(ListView l, View v, int position, long id) {
     // Intent launcher here
   }

But the intent launcher doesn't work. Neither does a toast notification.

When I turn the Activity in a ListActivity, Eclipse doesn't stagger, but my emulator gives me a force close.

How do I get

  • Either onListItemClick() click in the activity (preferable)
  • Or do I transform the code into a ListActivity without force close?

Thanks a lot in advance.

回答1:

I am writing my answer as:

1) the code by @Falmarri needs some update
2) My suggested edit was totally rejected XD
3) Stackoverflow is not allowing me to write a comment.

Here is the code:

ListView listView = (ListView) findViewById(R.id.my_listview_in_layout);
listview.setOnItemClickListener(new AdapterView.OnItemClickListener(){
    @Override
    public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> parent, View view, int position, long id){
        //Do stuff
        //...
    }
});


Reference: According to android.widget.AdapterView.OnItemClickListener , public method onItemClick() is the method invoked when an item is clicked {instead of unknown protected method onListItemClick() }



回答2:

A listItemClickListener is attached to a ListView. When you changed ListActivity to Activity, your class no longer has a view associated with it and thus an Activity class has no idea what to do with an onListItemClickListener.

You just have to attached a listener to your ListView:

listview.setOnItemClickListener(new OnItemClickListener(){
    @Override
    protected void onListItemClick(AdapterView<?> parent, View view, int position, long id){
        //Do stuff
    }
});


回答3:

I have been working on this all day and after making my own ArrayAdapter I couldn't figure out how to change classes in my list.

Here's how I found out how to do it. After I called my array i simply finished out my code in that method by doing.

ListView lv =getListView();
lv.setOnItemClickListener(this);

Then after all my text i put

public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> arg0, View arg1, int position,
            long arg3) {
    String item = (String) getListAdapter().getItem(position);

    if (item.equals("Economy"))
    {
        Intent intent = new Intent(packages.this, economy.class);
        startActivity(intent);
    }
    else if (item.equals("Basic"))
    {
        Intent intent = new Intent(packages.this, basic.class);
        startActivity(intent);
    }
    else if (item.equals("Professional"))
    {
        Intent intent = new Intent(packages.this, professional.class);
        startActivity(intent);
    }
    else if (item.equals("Custom Applications"))
    {
        Intent intent = new Intent(packages.this, applications.class);
        startActivity(intent);
    }
}

Between I managed to completely customize my ListView with custom font and backgrounds. I'm sure a ton of you don't really care. But I'm exited and was hoping by posting this that I might help someone in the future.



回答4:

For a non-ListActivity to have an item-clicked-listener for a ListView, you have to call the setOnItemClickedListener() on the ListView (you may need to get that using findViewById() if it's coming from XML)

Rather than just overriding ListActivity's onListItemClickListener(), here you'd have your invoking Activity implement AdapterView.onItemClickedListener() and pass it as the parameter to setOnItemClickedListener().

(If you read the source code for ListActivity (which I recommend), you'll see it just does exactly that behind the scenes by creating an internal listener object that calls your overridden onListItemClick()).



回答5:

If you are using ListActivity then you want to do something like this:

public class YourClass extends ListActivity implements OnItemClickListener{

    @Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle icicle){
        super.onCreate(icicle);
        setContentView(R.layout.your_layout);

        getListView().setOnItemClickListener(this);
    }

    @Override
    public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> arg0, View arg1, int arg2, long arg3) {
        // your stuff here
    }
}

This is not the only way to set an OnItemClickListener. Look other answers. This is the way I like to do it since it's clearer and easier to read.



回答6:

FE.java

package com.example.rfe;

import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileNotFoundException;
import java.io.FileReader;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Scanner;
import android.app.ListActivity;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.view.Menu;
import android.view.View;
import android.widget.ArrayAdapter;
import android.widget.ListView;
import android.widget.Toast;
public class FE extends ListActivity {
 public List<String> d = null;
    @Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
        setContentView(R.layout.file);
        d = new ArrayList<String>();    
        Scanner in = null;
        File f = new File("/sdcard/input.txt");
        try
        {
        in = new Scanner(new FileReader(f));
        while(in.hasNext()==true)
        {
            d.add(in.nextLine());   
        }
        }catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
            // TODO Auto-generated catch block
            e.printStackTrace();
    }
        ArrayAdapter<String> fileList =
                  new ArrayAdapter<String>(this, R.layout.row, d);
                 setListAdapter(fileList);
    }
 @Override
 protected void onListItemClick(ListView l, View v, int position, long id) 
 {
     String selection = l.getItemAtPosition(position).toString();
     Toast.makeText(this, selection, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
    super.onListItemClick(l, v, position, id);
}
}


回答7:

Assume you have datasource Fruit contain few strings. You can define the onCreate() as following:

setListAdapter(new ArrayAdapter<String>(this, R.layout.list_fruit,
                FRUITS)); // context is this, style is list_fruit, Context, ,data_binding to FRUITs

And then write the onListItemClick() as following:

protected void onListItemClick(ListView parent, View v, int position, long id) {
                Toast.makeText(this,  " You selected  " + FRUITS[position], Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
        }

I hope it works for you :)



回答8:

I have simply added following in onCreate():

    listvview.setOnItemClickListener(new OnItemClickListener() {
        public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> arg0, View arg1, int arg2,
                long arg3) {
            setPaymentDetails();
        }
    });

Outside of onCreate() added setPaymentDetails():

protected void setPaymentDetails()
{
    Intent intent = new Intent(this, SetPaymentDetailsActivity.class);
    startActivity(intent);
}