I have two fragments that share informations with each other, in the first one I have an edit text and button widget.The second fragment is just a listview. Basically when the user clicks the button, it displays whatever is in the edit text widget in the second fragment. So if the user enter the text study and clicks the button the second fragment will display
Study
If the user then enters the text eat and clicks the button, the second fragment will display Study Eat
I am having so issues with displaying the texts
So far this is what I did
class FirstFragment : Fragment() {
override fun onCreateView(inflater: LayoutInflater, container: ViewGroup?,
savedInstanceState: Bundle?): View? {
viewModel = activity?.run { ViewModelProvider(this)[MyViewModel::class.java]
} ?: throw Exception("Invalid Activity")
val view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.one_fragment, container, false)
val button = view.findViewById<Button>(R.id.vbutton)
val value = view.findViewById<EditText>(R.id.textView)
button.setOnClickListener {
}
return view;
}
}
class SecondFragment : Fragment() {
lateinit var viewModel: MyViewModel
@SuppressLint("MissingInflatedId")
override fun onCreateView(inflater: LayoutInflater, container: ViewGroup?,
savedInstanceState: Bundle?): View? {
viewModel = activity?.run { ViewModelProvider(this)[MyViewModel::class.java]
} ?: throw Exception("Invalid Activity")
val view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.page3_fragment, container, false)
val valueView = v.findViewById<TextView>(R.id.textView)
return view
The problem I am having is how to display the texts
CodePudding user response:
If I undestand you correctly, you want to share data between fragments? If yes, you can do that with "shared" viewModel. For example:
class FirstFragment : Fragment() {
private var _binding: FragmentFirstBinding? = null
private val binding get() = _binding!!
private val sharedViewModel by activityViewModels<SharedViewModel>()
override fun onCreateView(
inflater: LayoutInflater,
container: ViewGroup?,
savedInstanceState: Bundle?
): View {
_binding = FragmentFirstBinding.inflate(inflater, container, false)
binding.buttonChangeFragment.setOnClickListener {
/*
You can change data here, or in navigateWithNavController() from
activity (You already have an instance of your viewModel in activity)
*/
sharedViewModel.changeData(binding.myEditText.text.toString())
if (requireActivity() is YourActivity)
(requireActivity() as YourActivity).navigateWithNavController()
}
return binding.root
}
}
class SecondFragment : Fragment() {
private var _binding: FragmentSecondBinding? = null
private val binding get() = _binding!!
private val sharedViewModel by activityViewModels<SharedViewModel>()
override fun onCreateView(
inflater: LayoutInflater,
container: ViewGroup?,
savedInstanceState: Bundle?
): View {
_binding = FragmentSecondBinding.inflate(inflater, container, false)
binding.secondFragmentText.text = sharedViewModel.someData.value
return binding.root
}
}
and your activity:
class YourActivity: AppCompatActivity() {
private lateinit var binding: YourActivityBinding
private lateinit var appBarConfiguration: AppBarConfiguration
private val sharedViewModel: SharedViewModel by lazy {
ViewModelProvider(
this
)[SharedViewModel::class.java]
}
private lateinit var navController: NavController
override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState)
binding = YourActivityBinding.inflate(LayoutInflater.from(this))
setContentView(binding.root)
navController = this.findNavController(R.id.nav_host_fragment)
appBarConfiguration = AppBarConfiguration(navController.graph)
}
/*
This function is just for test
*/
fun navigateWithNavController() {
navController.navigate(R.id.secondFragment)
}
override fun onSupportNavigateUp(): Boolean {
return NavigationUI.navigateUp(navController, appBarConfiguration)
}
}
And your viewModel should look something like this:
class SharedViewModel : ViewModel() {
private val _someData = MutableLiveData("")
val someData: LiveData<String>
get() = _someData
fun changeData(newData: String?) {
_someData.value = newData ?: _someData.value
}
}
CodePudding user response:
Your view model should have a backing list of the entered words. When a word is added, the list can be updated, and in turn you can update a LiveData that publishes the latest version of the list.
class MyViewModel: ViewModel() {
private val backingEntryList = mutableListOf<String>()
private val _entryListLiveData = MutableLiveData("")
val entryListLiveData : LiveData<String> get() = _entryListLiveData
fun addEntry(word: String) {
backingEntryList = word
_entryListLiveData.value = backingEntryList.toList() // use toList() to to get a safe copy
}
}
Your way of creating the shared view model is the hard way. The easy way is by using by activityViewModels()
.
I also suggest using the Fragment constructor that takes a layout argument, and then setting things up in onViewCreated
instead of onCreateView
. It's less boilerplate code to accomplish the same thing.
In the first fragment, you can add words when the button's clicked:
class FirstFragment : Fragment(R.layout.one_fragment) {
private val viewModel by activityViewModels<MyViewModel>()
override fun onViewCreated(view: View, savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
val button = view.findViewById<Button>(R.id.vbutton)
val value = view.findViewById<EditText>(R.id.textView)
button.setOnClickListener {
viewModel.addEntry(value.text.toString())
}
}
}
In the second fragment, you observe the live data:
class SecondFragment : Fragment(R.layout.page3_fragment) {
private val viewModel by activityViewModels<MyViewModel>()
override fun onViewCreated(view: View, savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
val valueView = view.findViewById<TextView>(R.id.textView)
viewModel.entryListLiveData.observe(viewLifecycleOwner) { entryList ->
valueView.text = entryList.joinToString(" ")
}
}
}