The solution to this is actually easier than I thought. You can simply add in your custom adapter's getView()
method a setOnClickListener() for the buttons you're using.
Any data associated with the button has to be added with myButton.setTag()
in the getView()
and can be accessed in the onClickListener via view.getTag()
I posted a detailed solution on my blog as a tutorial.
This is sort of an appendage @znq's answer...
There are many cases where you want to know the row position for a clicked item AND you want to know which view in the row was tapped. This is going to be a lot more important in tablet UIs.
You can do this with the following custom adapter:
private static class CustomCursorAdapter extends CursorAdapter {
protected ListView mListView;
protected static class RowViewHolder {
public TextView mTitle;
public TextView mText;
}
public CustomCursorAdapter(Activity activity) {
super();
mListView = activity.getListView();
}
@Override
public void bindView(View view, Context context, Cursor cursor) {
// do what you need to do
}
@Override
public View newView(Context context, Cursor cursor, ViewGroup parent) {
View view = View.inflate(context, R.layout.row_layout, null);
RowViewHolder holder = new RowViewHolder();
holder.mTitle = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.Title);
holder.mText = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.Text);
holder.mTitle.setOnClickListener(mOnTitleClickListener);
holder.mText.setOnClickListener(mOnTextClickListener);
view.setTag(holder);
return view;
}
private OnClickListener mOnTitleClickListener = new OnClickListener() {
@Override
public void onClick(View v) {
final int position = mListView.getPositionForView((View) v.getParent());
Log.v(TAG, "Title clicked, row %d", position);
}
};
private OnClickListener mOnTextClickListener = new OnClickListener() {
@Override
public void onClick(View v) {
final int position = mListView.getPositionForView((View) v.getParent());
Log.v(TAG, "Text clicked, row %d", position);
}
};
}
For future readers:
To select manually the buttons with the trackball use:
myListView.setItemsCanFocus(true);
And to disable the focus on the whole list items:
myListView.setFocusable(false);
myListView.setFocusableInTouchMode(false);
myListView.setClickable(false);
It works fine for me, I can click on buttons with touchscreen and also alows focus an click using keypad
I don't have much experience than above users but I faced this same issue and I Solved this with below Solution
<Button
android:id="@+id/btnRemove"
android:layout_width="0dp"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:layout_toRightOf="@+id/btnEdit"
android:layout_weight="1"
android:background="@drawable/btn"
android:text="@string/remove"
android:onClick="btnRemoveClick"
/>
btnRemoveClick Click event
public void btnRemoveClick(View v)
{
final int position = listviewItem.getPositionForView((View) v.getParent());
listItem.remove(position);
ItemAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
}
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