I need to design the following screen, and I need your advice:
Explanation:
The title is static/fixed and I don't need to do anything with it.
Yellow: this is the interesting part, I need to design a ViewPager
like screen that has the capability to scroll left/right for Max 4 screens.
Red: In every screen I need to add a Table/Grid that can be scrollable as well if it's not fits screen size.
Green: The page switching can be done using the green buttons in the bottom of the screen or by scrolling the ViewPager
.
The Question Is: Can this behavior be achieve using a ViewPager
or should I use Fragments
? If Fragment is the way to go, then how would I implement the page switching using the sliding gesture? if it's a ViewPager
then how to add the inside scrolling and how to control it using the buttons at the bottom?
Any help would be appreciated, Thanks.
Steps for implementing viewpager: Adding the ViewPager widget to the XML layout (usually the main_layout). Creating an Adapter by extending the FragmentPagerAdapter or FragmentStatePagerAdapter class.
yes...you can use View instead of Fragment in viewpager. Here you can Find Whole example that will help you to achieve Viewpager without Fragment. Go through this documentation. Save this answer.
ViewPager2 is an improved version of the ViewPager library that offers enhanced functionality and addresses common difficulties with using ViewPager . If your app already uses ViewPager , read this page to learn more about migrating to ViewPager2 .
ViewPager save Fragment in FragmentManager with particular tags, So We can get ViewPager's fragment by FragmentManager class by providing tag. And ViewPager provide tag to each fragment by following syntax : Fragment page = getSupportFragmentManager(). findFragmentByTag("android:switcher:" + R.
I think this should be tackled with a Non Swipeable ViewPager
. There is no way the view pager and the underlying Fragment
s should respond to the swiping gesture. The methods to override to disable swiping within the ViewPager
are:
onTouchEvent()
- returns false
.onInterceptTouchEvent()
- returns false
.Refer to this SO question for more information on how to achieve this.
Next up you want to be using Fragment
s within each of your pager holders. So we're building the following layout:
Within the parent activity a FragmentPagerAdapter
is instantiated and your tabs added with a tag:
@Override
protected void onCreate(final Bundle saveInstanceState) {
final FragmentPagerAdapter myTabAdapter = new MyFragmentPagerAdapter(
<Your ViewPager View>, <Your activity context, this>);
myTabAdapter.addTab(getActionBar().newTab(), "YOUR TAG", "Your Title");
// etc...
}
So this gives us the frame of the diagram above. A hosting activity, containing a ViewPager
and the underlying tabs. Next up is getting the Fragment
s (containing your tables) into each of the respective tabs. This is handled by the FragmentPagerAdapter
implementation:
private class MyFragmentPagerAdapter extends FragmentPagerAdapter implements
ActionBar.TabListener, ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener {
/**
* Constructs a pager adapter to back a {@link ViewPager}.
*
* @param pager
* The {@link ViewPager} widget.
* @param activityContext
* The context the widget is being added under.
*/
public SpotMenuFragmentPagerAdapter(final ViewPager pager,
final Context activityContext) {
super(getFragmentManager());
pager.setAdapter(this);
this.context = activityContext;
}
/**
* Adds a tab to the hosting activity action bar.
*
* @param newTab
* The tab to add.
* @param tag
* The tab tag for id purposes.
* @param label
* The label of the tab displayed to the user.
*/
public void addTab(final ActionBar.Tab newTab, final String tag,
final String label) {
newTab.setTag(tag);
newTab.setText(label);
newTab.setTabListener(this);
getSupportActionBar().addTab(newTab);
}
/**
* This is where you do the work of building the correct fragment based
* on the tab currently selected.
*
* @see FragmentPagerAdapter#getItem(int)
*/
@Override
public Fragment getItem(final int position) {
final Tab tab = getActionBar().getTabAt(position);
if ("MY TAG".equals(tab.getTag().toString()) {
// instantiate the fragment (table) for "MY TAG"
} else {
// instantiate something else...
}
}
/**
* One fragment per tab.
*
* @see android.support.v4.view.PagerAdapter#getCount()
*/
@Override
public int getCount() {
return getSupportActionBar().getTabCount();
}
/**
* @see ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener#onPageScrollStateChanged(int)
*/
@Override
public void onPageScrollStateChanged(final int arg0) {
// No-op.
}
/**
* @see ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener#onPageScrolled(int, float, int)
*/
@Override
public void onPageScrolled(final int arg0, final float arg1,
final int arg2) {
// No-op.
}
/**
* @see ViewPager.OnPageChangeListener#onPageSelected(int)
*/
@Override
public void onPageSelected(final int position) {
getSupportActionBar().setSelectedNavigationItem(position);
}
/**
* @see TabListener#onTabSelected(app.ActionBar.Tab,
* app.FragmentTransaction)
*/
@Override
public void onTabSelected(final Tab tab, final FragmentTransaction ft) {
viewPager.setCurrentItem(tab.getPosition());
}
/**
* @see TabListener#onTabUnselected(ActionBar.Tab,
* app.FragmentTransaction)
*/
@Override
public void onTabUnselected(final Tab tab, final FragmentTransaction ft) {
// No-op.
}
/**
* @see TabListener#onTabReselected(ActionBar.Tab,app.FragmentTransaction)
*/
@Override
public void onTabReselected(final Tab tab, final FragmentTransaction ft) {
// No-op.
}
}
So hopefully by this point we have an activity hosting a 'non-swipeable' view pager and a mechanism for switching tabs in the form of the tab bar underneath the title (or alongside depending on the screen size). From this point I am sure you could customise to replace the tab bar with some navigational arrows.
Note: A lot of that was written from memory but hopefully I've conveyed the gist of where I would go with this.
In response to the updated question: you can set the tab to be any old view. Set the TabSpec accordingly. Apologies I haven't used this myself.
You have to use HorizontalScrollView which it'll contain a LinearLayout and the Linear is the one that will contain your individual elements
The XML would see something like this
<HorizontalScrollView
android:id="@+id/horizontal_scroll_parent"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:scrollbars="horizontal"
android:scrollbarStyle="outsideInset">
<LinearLayout android:id="@+id/content_scroll"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="match_parent"
android:orientation="horizontal"
android:gravity="center_vertical" />
</HorizontalScrollView>
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