I'm migrating my dialogs, currently using Activity.showDialog(DIALOG_ID);
, to use the DialogFragment
system as discussed in the android reference.
There's a question that arose during my development when using callbacks to deliver some event back to the activity/fragment that opened the dialog:
Here's some example code of a simple dialog:
public class DialogTest extends DialogFragment {
public interface DialogTestListener {
public void onDialogPositiveClick(DialogFragment dialog);
}
// Use this instance of the interface to deliver action events
static DialogTestListener mListener;
public static DialogTest newInstance(Activity activity, int titleId, int messageId) {
udateListener(activity);
DialogTest frag = new DialogTest();
Bundle args = new Bundle();
args.putInt("titleId", titleId);
args.putInt("messageId", messageId);
frag.setArguments(args);
return frag;
}
public static void udateListener(Activity activity) {
try {
// Instantiate the NoticeDialogListener so we can send events with it
mListener = (DialogTestListener) activity;
} catch (ClassCastException e) {
// The activity doesn't implement the interface, throw exception
throw new ClassCastException(activity.toString() + " must implement DialogTestListener");
}
}
@Override
public Dialog onCreateDialog(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
int titleId = getArguments().getInt("titleId");
int messageId = getArguments().getInt("messageId");
AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getActivity());
// dialog title
builder.setTitle(titleId);
// dialog message
builder.setMessage(messageId);
// dialog negative button
builder.setNegativeButton("No", new OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) {}});
// dialog positive button
builder.setPositiveButton("Yes", new OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) {
mListener.onDialogPositiveClick(DialogTest.this);
}});
// create the Dialog object and return it
return builder.create();
}}
And here's some activity code calling it:
public class SomeActivity extends FragmentActivity implements DialogTestListener {
private EditText mUserName;
@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
// setup ui
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.ui_user_edit);
// name input
mUserName = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.userEdit_editTextName);
}
@Override
public void onDialogPositiveClick(DialogFragment dialog) {
Log.d(TAG, this.toString());
mUserName.setText(mUserName.getText() + "1");
}
private void showDialog() {
DialogTest test = DialogTest.newInstance(SomeActivity.this, R.string.someTitleText, R.string.someMessageText);
test.show(getSupportFragmentManager(), "testDialog");
}}
The code is pretty much what you see the reference. Problem is, that once you do a orientation change, when a dialog is shown, it stops working as expected --> Due to the activity lifecycle, both, the activity and the dialog are rebuild, and the dialog now does not have the proper reference to the new rebuilt activity.
I added the following code to my activitys onResume method:
@Override
protected void onResume() {
super.onResume();
DialogTest.udateListener(this);
}
Doing this, I get the expected behavior, and the dialog sends events back to the new rebuilt activity when an orientation change occured.
My question is: What is the 'best practice' to handle the callbacks between the DialogFragment which was opened by a FragmentActivity during an orientation change?
Best regards
There is better solution instead of using static methods and variables because it would work only fro one instance of your dialog. It is better to store your callback as non static member
private DialogTestListener mListener;
public void setListener (DialogTestListener listener){
mListener = listener;
}
Then you should show your dialog using TAG like this mDialogFragment.show(getSupportFragmentManager(), DIALOG_TAG);
And then in onResume
method of your activity you can reset your listener
protected void onResume() {
super.onResume();
mDialogFragment = (CMFilterDialogFrg) getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag(DIALOG_TAG);
if(mDialogFragment != null){
mDialogFragment.setListener(yourListener)
}
}
Yeah, this is a common trap I'm falling in all the time myself. First of all let me say that your solution of calling DialogTest.udateListener()
in onResume()
seems to be fully appropriate to me.
An alternative way would be to use a ResultReceiver
which can be serialized as a Parcelable
:
public class DialogTest extends DialogFragment {
public static DialogTest newInstance(ResultReceiver receiver, int titleId, int messageId) {
DialogTest frag = new DialogTest();
Bundle args = new Bundle();
args.putParcelable("receiver", receiver);
args.putInt("titleId", titleId);
args.putInt("messageId", messageId);
frag.setArguments(args);
return frag;
}
@Override
public Dialog onCreateDialog(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
int titleId = getArguments().getInt("titleId");
int messageId = getArguments().getInt("messageId");
ResultReceiver receiver = getArguments().getParcelable("receiver");
AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getActivity());
// dialog title
builder.setTitle(titleId);
// dialog message
builder.setMessage(messageId);
// dialog negative button
builder.setNegativeButton("No", new OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) {
receiver.sendResult(Activity.RESULT_CANCEL, null);
}});
// dialog positive button
builder.setPositiveButton("Yes", new OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) {
receiver.sendResult(Activity.RESULT_OK, null);
}});
// create the Dialog object and return it
return builder.create();
}}
Then you can handle everything in the Receiver like this:
protected void onReceiveResult(int resultCode, Bundle resultData) {
if (getActivity() != null){
// Handle result
}
}
Check out ResultReceiver doesn't survire to screen rotation for more details. So in the end you probably still need to rewire the ResultReceiver
with your Activity
. The only difference is that you decouple the Activity
from the DialogFragment
.
While André's solution works, a better solution is to get the updated activity during onAttach()
in your Fragment
.
private DialogTestListener mListener;
@Override
public void onAttach(Activity activity) {
super.onAttach(activity);
mListener = (DialogTestListener) activity;
}
With this solution, you won't need to pass the Activity
in newInstance()
anymore. You just need to make sure the Activity
owning your Fragment
is a DialogTestListener
. You also don't need to save the state like in the ResultReceiver
solution.
First, call setTargetFragment
from FragmentParent
to start dialogFragment
. In dialogFragment
use getTargetFragment
to callback fragment and return data. All data result will excute in onactivityresult
of FragmentParent
follow this link: Receive result from DialogFragment
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