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Was PreferenceFragment intentionally excluded from the compatibility package?

Discovering that PreferenceActivity contains deprecated methods (although these are used in the accompanying sample code)

The deprecated methods are deprecated as of Android 3.0. They are perfectly fine on all versions of Android, but the direction is to use PreferenceFragment on Android 3.0 and higher.

Can anyone tell me whether this was intentional?

My guess is it's a question of engineering time, but that's just a guess.

If so, can I easily target a range of devices (i.e. < 3.0 and >=3.0) or will I have to jump through hoops?

I consider it to be done "easily". Have two separate PreferenceActivity implementations, one using preference headers and PreferenceFragments, the other using the original approach. Choose the right one at the point you need to (e.g., when the user clicks on the options menu item). Here is a sample project demonstrating this. Or, have a single PreferenceActivity that handles both cases, as in this sample project.

If it wasn't intentionally excluded, can we expect a new release of the compatibility package?

You will find out when the rest of us find out, which is to say, if and when it ships.

Or is there another workaround that is safe to use?

See above.


The subtle implication of the answer from @CommonsWare is that - your app must choose between the compatibility API or the built-in fragment API (since SDK 11 or so). In fact that's what the "easily" recommendation has done. In other words, if you want to use PreferenceFragment your app needs to use the built-in fragment API and deal with the deprecated methods on PreferenceActivity. Conversely, if it's important that your app use the compat. API you will be faced with not having a PreferenceFragment class at all. Thus, targeting devices is not a problem, but the hoop-jumping happens when you have to choose one or the other API and thus submit your design to unforeseen workarounds. I need the compat. API so I'm going to create my own PreferenceFragment class and see how that works. In the worst case scenario I'll just create a normal (fragment) layout and bind the view components to the sharedprefs manually...ugh.

EDIT: After trying and looking at the code at http://grepcode.com/file/repository.grepcode.com/java/ext/com.google.android/android/4.0.1_r1/android/preference/PreferenceFragment.java?av=h -- creating my own PreferenceFragment isn't going to happen. It appears the liberal use of package-private in PreferenceManager instead of 'protected' is the main blocker. It really doesn't look like there's any security or really good motivation to have done that and it isn't great for unit-testing but oh well...less typing I guess...

EDIT v2: Actually it did happen and it worked. It was definitely a headache to make the code work with the Compatibility API JAR. I had to copy about 70% the com.android.preference package from the SDK to my app and then wrestle with typically mediocre-quality Java code in Android. I used v14 of the SDK. It would have been much easier for a Goog engineer to do what I did, contrary to what I've heard some lead Android engineers say about this topic.

BTW - did I say "targeting devices is not a problem"? It totally is...if you use com.android.preference you are not going to be able to swap out with the Compatibility API without major refactoring. Fun log!


Building upon CommonsWare's answer as well as Tenacious' observations, I have come up with a single descendant class solution capable of targeting all current Android API versions with minimal fuss and no code or resource duplication. Please see my answer to the related question over here: PreferenceActivity Android 4.0 and earlier

or on my blog: http://www.blackmoonit.com/2012/07/all_api_prefsactivity/

Tested on two tablets running 4.0.3 and 4.0.4 as well as a phone running 4.0.4 and 2.3.3 and also an emulator running 1.6.


See PreferenceFragment-Compat from Machinarius. It was easy to drop in with gradle and I forget that it's even there.

compile 'com.github.machinarius:preferencefragment:0.1.1'

Important Update: The latest revision of the v7 support library now has a native PreferenceFragmentCompat.


On August 2015 Google released the new Preference Support Library v7.

Now you can use the PreferenceFragmentCompat with any Activity or AppCompatActivity

public static class PrefsFragment extends PreferenceFragmentCompat {

    @Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);

        // Load the preferences from an XML resource
        addPreferencesFromResource(R.xml.preferences);
    }
}

You have to set preferenceTheme in your theme:

<style name="AppTheme" parent="@style/Theme.AppCompat.Light">
  ...
  <item name="preferenceTheme">@style/PreferenceThemeOverlay</item>
</style>

In this way you can customize the preferenceTheme to style the layouts used for each preference type without affecting other parts of your Activity.