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Hands-On Android UI Development

You're reading from   Hands-On Android UI Development Design and develop attractive user interfaces for Android applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788475051
Length 348 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jason Morris Jason Morris
Author Profile Icon Jason Morris
Jason Morris
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Creating Android Layouts FREE CHAPTER 2. Designing Form Screens 3. Taking Actions 4. Composing User Interfaces 5. Binding Data to Widgets 6. Storing and Retrieving Data 7. Creating Overview Screens 8. Designing Material Layouts 9. Navigating Effectively 10. Making Overviews Even Better 11. Polishing Your Design 12. Customizing Widgets and Layouts 13. Activity Lifecycle
14. Test Your Knowledge Answers

Creating a RecyclerView adapter


In order to get data into a RecyclerView, you need an Adapter class, not unlike the PagerAdapter you wrote to display the attachment previews for the CaptureClaimActivity. However, RecyclerView does a lot more of the heavy lifting than ViewPager and as a result, what you can and can't do inside the adapter is far more restricted than with PagerAdapter. Also, unlike a PagerAdapter, a RecylcerView adapter has two actions that are involved in displaying each element: create and bind. When the RecyclerView needs a new child widget for an element, it will invoke onCreateViewHolder, which should return an unpopulated ViewHolder, which will then be passed to onBindViewHolder where the data should be mapped into the View from whatever data source the adapter uses.

First off, the RecyclerView maintains the list of its child views completely, so the adapter must never add or remove them directly. Secondly, the RecyclerView expects the adapter to be stable, that is, the...

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