Exploring the palette and more anonymous classes – part 2
Now that we have seen how anonymous classes work, specifically with RadioGroup
and RadioButton
, we can continue to explore the palette and examine how anonymous classes work with some more UI widgets.
Switch
The Switch
(not to be confused with the lowercase switch
Java keyword) widget is just like a Button
widget, except it has two possible states that can be read and responded to.
One obvious use for the Switch
widget is to show or hide something. Remember that in our Java Meet UI app, in Chapter 12, The Stack, the Heap, and the Garbage Collector, we used a Button
widget to show and hide a TextView
widget.
Each time we hid or showed the TextView
widget, we changed the text
property on the Button
widget to make it clear what would happen if it was clicked on again. What might have been more intuitive for the user, and more straightforward for us as programmers, would have been to use a Switch
widget, as...