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Xamarin Mobile Application Development for Android, Second Edition

You're reading from   Xamarin Mobile Application Development for Android, Second Edition Develop, test, and deliver fully-featured Android applications using Xamarin

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785280375
Length 296 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Anatomy of an Android App FREE CHAPTER 2. The Xamarin.Android Architecture 3. Creating the Points Of Interest App 4. Adding a List View 5. Adding a Details View 6. Making Your App Orientation-aware 7. Designing for Multiple Screen Sizes 8. Creating Data Storage Mechanisms 9. Making POIApp Location Aware 10. Adding the Camera App Integration 11. Publishing an App to the App Store Index

An introduction to fragments


Fragments are reusable pieces of a user interface component that provide flexibility to the application design. As you have already learnt from Chapter 1, The Anatomy of an Android App, fragments are reusable mini-activities, such as UI components, that can manage their own life cycles. Fragments are always intended to work without depending on another activity or fragment. Like an Activity class, a fragment class needs to extend from the Fragment class. To make things even easier, Android provides some of the additional specialized fragment subclasses such as ListFragment, DialogFragment, and PreferenceFragment.

The following table shows the list of fragment subclasses and their purposes. You may also extend any of the following fragment subclasses to create your own fragment.

ListFragment

This displays a list of data items from different sources, such as an array, a cursor, and so on.

DialogFragment

This displays a fragment as a floating dialog window...

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