Issue
I am creating a tabs list with several fragments.
I have noticed that, in the main activity, I used setContentView
to get the layout xml and use findViewById
to get the corresponding UI element config.
setContentView(R.layout.fragment_tabs);
mTabHost = (TabHost)findViewById(android.R.id.tabhost);
mTabHost.setup();
mTabManager = new TabManager(this, mTabHost, android.R.id.tabcontent);
However, in the different fragment class, I have to use the inflater instead.
View v = inflater.inflate(R.layout.webview, container, false);
WebView myBrowser=(WebView)v.findViewById(R.id.mybrowser);
And both function are used to get the layout xml to create an object, why is there a difference? Is the first one use during onCreate
, and the second one during onCreateView
? In what situation I should choose either of them?
Solution
setContentView
is an Activity
method only. Each Activity
is provided with a FrameLayout
with id "@+id/content"
(i.e. the content view). Whatever view you specify in setContentView
will be the view for that Activity
. Note that you can also pass an instance of a view to this method, e.g. setContentView(new WebView(this));
The version of the method that you are using will inflate the view for you behind the scenes.
Fragments, on the other hand, have a lifecycle method called onCreateView
which returns a view (if it has one). The most common way to do this is to inflate a view in XML and return it in this method. In this case you need to inflate it yourself though. Fragments don't have a setContentView
method
Activities and views both have a method called findViewById()
. The activity version will search for a view with the given id inside of it's content view (therefore, internally, it will call contentView.findViewById())
. This means that the contentView needs to be set before it becomes usable. Like setContentView
, fragments don't have a method for findViewById
(which makes sense, because there is no content view). Simply use getView().findViewById()
instead for the same behaviour.
LayoutInflater.inflate
just inflates and returns a view (you can use this anywhere). You still need to set that view as the content view within an Activity
Answered By - Bradley Campbell
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