What's the enhancement of RecyclerView over ListView?

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长发绾君心
长发绾君心 2021-02-13 18:04

RecyclerView is added into v7 support library since Android API 22 officially. And many people said that it is a enhancement over ListView

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  •  南笙
    南笙 (楼主)
    2021-02-13 18:35

    As per the official documentation RecyclerView is a major enhancement over ListView. It contains many new features like ViewHolder, ItemDecorator, LayoutManager, and SmoothScroller. But one thing that certainly gives it an edge over the ListView is; the ability to have animations while adding or removing an item.

    View Holders

    In ListView, defining view holders was a suggested approach for keeping references for views. But it was not a compulsion. Although by not doing so, ListView used show stale data. Another major drawback of not using view holders could lead to a heavy operation of finding views by ids every time. Which resulted in laggy ListViews.

    This problem is solved in RecylerView by the use of RecyclerView.ViewHolder class. This is one of the major differences in RecyclerView and ListView. When implementing a RecyclerView this class is used to define a ViewHolder object which is used by the adapter to bind ViewHolder with a position. Another point to be noted here, is that while implementing the adapter for RecyclerView, providing a ViewHolder is compulsory. This makes the implementation a little complex, but solves the issues faced in ListView.

    Layout Manager

    When speaking of ListViews, only one type of ListView is available i.e. the vertical ListView. You cannot implement a ListView with horizontal scroll. I know there are ways to implement a horizontal scroll, but believe me it was not designed to work that way.

    But now when we look at Android RecyclerView vs ListView, we have support for horizontal collections as well. In-fact it supports multiple types of lists. To support multiple types of lists it uses RecyclerView.LayoutManager class. This is something new that ListView does not have. RecyclerView supports three types of predefined Layout Managers:

    LinearLayoutManager – This is the most commonly used layout manager in case of RecyclerView. Through this, we can create both horizontal and vertical scroll lists.
    StaggeredGridLayoutManager – Through this layout manager, we can create staggered lists. Just like the Pinterest screen.
    GridLayoutManager– This layout manager can be used to display grids, like any picture gallery.

    Item Animator

    Animations in a list is a whole new dimension, which has endless possibilities. In a ListView, as such there are no special provisions through which one can animate, addition or deletion of items. Instead later on as android evolved ViewPropertyAnimator was suggested by Google’s Chet Haase in this video tutorial for animations in ListView. On the other hand comparing Android RecyclerView vs ListView, it has RecyclerView.ItemAnimator class for handling animations. Through this class custom animations can be defined for item addition, deletion and move events. Also it provides a DefaultItemAnimator, in case you don’t need any customizations.

    Adapter

    ListView adapters were simple to implement. They had a main method getView where all the magic used to happen. Where the views were bound to a position. Also they used to have an interesting method registerDataSetObserver where one can set an observer right in the adapter. This feature is also present in RecyclerView, but RecyclerView.AdapterDataObserver class is used for it. But the point in favor of ListView is that it supports three default implementations of adapters:
    ArrayAdapter
    CursorAdapter
    SimpleCursorAdapter
    Whereas RecyclerView adapter, has all the functionality that ListView adapters had except the built in support for DB cursors and ArrayLists. In RecyclerView.Adapter as of now we have to make a custom implementation to supply data to the adapter. Just like a BaseAdapter does for ListViews. Although if you wish to know more about RecyclerView adapter implementation, please refer to Android RecyclerView Example.

    Item Decoration

    To display custom dividers in a ListView, one could have easily added these parameters in the ListView XML:
    android:divider="@android:color/transparent" android:dividerHeight="5dp"
    The interesting part about Android RecyclerView is that, as of now it does not show a divider between items by default. Although the guys at Google must have left this out for customization, intentionally. But this greatly increases the effort for a developer. If you wish to add a divider between items, you may need to do a custom implementation by using RecyclerView.ItemDecoration class. Or you can apply a hack by using this file from official samples: DividerItemDecoration.java

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