I\'ve put a WebView loading an image inside a ViewPager. When I try to scroll the image horizontally I move over to the next view instead of scrolling the image.
Is
Although Sven mentioned for layout file I want to add detail. After you extend Webview and ViewPager classes,
Inside your activity you will cast to your extended class like this:
web = (MyWebView) findViewById(R.id.webview);
Inside your layout file like this:
<your.package.name.MyWebView
android:id="@+id/webview"
android:layout_width="fill_parent"
android:layout_height="fill_parent"
/>
The following is a real working solution which will scroll the WebView
on a horizontal swipe as long as it can scroll. If the WebView
cannot further scroll, the next horizontal swipe will be consumed by the ViewPager
to switch the page.
WebView
With API-Level 14 (ICS) the View
method canScrollHorizontally()
has been introduced, which we need to solve the problem. If you develop only for ICS or above you can directly use this method and skip to the next section. Otherwise we need to implement this method on our own, to make the solution work also on pre-ICS.
To do so simply derive your own class from WebView
:
public class ExtendedWebView extends WebView {
public ExtendedWebView(Context context) {
super(context);
}
public ExtendedWebView(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
}
public boolean canScrollHor(int direction) {
final int offset = computeHorizontalScrollOffset();
final int range = computeHorizontalScrollRange() - computeHorizontalScrollExtent();
if (range == 0) return false;
if (direction < 0) {
return offset > 0;
} else {
return offset < range - 1;
}
}
}
Important: Remember to reference your ExtendedWebView
inside your layout file instead of the standard WebView
.
ViewPager
Now you need to extend the ViewPager
to handle horizontal swipes correctly. This needs to be done in any case -- no matter whether you are using ICS or not:
public class WebViewPager extends ViewPager {
public WebViewPager(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
}
@Override
protected boolean canScroll(View v, boolean checkV, int dx, int x, int y) {
if (v instanceof ExtendedWebView) {
return ((ExtendedWebView) v).canScrollHor(-dx);
} else {
return super.canScroll(v, checkV, dx, x, y);
}
}
}
Important: Remember to reference your WebViewPager
inside your layout file instead of the standard ViewPager
.
That's it!
Update 2012/07/08: I've recently noticed that the stuff shown above seems to be no longer required when using the "current" implementation of the ViewPager
. The "current" implementation seems to check the sub views correctly before capturing the scroll event on it's own (see canScroll
method of ViewPager
here). Don't know exactly, when the implementation has been changed to handle this correctly -- I still need the code above on Android Gingerbread (2.3.x) and before.