One OnClickHandler for multiple Buttons

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再見小時候
再見小時候 2020-11-28 23:09

I find myself doing things like this all the time:

    Button button1 = (Button) findViewById(R.id.button1);
    Button button2 = (Button) findViewById(R.id.         


        
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6条回答
  • 2020-11-28 23:43

    Have your class implement `View.OnClickListener', like

    public class MyActivity extends Activity implements View.OnClickListener {
    
        Button button1, button2, button3;
    
        @Override
        public void onCreate(Bundle bundle) {
            super.onCreate();
    
            ...
    
            button1 = (Button) findViewById(R.id.button1);
            button2 = (Button) findViewById(R.id.button2);
            button3 = (Button) findViewById(R.id.button3);
    
            button1.setOnClickListener(this);
            button2.setOnClickListener(this);
            button3.setOnClickListener(this);
       }
    
       @Override
       public void onClick(View v) {
           switch(v.getId()) {
               case R.id.button1:
               // do stuff;
               break;
               case R.id.button2:
               // do stuff;
               break;
           ...
       }
    }
    
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  • 2020-11-28 23:44

    Gettin @foenix answer, you can simply do something like:

        int[] buttons = {R.id.button1, R.id.button2, R.id.button3, R.id.button4, R.id.button5, R.id.button6, R.id.button7
                , R.id.button8, R.id.button9};
        for (int i = 0; i < buttons.length; i++) {
            Button buttonNum = (Button) rootView.findViewById(buttons[i]);
            buttonNum.setOnClickListener(doSomething);
        }
    
    private OnClickListener doSomething= new OnClickListener() {
         @Override
         public void onClick(View v) {
                //doSomething
       }
    };
    
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  • 2020-11-28 23:45

    It should be noted, that

    android:onclick="onClick"
    

    requires at least Andoid SDK 1.6. So if you want your App to be accessible to as big audience as possible, you probably want to write your App against Android 1.6. Unless your App requires a feature which is only available in 1.6+. So while your first attempt is bit more of work, it has greater backwards compatibility. I usually do it the way you do, to keep my Apps 1.5 comptaible.

    Edit: It's easy to overlook this, if you set up Android 2.2 as SDK in your projects settings, but set minSDK version to 3 (1.5), as it doesn't give compiler errors.

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  • 2020-11-28 23:59

    If you want to do less code for click listeners you have this lib [http://jakewharton.github.io/butterknife/]

    you just have to do this

     @OnClick({ R.id.button1, R.id.button2, R.id.button3 })
    public void doSomething(View button) {
        //do whatever you want
        button.changeWhateverInTheView();
    }
    
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  • 2020-11-29 00:05

    I think in case, when your buttons are not in Activity but in FragmentDialog, etc., this can help

    Context mContext = getActivity().getBaseContext();
    mRes = mContext.getResources();
    String[] idOfButtons = { "button1", "button2", "button3"};
    for (int pos = 0; pos < idOfButtons.length; pos++) {
       Integer btnId = mRes.getIdentifier(idOfButtons[pos], "id",(getActivity()).getBaseContext().getPackageName());
        ImageButton ib = (ImageButton) v.findViewById(btnId);
        ib.setOnClickListener(this.onClickNum);
    }
    
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  • 2020-11-29 00:06

    You can also set it in your layout xml using the android:onclick attribute.

    android:onClick="onClick"
    

    Then in your activity class add the onClick method.

    public void onClick(View v) {
    ...
    

    Here's the documentation.

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