Member variables vs setArguments in Fragments

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攒了一身酷
攒了一身酷 2020-12-12 13:02

I\'ve noticed that in the Android reference for Fragments (notably DialogFragment) that they do a couple of things different from what I\'d expect:

1). Use pub

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  • 2020-12-12 13:28

    I am pretty new to Android programming but this is my current understanding of the issue:

    The constructor for Fragments cannot have any parameters. When your activity is paused your Fragment can be released. Before your activity is resumed, the system creates a new version of your Fragment calling the constructor. If a non-default constructor is used, how is Android supposed to know what the types and values are for the arguments to your Fragments constructor?

    I don't believe that bundle is released. The bundle is kept around precisely so that it can be passed back to your Fragment after it has been recreated with the default constructor.

    Philipp Reichart eluded to this in his post (actually more than eluded.)

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  • 2020-12-12 13:28

    Just want to add one more drawback to arguments is that you have to dynamically create fragments. As arguments does not work very well if you creating from the xml. And I really hate that.

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  • 2020-12-12 13:33

    I've also stumbled upon this and found a few advantages to using the arguments Bundle over instance fields:

    • If it's in a Bundle the Android system knows about it and can create and destroy your Fragment (using the mandatory parameterless/default constructor and usual lifecycle methods), and just pass in the arguments bundle again. This way no arguments get lost on a low memory killing spree or the eventual orientation changes (this often hits me on first deploy to a real device after development in the less-rotating emulator).

    • You can just pass the extras Bundle of an Activity as-is to a Fragment embedded in the layout; e.g. I often use this when I have an Activity that displays a Fragment "fullscreen" and needs some ID (or ContentProvider URI) to know what to display/do. I sometimes even add more stuff to a Bundle (or a copy) before I pass it on, e.g.

      @Override
      protected void onCreate(final Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
      
        if (savedInstanceState == null) { // not a re-creation
          final Bundle args = new Bundle(getIntent().getExtras());
          args.putInt(CoverImageFragment.BACKGROUND_RESOURCE, android.R.color.black);
          final Fragment fragment = CoverImageFragment.newInstance(args);
          getSupportFragmentManager()
            .beginTransaction()
            .add(android.R.id.content, fragment)
            .commit();
        }
      }
      
    • It keeps the way of developing a Fragment close to that of an Activity, i.e. Bundle as "input parameters, no exceptions".

    As for the downsides you mentioned:

    • I think the overhead is minimal because you most likely won't be querying the Bundle in a tight loop, so getting your argument data out once in onCreate(), onViewCreate(), etc. isn't that bad.

    • For type-safety, Bundle has all the different getXXXX() methods, and even overloads to provide a default value if a something is missing/optional :)

    As for the newInstance() methods, I think of them as an easy way to encapsulate the new and setArguments() calls for my Fragment; I sometimes provide an additional MyFragment newInstance(String singleIdOfWhatToDisplay) that creates both the Bundle and Fragment in one go and returns a ready-to-go Fragment instance.

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  • 2020-12-12 13:44

    I found this to be a HIGHLY confusing issue (one of many that litter the Android landscape).

    setArguments() is a workaround for Android's very unhelpful need to have a parameter-less constructor available for Fragments.

    My confusion came in waves. First, the methods you naturally override in your Fragment (e.g. onCreate, onCreateView) receive a Bundle parameter that represents the savedInstanceState of your Fragment. This instance state apparently has NOTHING whatsoever to do with the values you store via setArguments() and retrieve via getArguments(). Both use a Bundle, both Bundles are likely to be accessed within the same overridden method, neither have anything to do with each other.

    Second, it's unclear how Android uses setArguments(). Android calls your parameter-less constructor to rebuild your Fragment on rotate, but apparently ALSO will call whichever setArguments() method was last called when the Fragment was constructed.

    Huh????

    Amazing, but true. All of this creating Bundles with setArguments() madness exists to compensate for the need of a parameter-less Fragment constructor.

    In short, I'm using the static newInstance method to create my Fragment.

    public MyFragment() {
        //satisfy Android
    }
    
    public static MyFragment newInstance(long record_id) {
        Log.d("MyFragment", "Putting " + record_id + " into newInstance");
        MyFragment f = new MyFragment();
        Bundle args = new Bundle();
        args.putLong("record_id", record_id);
        f.setArguments(args);
        return f;
    }
    
    @Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
        /**
         * Perform an immediate check of arguments,
         * which ARE NOT the same as the bundle used
         * for saved instance state.
         */
        Bundle args = getArguments();
        if(args != null) {
            record_id = args.getLong("record_id");
            Log.d("MyFragment", "found record_id of " + String.valueOf(record_id));
        }
        if(savedInstanceState != null) {
            //now do something with savedInstanceState
        }
    }
    
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