Currently (Android API 17), the only mention of super
in the Android Reference on Fragment is casually via some code examples (unlike the Android Reference on A
All of the corresponding Activity lifecycle methods except onSaveInstanceState
require calls to super. In addition:
onAttach()
- yesonActivityCreated()
- yesonViewStateRestored()
- is not a Fragment methodonDestroyView()
- yesonDetach()
- yes onSaveInstanceState()
- from Fragment#onSaveInstanceState it
looks like a noAll of the methods that require calls to super share the first line of their method in android.app.Fragment:
mCalled = true;
That way the FragmentManager can check if mCalled is true and throw a SuperNotCalledException when it is not called. See FragmentManager#moveToState to see this implementation.
When generating a fragment with Eclipse, the onCreateView method template code does not have a call to super.onCreateView. Also, the generally quite good book published by WROX: Android 4 Application Development misses it out in its sample lifetime code (it does not miss out any other calls to super).
Of course both these two sources could be incorrect, but using the Eclipse template and not adding super.onCreateView has not caused me an issue.
I am typing with capital letter 'O' instead of small letter 'o'
means : OnCreate instead of onCreate methods.
Its a silly mistake but need to remember :)
Thanks