Android ListView not refreshing after notifyDataSetChanged

最后都变了- 提交于 2019-11-26 06:09:12

Look at your onResume method in ItemFragment:

@Override
public void onResume() {
    super.onResume();
    items.clear();
    items = dbHelper.getItems(); // reload the items from database
    adapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
}

what you just have updated before calling notifyDataSetChanged() is not the adapter's field private List<Item> items; but the identically declared field of the fragment. The adapter still stores a reference to list of items you passed when you created the adapter (e.g. in fragment's onCreate). The shortest (in sense of number of changes) but not elegant way to make your code behave as you expect is simply to replace the line:

    items = dbHelper.getItems(); // reload the items from database

with

    items.addAll(dbHelper.getItems()); // reload the items from database

A more elegant solution:

1) remove items private List<Item> items; from ItemFragment - we need to keep reference to them only in adapter

2) change onCreate to :

@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
    super.setHasOptionsMenu(true);
    getActivity().setTitle(TITLE);
    dbHelper = new DatabaseHandler(getActivity());
    adapter = new ItemAdapter(getActivity(), dbHelper.getItems());
    setListAdapter(adapter);
}

3) add method in ItemAdapter:

public void swapItems(List<Item> items) {
    this.items = items;
    notifyDataSetChanged();
}

4) change your onResume to:

@Override
public void onResume() {
    super.onResume();
    adapter.swapItems(dbHelper.getItems());
}
Santhosh

You are assigning reloaded items to global variable items in onResume(), but this will not reflect in ItemAdapter class, because it has its own instance variable called 'items'.

For refreshing ListView, add a refresh() in ItemAdapter class which accepts list data i.e items

class ItemAdapter
{
    .....

    public void refresh(List<Item> items)
    {
        this.items = items;
        notifyDataSetChanged();
    } 
}

update onResume() with following code

@Override
public void onResume()
{
    super.onResume();
    items.clear();
    items = dbHelper.getItems(); //reload the items from database
    **adapter.refresh(items);**
}

In onResume() change this line

items = dbHelper.getItems(); //reload the items from database

to

items.addAll(dbHelper.getItems()); //reload the items from database

The problem is that you're never telling your adapter about the new items list. If you don't want to pass a new list to your adapter (as it seems you don't), then just use items.addAll after your clear(). This will ensure you are modifying the same list that the adapter has a reference to.

If the adapter is already set, setting it again will not refresh the listview. Instead first check if the listview has a adapter and then call the appropriate method.

I think its not a very good idea to create a new instance of the adapter while setting the list view. Instead, create an object.

BuildingAdapter adapter = new BuildingAdapter(context);

    if(getListView().getAdapter() == null){ //Adapter not set yet.
     setListAdapter(adapter);
    }
    else{ //Already has an adapter
    adapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
    }

Also you might try to run the refresh list on UI Thread:

activity.runOnUiThread(new Runnable() {         
        public void run() {
              //do your modifications here

              // for example    
              adapter.add(new Object());
              adapter.notifyDataSetChanged()  
        }
});

If you want to update your listview doesn't matter if you want to do that on onResume(), onCreate() or in some other function, first thing that you have to realize is that you won't need to create a new instance of the adapter, just populate the arrays with your data again. The idea is something similar to this :

private ArrayList<String> titles;
private MyListAdapter adapter;
private ListView myListView;

@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState){
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
    setContentView(R.layout.main_activity);

    myListView = (ListView) findViewById(R.id.my_list);

    titles = new ArrayList<String>()

    for(int i =0; i<20;i++){
        titles.add("Title "+i);
    }

    adapter = new MyListAdapter(this, titles);
    myListView.setAdapter(adapter);
}


@Override
public void onResume(){
    super.onResume();
    // first clear the items and populate the new items
    titles.clear();
    for(int i =0; i<20;i++){
        titles.add("New Title "+i);
    }
    adapter.notifySetDataChanged();
}

So depending on that answer you should use the same List<Item> in your Fragment. In your first adapter initialization you fill your list with the items and set adapter to your listview. After that in every change in your items you have to clear the values from the main List<Item> items and than populate it again with your new items and call notifySetDataChanged();.

That's how it works : ).

user2996950

An answer from AlexGo did the trick for me:

getActivity().runOnUiThread(new Runnable() {
        @Override
        public void run() {
         messages.add(m);
         adapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
         getListView().setSelection(messages.size()-1);
        }
});

List Update worked for me before when the update was triggered from a GUI event, thus being in the UI thread.

However, when I update the list from another event/thread - i.e. a call from outside the app, the update would not be in the UI thread and it ignored the call to getListView. Calling the update with runOnUiThread as above did the trick for me. Thanks!!

Try this

@Override
public void onResume() {
super.onResume();
items.clear();
items = dbHelper.getItems(); //reload the items from database
adapter = new ItemAdapter(getActivity(), items);//reload the items from database
adapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
}
Som
adpter.notifyDataSetInvalidated();

Try this in onPause() method of Activity class.

Hitman
adapter.setNotifyDataChanged()

should do the trick.

Jachu

Try like this:

this.notifyDataSetChanged();

instead of:

adapter.notifyDataSetChanged();

You have to notifyDataSetChanged() to the ListView not to the adapter class.

If your list is contained in the Adapter itself, calling the function that updates the list should also call notifyDataSetChanged().

Running this function from the UI Thread did the trick for me:

The refresh() function inside the Adapter

public void refresh(){
    //manipulate list
    notifyDataSetChanged();
}

Then in turn run this function from the UI Thread

getActivity().runOnUiThread(new Runnable() { 
    @Override
    public void run() {
          adapter.refresh()  
    }
});
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!