Is it possibile to set hint Spinner in Android [duplicate]
Is there开发者_开发百科 anyway of making a hint for a spinner similar to hint that is provided for edit text fields. I know you can use a prompt that gives you a title bar but still leaves the initial spinner field blank until you click into the spinner. I currently have a crude way of setting a dummy field as the first part of the spinner array which is the question and then have a check at the end to make sure the spinner doesn't equal the question string. Is there any cleaner / better way of doing this?
Thanks!
Here's a solution which is probably a bit simpler than Ravi Vyas code (thanks for the inspiration!):
ArrayAdapter<String> adapter = new ArrayAdapter<String>(getActivity(), android.R.layout.simple_spinner_dropdown_item) {
@Override
public View getView(int position, View convertView, ViewGroup parent) {
View v = super.getView(position, convertView, parent);
if (position == getCount()) {
((TextView)v.findViewById(android.R.id.text1)).setText("");
((TextView)v.findViewById(android.R.id.text1)).setHint(getItem(getCount())); //"Hint to be displayed"
}
return v;
}
@Override
public int getCount() {
return super.getCount()-1; // you dont display last item. It is used as hint.
}
};
adapter.setDropDownViewResource(android.R.layout.simple_spinner_dropdown_item);
adapter.add("Item 1");
adapter.add("Item 2");
adapter.add("Hint to be displayed");
spinner.setAdapter(adapter);
spinner.setSelection(adapter.getCount()); //display hint
You can setup your own spinner adapter and overide the getView method to show the hint instead of an item . I have created a sample project on github , check it out here
An even easier way than setting up your own spinner adapter is to just use a button and style it like a spinner object with
android:background="@android:drawable/btn_dropdown"
Then setup the button's onClick event to open a single-item-select dialog. You can then do whatever you want with the text of the button.
This has been my preferred way of handling this for a while. Hope it helps someone.
EDIT: I've been playing around with this again recently (and someone asked me to post an example a while ago). This strategy will look a bit different if you're using the Holo theme. However, if you're using other themes such as Theme.Black, this will look identical.
To demonstrate this, I made a simple app that has both a regular Spinner along with my custom button-spinner. I threw this up in a GitHub repo, but here's what the Activity looks like:
package com.stevebergamini.spinnerbutton;
import android.app.Activity;
import android.app.AlertDialog;
import android.content.DialogInterface;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.view.View;
import android.view.View.OnClickListener;
import android.widget.Button;
import android.widget.Spinner;
public class MainActivity extends Activity {
Spinner spinner1;
Button button1;
AlertDialog ad;
String[] countries;
int selected = -1;
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
spinner1 = (Spinner) findViewById(R.id.spinner1);
button1 = (Button) findViewById(R.id.button1);
countries = getResources().getStringArray(R.array.country_names);
// You can also use an adapter for the allert dialog if you'd like
// ArrayAdapter<String> adapter = new ArrayAdapter<String>(this, android.R.layout.simple_spinner_dropdown_item, countries);
ad = new AlertDialog.Builder(MainActivity.this).setSingleChoiceItems(countries, selected,
new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
@Override
public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int which) {
button1.setText(countries[which]);
selected = which;
ad.dismiss();
}}).setTitle(R.string.select_country).create();
button1.setOnClickListener( new OnClickListener(){
@Override
public void onClick(View v) {
ad.getListView().setSelection(selected);
ad.show();
}});
}
}
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