Bhiefer
Bhiefer

Reputation: 1653

Android: How to propagate click event to LinearLayout childs and change their drawable

I would like to create a linear layout which would behave similarly to ImageButton.

<LinearLayout
    android:id="@+id/container"
    style="?WidgetHomeIconContainer">            

    <ImageView
        android:id="@+id/icon"
        style="?WidgetHomeIcon" />

    <TextView
        android:id="@+id/title"
        style="?WidgetHomeLabel"             
        android:text="@string/title"
        android:textAppearance="?attr/TextHomeLabel" />
</LinearLayout>

In styles of ImageView, TextView and LinearLayout, I set a selectors for all states.

Now:

So I would like to do the following. When I click on parent LinearLayout, I need to change all it's childs to pressed state.

I tried to add following code to LinearLayout onClickListener to propagate the click:

@Override
public void onClick(View v)
{
    LinearLayout l = (LinearLayout) v;
    for(int i = 0; i < l.getChildCount(); i++)
    {
        l.getChildAt(i).setClickable(true);
        l.getChildAt(i).performClick();
    }
}

But it still reamins the same. Thank you very much for any help.

Upvotes: 28

Views: 30465

Answers (5)

Aldo Wachyudi
Aldo Wachyudi

Reputation: 18001

At first, my child view failed to get click from parent. After investigating, what I need to do to make it work are:

  1. remove click listener on child view
  2. adding click listener on parent view

So, I don't need to add these on every children.

android:duplicateParentState="true"
android:clickable="false"

I only add duplicateParentState to one of my child view.

My child view is now listening to parent click event.

Upvotes: 1

IgniteCoders
IgniteCoders

Reputation: 4980

In my case, no one of the other solutions works!

I finally had to use OnTouchListener as explained here, capturing the event when the user clicks in the parent view, and removing all childs OnClickListener.

So the idea is, delegate the click behavior to the parent, and notify the child that is really clicked, if you want to propagate the event. ¡¡That's what we are looking for!!

Then, we need to check which child has been clicked. You can find a reference here to know how it´s done. But the idea is basiclly getting the area of the child, and asking for who contains the clicked coordinates, to perform his action (or not).

Upvotes: 1

Morphing Coffee
Morphing Coffee

Reputation: 835

Not only make for every child:

android:duplicateParentState="true"

But also additionally:

android:clickable="false"  

This will prevent unexpected behaviour (or solution simply not working) if clickable child views are used.

SO Source

Upvotes: 8

Bernd
Bernd

Reputation: 27

After having the same problem some months later, I found this solution:

private void setOnClickListeners() {
    super.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {

        public void onClick(View v) {
            onClick(v);
        }
    });
    for (int index = 0; index < super.getChildCount(); index++) {
        View view = super.getChildAt(index);
        view.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {

            public void onClick(View v) {
                onClick(v);
            }
        });
    }
}

protected void onClick(View v) {
    // something to do here...
}

Upvotes: 1

5hssba
5hssba

Reputation: 8079

Put

android:duplicateParentState="true"

in your ImageView and TextView..then the views get its drawable state (focused, pressed, etc.) from its direct parent rather than from itself.

Upvotes: 55

Related Questions