Reputation: 5634
I find Fragment#setRetainInstance(true) confusing. Here is the Javadoc, extracted from the Android Developer API:
public void setRetainInstance (boolean retain)
Control whether a fragment instance is retained across Activity re-creation (such as from a configuration change). This can only be used with fragments not in the back stack. If set, the fragment lifecycle will be slightly different when an activity is recreated:
- onDestroy() will not be called (but onDetach() still will be, because the fragment is being detached from its current activity).
- onCreate(Bundle) will not be called since the fragment is not being re-created.
- onAttach(Activity) and onActivityCreated(Bundle) will still be called.
Question: How do you as a developer use this, and why does it make things easier?
Upvotes: 72
Views: 53949
Reputation: 11501
The setRetainInstance(boolean)
method on Fragments has been deprecated as of Version 1.3.0 of fragment API.
With the introduction of ViewModels, developers have a specific API for retaining state that can be associated with Activities, Fragments, and Navigation graphs. This allows developers to use a normal, not retained Fragment and keep the specific state they want retained separate.
This ensures that developers have a much more understandable lifecycle for those Fragments (one that matches all of the rest of their Fragments) while maintaining the useful properties of a single creation and single destruction (in this case, the constructor of the ViewModel
and the onCleared()
callback from the ViewModel
).
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 8543
Added this answer very late, but I thought it would make things clearer. Say after me. When setRetainInstance
is:
FALSE
onCreate()
and onDestroy()
.TRUE
onCreate()
and onDestroy()
.Don't forget that the above applies to DialogFragment
s as well as Fragments.
Upvotes: 35
Reputation: 36045
It's very helpful in keeping long running resources open such as sockets. Have a UI-less fragment that holds references to bluetooth sockets and you won't have to worry about reconnecting them when the user flips the phone.
It's also handy in keeping references to resources that take a long time to load like bitmaps or server data. Load it once, keep it in a retained fragment, and when the activity is reloaded it's still there and you don't have to rebuild it.
Upvotes: 49
Reputation: 1007659
How do you as a developer use this
Call setRetainInstance(true)
. I typically do that in onCreateView()
or onActivityCreated()
, where I use it.
and why does it make things easier?
It tends to be simpler than onRetainNonConfigurationInstance()
for handling the retention of data across configuration changes (e.g., rotating the device from portrait to landscape). Non-retained fragments are destroyed and recreated on the configuration change; retained fragments are not. Hence, any data held by those retained fragments is available to the post-configuration-change activity.
Upvotes: 93