async-expandable-list


Source link: https://github.com/Ericliu001/async-expandable-list

async-expandable-list

============ async-expandable-list contains 2 View classes: CollectionView and AsyncExpandableListView.

Add async-expandable-list to your project

Gradle:

compile 'com.ericliu.asyncexpandablelist:asyncexpandablelist:1.1.0'

Please make sure you have jcenter() in your project's repository. Check build.gradle file under the project's root directory. Add the following lines if they are missing.

allprojects {

  repositories {

jcenter()
  
}
 
}

Introduction

CollectionView displays a list of headers and sub-items:

  • Header A
    • item a1
    • item a2
  • Header B
    • item b1
    • item b2
    • item b3
  • Header C
    • item c1
    • item c2
    • item c3

AsyncExpandableListView displays a list of headers and loads a sub-list under a header when a header item is clicked. The loading of sub-items can be done asynchronously and there are callbacks to populate the data into the list when it's done loading.

  1. CollectionView in 3 steps

  1. Add the CollectionView to the layout.xml file where you want to display the list (Optional, population the CollectionView class in java has the same result)
<com.ericliu.asyncexpandablelist.CollectionView

android:id="@+id/collectionView"

android:layout_width="match_parent"

android:layout_height="match_parent"/> 
  1. Pouplating data
  • find the CollectionView instance and call setCollectionCallbacks() to setup callbacks for the CollectionView, which will be responsible for creating ViewHolders and binding data into the ViewHoders - works the same as the RecyclerView.Adapter except that you don't have to worry about view types.
  • Create a CollectionView.Inventory instance, the Inventory instance represents the whole data structure that's gonna be populated into the list.
public class MainActivity extends Activity implements CollectionViewCallbacks<String, News> {

private CollectionView<String, News> mCollectionView;
private CollectionView.Inventory<String, News> inventory;
 @Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {

 super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);

 setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);

  mCollectionView = (CollectionView) findViewById(R.id.collectionView);

 mCollectionView.setCollectionCallbacks(this);

  // the inventory represent all the whole data structure that's gonna be populated into the list.

 inventory = new CollectionView.Inventory<>();
 
  • Create InventoryGroup intances and add header item and sub-items into the InventoryGroup instance. Note the the newGroup(int groupOrdinal) method provided in the Inventory class requires an integer parameter: groupOrdinal. All the groups will be displayed in the list in an ascending order on the groupOrdinal. An InventoryGroup represents a header item and all sub-items under that header in the list.

int groupOrdinal = 0; // groupOrdinal dictates the sequence of groups to be displayed in the list

 CollectionView.InventoryGroup<String, News> group1 = inventory.newGroup(groupOrdinal);

// creating objects to be populated into the list.

 News news1 = new News();

 ...

News news2 = new News();
 ......

 .......

  // set the header item, in this case, it is simply a String.

 group1.setHeaderItem("Top Stories");

 // add items under this header.

 group1.addItem(news1);

 group1.addItem(news2);

 group1.addItem(news3);

.... 
  • Call updateInventory() to display the data structure we just created
 mCollectionView.updateInventory(inventory);

All done, the list will display the exact header-items structure.

  1. AsyncExpandableListView in 3 steps

  1. add AsyncExpandableListView to layout.xml file where you want to display the expandable list. (Optional, population the AsyncExpandableListView class in java has the same result).
<com.ericliu.asyncexpandablelist.async.AsyncExpandableListView

android:id="@+id/asyncExpandableCollectionView"

android:layout_width="match_parent"

android:layout_height="match_parent"/>
  1. Populating data
  • find the AsyncExpandableListView and call setCallbacks() and supply an AsyncExpandableListViewCallbacks instance to the view. The callbacks will handle the creation of ViewHolders and binding data to the ViewHolders.
public class AsyncActivity extends Activity implements AsyncExpandableListViewCallbacks<String, News> {

 private AsyncExpandableListView<String, News> mAsyncExpandableListView;
private CollectionView.Inventory<String, News> inventory;
  @Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {

 super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);

 setContentView(R.layout.activity_async);

 mAsyncExpandableListView = (AsyncExpandableListView) findViewById(R.id.asyncExpandableCollectionView);

 mAsyncExpandableListView.setCallbacks(this);
 
  • In particular the void onStartLoadingGroup(int groupOrdinal) method in the AsyncExpandableListViewCallbacks will be triggered on the header item click events, which gives the client a change to trigger loading sub-item data calls. When the call comes back, the client should call the method onFinishLoadingGroup(mGroupOrdinal, items) on the AsyncExpandableListView instance to display the data as well as updating UI.
  • The steps to add groups are the same as CollectionView mentioned above, but we don't need to add sub-items to groups at this point because only headers will be shown in the beginning in an expandable list, as the code snippet showed below:
 inventory = new CollectionView.Inventory<>();

 CollectionView.InventoryGroup<String, News> group1 = inventory.newGroup(0);
 // groupOrdinal is the smallest, displayed first

group1.setHeaderItem("Top Stories");

  CollectionView.InventoryGroup<String, News> group2 = inventory.newGroup(2);
 // 2 is the second smallest ordinal, displayed second

group2.setHeaderItem("World");

  CollectionView.InventoryGroup<String, News> group3 = inventory.newGroup(3);

group3.setHeaderItem("Australia");

 CollectionView.InventoryGroup<String, News> group4 = inventory.newGroup(4);

 group4.setHeaderItem("International");

 CollectionView.InventoryGroup<String, News> group5 = inventory.newGroup(5);

 group5.setHeaderItem("Businesses");

 CollectionView.InventoryGroup<String, News> group6 = inventory.newGroup(6);

 group6.setHeaderItem("Technology");

 mAsyncExpandableListView.updateInventory(inventory);
 
  1. Handle the async calls
  • Making the call to load all sub-items under a header in the method onStartLoadingGroup() in the AsyncExpandableListViewCallbacks.
 @Override
public void onStartLoadingGroup(int groupOrdinal) {

 new LoadDataTask(groupOrdinal, mAsyncExpandableListView).executeOnExecutor(AsyncTask.THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR);

}

``` * When the data come back, call ``` onFinishLoadingGroup(mGroupOrdinal, items);
 ``` to display data.  ```java
mAsyncExpandableListView.onFinishLoadingGroup(mGroupOrdinal, items);

References:

Inspired by CollectionView in Google iosche

https://github.com/google/iosched/blob/master/android/src/main/java/com/google/samples/apps/iosched/ui/widget/CollectionView.java

Resources

android-checkout is a library for Android In-App Billing (v3). The main goal is to reduce work which should be done by developers who want to integrate in-app purchases in their products. The project is inspired by Volley library and is designed to be easy to use, fast and flexible.

Mobile App testing on 300+ real devices!

  • Save in App Development Costs
  • Reduce Risks with Proactive, Agile Testing
  • Speed Up Time to Market
  • Reduce Operational & Unpredictable Costs
  • Improve App Ratings & Brand Reputation

AndroidAsync is a low level network protocol library.

Features:

  • Based on NIO. One thread, driven by callbacks. Highly efficient.
  • All operations return a Future that can be cancelled
  • Socket client + socket server
  • HTTP client + server
  • WebSocket client + server
  • Socket.IO client

This library is an Android networking abstraction library consisting of a combination of Volley, OkHttp, and Jackson, with a little glue to stick it all together. It's a great place to start if you need to execute requests, especially thos which return JSON.

RoboCoP is a Java library that can generate a fully-functional ContentProvider from a simple JSON schema file.

If you are looking for a listview with a paged header this is the dependency you are looking for. With PagedHeadListView you will be able to set your own fragments as new pages for the header, and a brand new indicator will be added automatically. You can play with all the custom attributes provided with the library to set indicator colors and position, ViewPager drag animation, and touch behaviour for the header view.

Topics


2D Engines   3D Engines   9-Patch   Action Bars   Activities   ADB   Advertisements   Analytics   Animations   ANR   AOP   API   APK   APT   Architecture   Audio   Autocomplete   Background Processing   Backward Compatibility   Badges   Bar Codes   Benchmarking   Bitmaps   Bluetooth   Blur Effects   Bread Crumbs   BRMS   Browser Extensions   Build Systems   Bundles   Buttons   Caching   Camera   Canvas   Cards   Carousels   Changelog   Checkboxes   Cloud Storages   Color Analysis   Color Pickers   Colors   Comet/Push   Compass Sensors   Conferences   Content Providers   Continuous Integration   Crash Reports   Credit Cards   Credits   CSV   Curl/Flip   Data Binding   Data Generators   Data Structures   Database   Database Browsers   Date &   Debugging   Decompilers   Deep Links   Dependency Injections   Design   Design Patterns   Dex   Dialogs   Distributed Computing   Distribution Platforms   Download Managers   Drawables   Emoji   Emulators   EPUB   Equalizers &   Event Buses   Exception Handling   Face Recognition   Feedback &   File System   File/Directory   Fingerprint   Floating Action   Fonts   Forms   Fragments   FRP   FSM   Functional Programming   Gamepads   Games   Geocaching   Gestures   GIF   Glow Pad   Gradle Plugins   Graphics   Grid Views   Highlighting   HTML   HTTP Mocking   Icons   IDE   IDE Plugins   Image Croppers   Image Loaders   Image Pickers   Image Processing   Image Views   Instrumentation   Intents   Job Schedulers   JSON   Keyboard   Kotlin   Layouts   Library Demos   List View   List Views   Localization   Location   Lock Patterns   Logcat   Logging   Mails   Maps   Markdown   Mathematics   Maven Plugins   MBaaS   Media   Menus   Messaging   MIME   Mobile Web   Native Image   Navigation   NDK   Networking   NFC   NoSQL   Number Pickers   OAuth   Object Mocking   OCR Engines   OpenGL   ORM   Other Pickers   Parallax List   Parcelables   Particle Systems   Password Inputs   PDF   Permissions   Physics Engines   Platforms   Plugin Frameworks   Preferences   Progress Indicators   ProGuard   Properties   Protocol Buffer   Pull To   Purchases   Push/Pull   QR Codes   Quick Return   Radio Buttons   Range Bars   Ratings   Recycler Views   Resources   REST   Ripple Effects   RSS   Screenshots   Scripting   Scroll Views   SDK   Search Inputs   Security   Sensors   Services   Showcase Views   Signatures   Sliding Panels   Snackbars   SOAP   Social Networks   Spannable   Spinners   Splash Screens   SSH   Static Analysis   Status Bars   Styling   SVG   System   Tags   Task Managers   TDD &   Template Engines   Testing   Testing Tools   Text Formatting   Text Views   Text Watchers   Text-to   Toasts   Toolkits For   Tools   Tooltips   Trainings   TV   Twitter   Updaters   USB   User Stories   Utils   Validation   Video   View Adapters   View Pagers   Views   Watch Face   Wearable Data   Wearables   Weather   Web Tools   Web Views   WebRTC   WebSockets   Wheel Widgets   Wi-Fi   Widgets   Windows   Wizards   XML   XMPP   YAML   ZIP Codes