Read the motivation for this project in my blog post.
This library is available on maven central:
compile 'com.hannesdorfmann:adapterdelegates4:4.0.0'
Please note that since 4.0 the group id has been changed to adapterdelegates4
.
compile 'com.hannesdorfmann:adapterdelegates4:4.0.1-SNAPSHOT'
You also have to add the url to the snapshot repository:
allprojects {
repositories {
...
maven { url "https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/snapshots/" }
}
See releases section
The idea of this library is to build your adapters by composing reusable components.
Favor composition over inheritance
The idea is that you define an AdapterDelegate
for each view type. This delegate is responsible for creating ViewHolder and binding ViewHolder for a certain viewtype.
An AdapterDelegate
get added to an AdapterDelegatesManager
. This manager is the man in the middle between RecyclerView.Adapter
and each AdapterDelegate
.
For example:
public class CatAdapterDelegate extends AdapterDelegate<List<Animal>> {
private LayoutInflater inflater;
public CatAdapterDelegate(Activity activity) {
inflater = activity.getLayoutInflater();
}
@Override public boolean isForViewType(@NonNull List<Animal> items, int position) {
return items.get(position) instanceof Cat;
}
@NonNull @Override public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent) {
return new CatViewHolder(inflater.inflate(R.layout.item_cat, parent, false));
}
@Override public void onBindViewHolder(@NonNull List<Animal> items, int position,
@NonNull RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, @Nullable List<Object> payloads) {
CatViewHolder vh = (CatViewHolder) holder;
Cat cat = (Cat) items.get(position);
vh.name.setText(cat.getName());
}
static class CatViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public TextView name;
public CatViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
name = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.name);
}
}
}
Please note that onBindViewHolder()
last parameter payloads
is null unless you use from adapter.notify
. There are more methods like onViewRecycled(ViewHolder)
, onFailedToRecycleView(ViewHolder)
,
onViewAttachedToWindow(ViewHolder)
and onViewDetachedFromWindow(ViewHolder)
you can override in your AdapterDelegate
class.
Then an AnimalAdapter
could look like this:
public class AnimalAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter {
private AdapterDelegatesManager<List<Animal>> delegatesManager;
private List<Animal> items;
public AnimalAdapter(Activity activity, List<Animal> items) {
this.items = items;
delegatesManager = new AdapterDelegatesManager<>();
// AdapterDelegatesManager internally assigns view types integers
delegatesManager.addDelegate(new CatAdapterDelegate(activity))
.addDelegate(new DogAdapterDelegate(activity))
.addDelegate(new GeckoAdapterDelegate(activity));
// You can explicitly assign integer view type if you want to
delegatesManager.addDelegate(23, new SnakeAdapterDelegate(activity));
}
@Override public int getItemViewType(int position) {
return delegatesManager.getItemViewType(items, position);
}
@Override public RecyclerView.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
return delegatesManager.onCreateViewHolder(parent, viewType);
}
@Override public void onBindViewHolder(RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder, int position) {
delegatesManager.onBindViewHolder(items, position, holder);
}
@Override public int getItemCount() {
return items.size();
}
}
As you have seen in the code snippet above this may require to write the same boiler plate code again and again to hook in AdapterDelegatesManager
to Adapter
.
This can be reduced by extending either from ListDelegationAdapter
if the data source the adapter displays is java.util.List<?>
or AbsDelegationAdapter
which is a more general one (not limited to java.util.List
)
For example the same AnimalAdapter
from above could be simplified as follows by extending from ListDelegationAdapter
:
public class AnimalAdapter extends ListDelegationAdapter<List<Animal>> {
public AnimalAdapter(Activity activity, List<Animal> items) {
// DelegatesManager is a protected Field in ListDelegationAdapter
delegatesManager.addDelegate(new CatAdapterDelegate(activity))
.addDelegate(new DogAdapterDelegate(activity))
.addDelegate(new GeckoAdapterDelegate(activity))
.addDelegate(23, new SnakeAdapterDelegate(activity));
// Set the items from super class.
setItems(items);
}
}
Also you may have noticed that you often have to write boilerplate code to cast items and ViewHolders when working with list of items as adapters dataset source.
AbsListItemAdapterDelegate
can help you here. Let's take this class to create a CatListItemAdapterDelegate
similar to the CatAdapterDelegate
from top of this page but without the code for casting items.
public class CatListItemAdapterDelegate extends AbsListItemAdapterDelegate<Cat, Animal, CatViewHolder> {
private LayoutInflater inflater;
public CatAdapterDelegate(Activity activity) {
inflater = activity.getLayoutInflater();
}
@Override public boolean isForViewType(Animal item, List<Animal> items, int position) {
return item instanceof Cat;
}
@Override public CatViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent) {
return new CatViewHolder(inflater.inflate(R.layout.item_cat, parent, false));
}
@Override public void onBindViewHolder(Cat item, CatViewHolder vh, @Nullable List<Object> payloads) {
vh.name.setText(item.getName());
}
static class CatViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
public TextView name;
public CatViewHolder(View itemView) {
super(itemView);
name = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.name);
}
}
}
As you see, instead of writing code that casts list item to Cat we can use AbsListItemAdapterDelegate
to do the same job (by declaring generic types).
Support library 27.0.1 introduced ListAdapter
- the new extension of RecyclerView.Adapter
that uses AsyncListDiffer
internally. It does calculating diff in the background thread by default and does all particular animations for you items collection. Hence you don't need carry about notify*
methods, AsyncListDiffer
does all the job for you. And AdapterDelegates supports it too.
This library offers the equivalent to ListAdapter
which is called AsyncListDifferDelegationAdapter
that can be used together with any regular AdapterDelegate
.
public class DiffAdapter extends AsyncListDifferDelegationAdapter<Animal> {
public DiffAdapter() {
super(DIFF_CALLBACK) // Your diff callback for diff utils
delegatesManager
.addDelegate(new DogAdapterDelegate());
.addDelegate(new CatAdapterDelegate());
}
}
What if your adapter's data source contains a certain element you don't have registered an AdapterDelegate
for? In this case the AdapterDelegateManager
will throw an exception at runtime. However, this is not always what you want. You can specify a fallback AdapterDelegate
that will be used if no other AdapterDelegate
has been found to handle a certain view type.
AdapterDelegate fallbackDelegate = ...;
adapterDelegateManager.setFallbackDelegate( fallbackDelegate );
Note also that boolean return type of isForViewType()
of a fallback delegate will be ignored (will not be take into account). So it doesn't matter if you return true or false. You can use AbsFallbackAdapterDelegate
that already implements isForViewType()
so that you only have to override onCreateViewHolder()
and onBindViewHolder()
for your fallback adapter delegate.
AdapterDelegates3
uses com.android.support:recyclerview-v7:x.y.z
whereas AdapterDelegates4
uses
androidx.recyclerview:recyclerview:1.0.0
.
Migration should be easy. Just use IntelliJ IDE or Android Studio 'Replace in Path' (can be found inside Edit
main menu then Find
submenu):
Replace com.hannesdorfmann.adapterdelegates3
with com.hannesdorfmann.adapterdelegates4
.
You might also have to replace android.support.v7.widget.RecyclerView
with androidx.recyclerview.widget.RecyclerView
and
android.support.annotation.NonNull
with androidx.annotation.NonNull
.
Copyright 2015 Hannes Dorfmann
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.