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I have a FragmentTabHost with 4 tabs. The content of one tab is created dynamically in the onViewCreated method. It's a table and the amount of rows added to this table depends on the user settings.

My problem is, when I add (for testing purposes) 3 rows to the table, switch the tab and switch back, I have 6 rows in the table. If I do it again, I have 9 rows in the table.

So everytime I open this tab 3 rows are added to the table without the former content being deleted.

If I got it right, the FragmentTabHost stores the state of each Tabs Fragment. So I check if the savedInstanceState of the onViewCreated method is null before adding the rows. Unfortunately savedInstanceState always returns null.

This is the initialization code of my FragmentTabHost

private void initTabs()
{
    FragmentTabHost tabHost = (FragmentTabHost)findViewById(android.R.id.tabhost);

    tabHost.setup(this, getSupportFragmentManager(),R.id.realtabcontent);
    tabHost.addTab(tabHost.newTabSpec("tab1").setIndicator("tab1"), TestFragment1.class, null);
    tabHost.addTab(tabHost.newTabSpec("tab2").setIndicator("tab2"), TestFragment2.class, null);
    tabHost.addTab(tabHost.newTabSpec("tab3").setIndicator("tab3"), TestFragment3.class, null);
    tabHost.addTab(tabHost.newTabSpec("tab4").setIndicator("tab4"), TestFragment4.class, null);     

    tabHost.setOnTabChangedListener(this);
}

This is the code of the 'tableView'-Fragment of one of the tabs:

@Override 
public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container,
        Bundle savedInstanceState) 
{
    super.onCreateView(inflater, container, savedInstanceState);
    return inflater.inflate(R.layout.tab_tableview, container, false);    
}

@Override
public void onViewCreated(View view, Bundle savedInstanceState) 
{
    super.onViewCreated(view, savedInstanceState);

    Log.d("savedInstanceState", String.valueOf(savedInstanceState)); // is always null

    if (savedInstanceState != null)
        return;

    // Add Test-Rows
    for (int i=0; i<3; i++)
    {
        RowFragment fragment = new RowFragment();
        FragmentTransaction ft = getChildFragmentManager().beginTransaction();
        ft.add(R.id.RowFragmentLayoutContainer, fragment);
        ft.commit();
    }

}

What is wrong with my code? What must I do to only add the rows once?

1 Answer 1

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Hmm, the way you are using the child fragments looks a bit weird, but in case you have a reason to use fragments as table items (who am I to judge :) ), the simplest way that I can quickly come up with is to first try and find the fragment in case it was previously added:

FragmentManager manager = getChildFragmentManager();
if (manager.findFragmentById(R.id.RowFragmentLayoutContainer) != null)
    return;

for (int i=0; i<3; i++)
{
    RowFragment fragment = new RowFragment();
    FragmentTransaction ft = manager.beginTransaction();
    ft.add(R.id.RowFragmentLayoutContainer, fragment);
    ft.commit();
}
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  • Thanks for your answer :). But shouldn't be savedInstanceState != null or the view completly new created? There must be another way than looking for formely added rows... or not :)? Oct 28, 2013 at 19:41
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    I've never needed to use the savedInstanceState, but I've thought that you need to store something yourself in onSaveInstanceState in order to have the state available when the fragment is created again. Someone correct me if I'm wrong, though. But what I suggested is just a simple way to (hopefully) get the thing working. Like I said, using the fragments for table rows seems like an overkill, maybe you could use a ListView instead and just update its adapter in the tab fragment's onResume?
    – J.Nieminen
    Oct 28, 2013 at 19:50
  • I try to port an iOS-app to android and I still have my problems to get several thinks done right in android ;). Thanks for the tip with the ListView. I'll take a look at it. Right now I've solved my problem with using a bool-var. But I still have my doubts that this is the right way to handle my issue. Android feels some kind of weird, when you come from iOS :). Oct 28, 2013 at 19:54
  • 1
    This might help you with the ListViews in case you decide to use them (read the whole tutorial if you can, there's a lot of good things to learn): vogella.com/articles/AndroidListView/article.html
    – J.Nieminen
    Oct 28, 2013 at 20:01
  • Thanks a lot. That seems to be a far better approach than using fragments :). And I also have click events etc included :). So, I'll port my code to ListView ;)... Thanks! Oct 28, 2013 at 20:06

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