49

ScrollView has a method for setting the x and y scroll offset, but no method for getting the current offset (all I'm really interested is the y offset, since ScrollView only supports vertical scrolling). I don't see any method that would work in the superclasses, and tried getTop() for the content view, which is always zero. Am I missing something?

5 Answers 5

66

Call getScrollY() on the ScrollView

See here for the documentation: http://developer.android.com/reference/android/view/View.html#getScrollY%28%29

1
  • 2
    I wanted to know whether my scrollView wrapping a textView with periodically increasing content (like a log view) was showing the last line of text. This did it: boolean lastLineVisible = scrollView.getScrollY() + scrollView.getHeight() + 100 >= textView.getHeight() Jul 2, 2015 at 1:17
12

Why don't you try something like this ?

targetScrollView.getViewTreeObserver().addOnScrollChangedListener(new ViewTreeObserver.OnScrollChangedListener() {
        @Override
        public void onScrollChanged() {
            int scrollX = targetScrollView.getScrollX();
            Log.d(TAG, "scrollX: " + scrollX);
        }
    });
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  • 1
    অস্থির সল্যুশন, Amazing solution.... Thank's, I love your solution. After 6 years of Android Apps Development, finally I found that solution. Oct 26, 2020 at 9:43
9

If you are certain that you should get some value after using getScrollY() or getTop(), try to put those method inside a

yourScroolView.post(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
    Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(),"Current Y is : "+getScrollY,Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
            }
        });

Now it should work. According to my understanding about this method, it will only run after the layout being drawn. That can be one of the reason why you kept getting 0 previously. Hope it helps.

3

What about: computeHorizontalScrollOffset() and computeVerticalScrollOffset().

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    Those methods are protected and thus only accessible if you're subclassing ScrollView. May 11, 2011 at 14:56
  • Thanks, Cristian, your solution helped to me. I have already had a subclassed view from ScrollView. It should be calculated with a listener setOnScrollViewListener (nicholasmelnick.com/entries/104). Also a first solution with getScrollY() works right.
    – CoolMind
    Nov 2, 2015 at 15:31
0

I achieve to get by the following. First get screen heigh and width.

DisplayMetrics metrics = getResources().getDisplayMetrics();
float screenWidth = metrics.widthPixels;
float screenHeight = metrics.heightPixels;

then to find out the document height (the total, what is being shown and what is out of the screen)

public float getDocumentHeight(){
    return (computeVerticalScrollRange() * screenHeight)/computeVerticalScrollExtent();
}

Finally to get the offset

public float getTopY(){
    return (getDocumentHeight() * computeVerticalScrollOffset())/computeVerticalScrollRange();
}

This give you the top of the window relative to the part of the document you are seeing so you could find the exact position of an event by

public boolean onTouchEvent(MotionEvent event) {
      int y = event.getY() + (int) getTopY();
    }

You can also do something similar to handle the width

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