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I am not a programmer I just like to make apps that help me for my work so I dont know alot about programming properly. That being said this is what I am up against. I enter a number for 1 to 100 and then my app will create a scrollable tablelayout with that many rows. Each row has a textview, an edittext and another textview here my code:

TableLayout tL = (TableLayout)findViewById(R.id.tableLayout1);
    // creates all the fields
    for(int i = 1; i <= numOfInjWells; i++) {
        TableRow tR = new TableRow(this);
        // creates the textView
        TextView tV1 = new TextView(this);
        tV1.setText("      " + i + ":    ");

        // add edit text
        EditText eT = new EditText(this);
        eT.setText("Meter Reading");
        eT.setInputType(InputType.TYPE_CLASS_NUMBER);

        TextView tV2 = new TextView(this);
        tV2.setText("");

        // add the TextView and the editText to the new TableRow
        tR.addView(tV1);
        tR.addView(eT);
        tR.addView(tV2);

        // add the TableRow to the TableLayout
        tL.addView(tR,new TableLayout.LayoutParams(
                LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT));    
    } // end for statement

so when I input a number in the edittext (eT) of row one I want it to then calculate the difference between it and a number I have stored in my database (I already know how to get the specific number I need from the database) and then change the textview tV2 in row one so it displays the difference without clicking a button. The problem that I am coming across is how do I associate edittext (eT) in row one with textview (tV2) because all the edittext and textviews have the same name eT or tV2

thanks for you help and I am sorry that I dont know much about coding.

edit: I thought about adding

eT.setId(i);
tV2.setId(i); 

but I dont know how to use that in my calculations.

3 Answers 3

0

The problem that I am coming across is how do I associate edittext (eT) in row one with textview (tV2) because all the edittext and textviews have the same name eT or tV2

One simple option is to set ids for this two Views that have a relation between them and when a particular EditText is modified you would find out which TextView is near the EditText an update it. For example to set the ids:

// add edit text
EditText eT = new EditText(this);
et.setId(1000 + i);
eT.setText("Meter Reading");
eT.setInputType(InputType.TYPE_CLASS_NUMBER);

TextView tV2 = new TextView(this);
tV2.setId(2000 + i); // as you see the difference between the this id and the EditText is 1000
tV2.setText("");

So if you have a reference to the EditText for which you want to calculate the value you could simple do a findViewById by the id of the EditText to which you add 1000. Now, I don't know how exactly you calculate the value based on the EditText, if you use a TextWatcher you could make your own class(that implements the TextWatcher interface) which also takes an int representing the id of the EditText for which you set the watcher and find the desired TextView from that.

Also, note that at 3 Views per row(+ 1 the TableRow) you could get in trouble with the app's memory if you create 50 rows or more(as this will result in about 200 Views in your layout). Might worth looking at the ListView.

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  • I have looked into the listviews but because of my lack of knowledge of coding I am getting lost with them or I cant get them to compile without errors. I have been trying to find tutorials to help me with it but I have not came up with any close enough to what I am doing that I can manipulate to my needs. thanks for your help I will try this and see if I can make it work Jul 11, 2012 at 20:54
  • @deerkiller11 Did you manage to do something? Also my advice with a ListView might not be such a good idea because an EditText in a ListView row doesn't work to well. Another approach could be to keep the current table layout and build some kind of pagination to only show a part of the table.
    – user
    Jul 13, 2012 at 9:42
  • not yet I am looking into the listview option but I have not been able to get it to work yet. Jul 15, 2012 at 3:37
0

After looking into listview I couldnt get them to work with the edittext so I went back to my tablelayout and this is the final working version.

Here I create the fields and a textwatcher added to the edittext to watch for changes:

    TableLayout tL = (TableLayout)findViewById(R.id.tableLayout1);
    // creates all the fields
    for(int i = 1; i <= numOfInjWells; i++) {
        TableRow tR = new TableRow(this);
        // creates the textView
        TextView tV1 = new TextView(this);
        tV1.setText("       " + i + ":    ");

        // add edit text
        eT = new EditText(this);
        eT.setInputType(InputType.TYPE_CLASS_NUMBER);
        eT.setWidth(100);
        eT.setId(1000 + i);
        eT.addTextChangedListener(new CustomTextWatcher(eT));

        tV2 = new TextView(this);
        tV2.setText("");
        tV2.setId(2000 + i);

        // add the TextView and the editText to the new TableRow
        tR.addView(tV1);
        tR.addView(eT);
        tR.addView(tV2);

        // add the TableRow to the TableLayout
        tL.addView(tR,new TableLayout.LayoutParams(
                LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT));    
    } // end for statement

next I created this class for my customtextwachter:

private class CustomTextWatcher implements TextWatcher {
    private EditText mEditText;

    public CustomTextWatcher(EditText eT) {
        mEditText = eT;
    }

    public void beforeTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int count, int after) {
    }

    public void onTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int before, int count) {
    }

    public void afterTextChanged(Editable s) {
        // gets the change amount for each meter reading from the previous reading
            // this method does the work
        getMeterChange();

    }
} // end class CustomTextWatcher

the getMeterChange() method does the work:

public void getMeterChange() {
    int preMeterReading = 0;
    int mReading = 0;

    try {
        cRWLogData.moveToPosition(recordLookUp - 1);
        preMeterReading = cRWLogData.getInt( 14 + rowChanged);
        // finds the edittext that has focus
        View currView = tL.findFocus();
        int currentid = tL.findFocus().getId();
        // gets the string from the edittext and changes it to a int
        EditText currentComponent = (EditText) currView;
        String eTValue = currentComponent.getText().toString();
        mReading = Integer.parseInt(eTValue);
        // calculates difference for what is entered and what is in database
        mChange = mReading - preMeterReading;
        // makes the textview in the same tablerow as the edittext active
        TextView tV2 = (TextView) findViewById(currentid + 1000);
        // sets the text of the textview
        tV2.setText("     " + mChange +"");
    } // end try
    catch (Exception e) {}

} // end getMeterChange
0

I know this is old, but for those who found this when searching I'll update a better option...

TableLayout tL = (TableLayout)findViewById(R.id.tableLayout1);
// creates all the fields
for(int i = 1; i <= numOfInjWells; i++) {
    TableRow tR = new TableRow(this);
    // creates the textView
    TextView tV1 = new TextView(this);
    tV1.setText("       " + i + ":    ");

    // add edit text
    eT = new EditText(this);
    eT.setInputType(InputType.TYPE_CLASS_NUMBER);
    eT.setWidth(100);


    tV2 = new TextView(this);
    tV2.setText("");
    eT.addTextChangedListener(new CustomTextWatcher(tV2));

    // add the TextView and the editText to the new TableRow
    tR.addView(tV1);
    tR.addView(eT);
    tR.addView(tV2);

    // add the TableRow to the TableLayout
    tL.addView(tR,new TableLayout.LayoutParams(
            LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT, LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT));    
} // end for statement

Then the watcher:

private class CustomTextWatcher implements TextWatcher {
    private TextView mTextView;

    public CustomTextWatcher(TextView tV2) {
        mTextView = tV2;
    }

    public void beforeTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int count, int after) {}

    public void onTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int before, int count) {}

    public void afterTextChanged(Editable s) {
        // gets the change amount for each meter reading from the previous reading
            // this method does the work

        cRWLogData.moveToPosition(recordLookUp - 1);
        preMeterReading = cRWLogData.getInt( 14 + rowChanged);
        // edit text has just passed the value in Editable s
        mReading = Integer.parseInt(s.toString());
        // calculates difference for what is entered and what is in database
        mChange = mReading - preMeterReading;
        // sets the text of the textview
        mTextView.setText("     " + mChange +"");

    }
} // end class CustomTextWatcher

There's a reason the values are passed into the watcher. Use the framework to do the hard yards for you.

NOTE: I haven't actually compiled this, and you would likely need to put the try/catch back in, I simply removed it for clarity.

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