I have an EditText field which needs to be a numeric password field. Everything works OK in portrait mode; not in landscape. When the user selects the EditText field, the UI zooms into the field and when I type all the characters are visible.

I need a numeric keyboard also. I tried setting the input type to text password|number. If I remove "number" option everything works right; otherwise no.

Any suggestions?

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4 Answers

This problem can be solved without using deprecated android:password. Use the following code snippet, but do not reverse the sequence of calls:

    EditText editText = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.MyEditText);
    editText.setInputType(InputType.TYPE_CLASS_NUMBER);
    editText.setTransformationMethod(PasswordTransformationMethod.getInstance());
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Sure, but somehow not as clear as a simple android:password="true". I wonder why they deprecated it. – ettore Mar 8 '11 at 2:58
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Somehow this does not seem to work on 2.3.x . Turning to landscape the passwort is still visible as described by Mar. – Marcus Wolschon Aug 29 '11 at 9:45
I just found out that editText.setSingleLine(true); after the editText.setTransformationMethod() causes the dots to stop being shown !! – Someone Somewhere Jan 5 at 21:52
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To fix the issue where the password is visible in the landscape mode full-screen editor (as Marcus described), you can add the following line to disable the full-screen editor:

editText.setImeOptions(EditorInfo.IME_FLAG_NO_EXTRACT_UI);

You may also want to change the typeface to monospace to better emulate the text-password behavior:

editText.setTypeface(Typeface.MONOSPACE);
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Using the deprecated

android:password="true"

may solve your problem.

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Indeed, I was about to link to your previous answer: stackoverflow.com/questions/2017674/… – Christopher Mar 10 '10 at 23:47
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I think you should use android:password="true" and android:numeric="integer". But as the Android documentation states (in R.attr.html, not in the TextView docs), these are deprectated and you should use android:inputType. inputType takes flag, so you can mix mulitple possibilities. And I think android:inputType="number | password" should work for you.

You should specify android:password="true" if you want to support older devices too.

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See dtmilano's answer, plus the link I gave to a previous question which covers these points. Unfortunately passing both into inputType doesn't work. – Christopher Mar 19 '10 at 11:21
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