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I've thought of some less than elegant ways to solve this, but I know I must be missing something.

My onItemSelected fires off immediately without any interaction with the user, and this is undesired behavior. I wish for the UI to wait until the user selects something before it does anything.

I even tried setting up the listener in the onResume, hoping that would help, but it doesn't.

How can I stop this from firing off before the user can touch the control? THANKS

public class CMSHome extends Activity { 

private Spinner spinner;

@Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
    setContentView(R.layout.main);

    // Heres my spinner ///////////////////////////////////////////
    spinner = (Spinner) findViewById(R.id.spinner);
    ArrayAdapter<CharSequence> adapter = ArrayAdapter.createFromResource(
            this, R.array.pm_list, android.R.layout.simple_spinner_item);
    adapter.setDropDownViewResource(android.R.layout.simple_spinner_dropdown_item);
    spinner.setAdapter(adapter);
    };

public void onResume() {
    super.onResume();
    spinner.setOnItemSelectedListener(new MyOnItemSelectedListener());
}

    public class MyOnItemSelectedListener implements OnItemSelectedListener {

    public void onItemSelected(AdapterView<?> parent,
        View view, int pos, long id) {

     Intent i = new Intent(CMSHome.this, ListProjects.class);
     i.putExtra("bEmpID", parent.getItemAtPosition(pos).toString());
        startActivity(i);

        Toast.makeText(parent.getContext(), "The pm is " +
          parent.getItemAtPosition(pos).toString(), Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
    }

    public void onNothingSelected(AdapterView parent) {
      // Do nothing.
    }
}

}

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11 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

I would have expected your solution to work -- I though the selection event would not fire if you set the adapter before setting up the listener.

That being said, a simple boolean flag would allow you to detect the rogue first selection event and ignore it.

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ugh, yeah. Thats what I meant by an inelegant solution. Seems like there must be a better way. Thank you though. – FauxReal Apr 1 '10 at 17:54
3  
This thread on the Dev ml has more insight about this: groups.google.com/group/android-developers/browse_thread/thread/… - Unfortunately no solution is given... – BoD Sep 20 '10 at 9:32
7  
The process of laying out the components fires the selection listener. You'd therefore have to add the listener after the layout has been done. I have been unable to find a suitable, straightforward place to do this as the layout seems to happen at some point after onResume() and onPostResume(), so all of the normal hooks have completed by the time the layout happens. – Dan Dyer Dec 18 '10 at 13:05

Referring to the answer of Dan Dyer try to register the OnSelectListener in a post(Runnbale) method:

spinner.post(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
    spinner.setOnItemSelectedListener(listener);
}
});

By doing that for me the wished behavoir finally occurred. In this case it also means that the listener only fires on a changed item.

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2  
thats a good solution Thanks, works well – IronBlossom May 25 '12 at 11:02
this didnt work for me... – smitalm Nov 13 '12 at 17:27
1  
I get an error saying: The method setOnItemSelectedListener(AdapterView.OnItemSelectedListener) in the type AdapterView<SpinnerAdapter> is not applicable for the arguments (new Runnable(){}) why is that? – Jakob Nov 18 '12 at 10:46
+1, effective way of doing what should have been the default behavior (or at least configurable) – nobre Nov 29 '12 at 12:29
fast and awesome! – Nezam Dec 21 '12 at 12:57
show 2 more comments

I was in similar situation, and I have a simple solution working for me.

It seems like methods setSelection(int position) and setSelected(int position, boolean animate) have different internal implementation.

When you use the second method setSelected(int position, boolean animate) with false animate flag, you get the selection without firing onItemSelected listener.

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The better approach is to not worry about the extra calls to onItemSelected, but to make sure that it shows the right selection. So, calling spinner.setSelection(selectedIndex) before adding listener made it work consistently for me. – andude Mar 6 at 16:23

I created a small utility method for changing Spinner selection without notifying the user:

private void setSpinnerSelectionWithoutCallingListener(final Spinner spinner, final int selection) {
    final OnItemSelectedListener l = spinner.getOnItemSelectedListener();
    spinner.setOnItemSelectedListener(null);
    spinner.post(new Runnable() {
        @Override
        public void run() {
            spinner.setSelection(selection);
            spinner.post(new Runnable() {
                @Override
                public void run() {
                    spinner.setOnItemSelectedListener(l);
                }
            });
        }
    });
}

It disables the listener, changes the selection, and re-enables the listener after that.

The trick is that calls are asynchronous to the UI thread, so you have to do it in consecutive handler posts.

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VERY nice. This method has simplified my code. Thanks! – PeteH Mar 14 at 7:15

Unfortunately it seems that the two most commonly suggested solutions to this issue, namely counting callback occurrences and posting a Runnable to set the callback at a later time can both fail when for example accessibility options are enabled. Here's a helper class that works around these issues. Further explenation is in the comment block.

import android.view.View;
import android.widget.AdapterView;
import android.widget.AdapterView.OnItemSelectedListener;
import android.widget.Spinner;
import android.widget.SpinnerAdapter;

/**
 * Spinner Helper class that works around some common issues 
 * with the stock Android Spinner
 * 
 * A Spinner will normally call it's OnItemSelectedListener
 * when you use setSelection(...) in your initialization code. 
 * This is usually unwanted behavior, and a common work-around 
 * is to use spinner.post(...) with a Runnable to assign the 
 * OnItemSelectedListener after layout.
 * 
 * If you do not call setSelection(...) manually, the callback
 * may be called with the first item in the adapter you have 
 * set. The common work-around for that is to count callbacks.
 * 
 * While these workarounds usually *seem* to work, the callback
 * may still be called repeatedly for other reasons while the 
 * selection hasn't actually changed. This will happen for 
 * example, if the user has accessibility options enabled - 
 * which is more common than you might think as several apps 
 * use this for different purposes, like detecting which 
 * notifications are active.
 * 
 * Ideally, your OnItemSelectedListener callback should be
 * coded defensively so that no problem would occur even
 * if the callback was called repeatedly with the same values
 * without any user interaction, so no workarounds are needed.
 * 
 * This class does that for you. It keeps track of the values
 * you have set with the setSelection(...) methods, and 
 * proxies the OnItemSelectedListener callback so your callback
 * only gets called if the selected item's position differs 
 * from the one you have set by code, or the first item if you
 * did not set it.
 * 
 * This also means that if the user actually clicks the item
 * that was previously selected by code (or the first item
 * if you didn't set a selection by code), the callback will 
 * not fire.
 * 
 * To implement, replace current occurrences of:
 * 
 *     Spinner spinner = 
 *         (Spinner)findViewById(R.id.xxx);
 *     
 * with:
 * 
 *     SpinnerHelper spinner = 
 *         new SpinnerHelper(findViewById(R.id.xxx))
 *         
 * SpinnerHelper proxies the (my) most used calls to Spinner
 * but not all of them. Should a method not be available, use: 
 * 
 *      spinner.getSpinner().someMethod(...)
 *
 * Or just add the proxy method yourself :)
 * 
 * (Quickly) Tested on devices from 2.3.6 through 4.2.2
 * 
 * @author Jorrit "Chainfire" Jongma
 * @license WTFPL (do whatever you want with this, nobody cares)
 */
public class SpinnerHelper implements OnItemSelectedListener {
    private final Spinner spinner;

    private int lastPosition = -1;
    private OnItemSelectedListener proxiedItemSelectedListener = null;  

    public SpinnerHelper(Object spinner) {
         this.spinner = (spinner != null) ? (Spinner)spinner : null;        
    }

    public Spinner getSpinner() {
        return spinner;
    }

    public void setSelection(int position) { 
        lastPosition = Math.max(-1, position);
        spinner.setSelection(position);     
    }

    public void setSelection(int position, boolean animate) {
        lastPosition = Math.max(-1, position);
        spinner.setSelection(position, animate);        
    }

    public void setOnItemSelectedListener(OnItemSelectedListener listener) {
        proxiedItemSelectedListener = listener;
        spinner.setOnItemSelectedListener(listener == null ? null : this);
    }   

    public void onItemSelected(AdapterView<?> parent, View view, int position, long id) {
        if (position != lastPosition) {
            lastPosition = position;
            if (proxiedItemSelectedListener != null) {
                proxiedItemSelectedListener.onItemSelected(
                        parent, view, position, id
                );
            }
        }
    }

    public void onNothingSelected(AdapterView<?> parent) {
        if (-1 != lastPosition) {
            lastPosition = -1;
            if (proxiedItemSelectedListener != null) {
                proxiedItemSelectedListener.onNothingSelected(
                        parent
                );
            }
        }
    }

    public void setAdapter(SpinnerAdapter adapter) {
        if (adapter.getCount() > 0) {
            lastPosition = 0;
        }
        spinner.setAdapter(adapter);
    }

    public SpinnerAdapter getAdapter() { return spinner.getAdapter(); } 
    public int getCount() { return spinner.getCount(); }    
    public Object getItemAtPosition(int position) { return spinner.getItemAtPosition(position); }   
    public long getItemIdAtPosition(int position) { return spinner.getItemIdAtPosition(position); }
    public Object getSelectedItem() { return spinner.getSelectedItem(); }
    public long getSelectedItemId() { return spinner.getSelectedItemId(); }
    public int getSelectedItemPosition() { return spinner.getSelectedItemPosition(); }
    public void setEnabled(boolean enabled) { spinner.setEnabled(enabled); }
    public boolean isEnabled() { return spinner.isEnabled(); }
}
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this solved my problem so maybe someone could find it useful too ;-)

Android Spinner selection

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I've found much more elegant solution to this. It involves counting how many times the ArrayAdapter (in your case "adapter")has been invoked. Let's say you have 1 spinner and you call:

int iCountAdapterCalls = 0;

ArrayAdapter<CharSequence> adapter = ArrayAdapter.createFromResource(
            this, R.array.pm_list, android.R.layout.simple_spinner_item);
adapter.setDropDownViewResource(android.R.layout.simple_spinner_dropdown_item);
    spinner.setAdapter(adapter);

Declare an int counter after the onCreate and then inside onItemSelected() method put an "if" condition to check how many times the atapter has been called. In your case you have it called just once so:

if(iCountAdapterCalls < 1)
{
  iCountAdapterCalls++;
  //This section executes in onCreate, during the initialization
}
else
{
  //This section corresponds to user clicks, after the initialization
}
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I have found a solution for this problem and posted it here (with code sample):

Spinner onItemSelected() executes when it is not suppose to.

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I would try to call

spinner.setOnItemSelectedListener(new MyOnItemSelectedListener());

after you call setAdapter(). Also try out calling before the adapter.

You always have the solution to go with subclassing, where you can wrap a boolean flag to your overriden setAdapter method to skip the event.

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You can look at this solution, it is easy and practical.

http://stackoverflow.com/a/10102356/621951

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The solution with a boolean flag or a counter didn't help me, 'cause during orientation change onItemSelected() calls "overflew" the flag or the counter.

I subclassed android.widget.Spinner and made tiny additions. The relevant parts are below. This solution worked for me.

private void setHandleOnItemSelected()
{
  final StackTraceElement [] elements = Thread.currentThread().getStackTrace();

  for (int index = 1; index < elements.length; index++)
  {
     handleOnItemSelected = elements[index].toString().indexOf("PerformClick") != -1; //$NON-NLS-1$

     if (handleOnItemSelected)
     {
        break;
     }
  }
}

@Override
public void setSelection(int position, boolean animate)
{
  super.setSelection(position, animate);

  setHandleOnItemSelected();
}

@Override
public void setSelection(int position)
{
  super.setSelection(position);

  setHandleOnItemSelected();
}

public boolean shouldHandleOnItemSelected()
{
  return handleOnItemSelected;
}
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