50

I have this code

final static int TITLE_ID = 1;
final static int REVIEW_ID = 2;

Now, I want to create a new layout in my main class

public View createContent() {
    // create linear layout for the entire view
    LinearLayout layout = new LinearLayout(this);
    layout.setLayoutParams(new ViewGroup.LayoutParams(ViewGroup.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT,
            ViewGroup.LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT));
    layout.setOrientation(LinearLayout.VERTICAL);

    // create TextView for the title
    TextView titleView = new TextView(this);
    titleView.setId(TITLE_ID);
    titleView.setTextColor(Color.GRAY);
    layout.addView(titleView);

    StarView sv = new StarView(this);
    sv.setId(REVIEW_ID);
    layout.addView(sv);

    return layout;
}

But when ever I call TITLE_ID and REVIEW_ID, it gives me an error

Supplying the wrong type of resource identifier.
For example, when calling Resources.getString(int id), you should be passing R.string.something, not R.drawable.something.
Passing the wrong constant to a method which expects one of a specific set of constants. For example, when calling View#setLayoutDirection, the parameter must be android.view.View.LAYOUT_DIRECTION_LTR or android.view.View.LAYOUT_DIRECTION_RTL.

I don't have any problem running this code. I'm just wondering why it gives me an error. Any idea?

2
  • Maybe there is a conflict. Set TITLE_ID and REVIEW_ID to very big numbers and try again.
    – onof
    Apr 17, 2015 at 10:44
  • you can manage using setTag() instead of SetId Apr 17, 2015 at 11:11

3 Answers 3

116

This is not a compiler error. It is just editor validation error(lint warning) as this is not a common way to deal with Ids.

So if your app supporting API 17 and higher,

you can call View.generateViewId as

  titleView.setId(View.generateViewId());

and

  sv.setId(View.generateViewId());

and for API<17

  1. open your project's res/values/ folder
  2. create an xml file called ids.xml

with the following content:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<resources>
    <item name="titleId" type="id" />
    <item name="svId" type="id" />
</resources>

then in your code,

  titleView.setId(R.id.titleId);

and

  sv.setId(R.id.svId);

And to disable this warning (If you want)

In Android Studio click on light bulb on line with this 'error'. And select Disable inspection in first submenu.

3
  • 5
    When using generateViewId: What if I want to reference later a specific view? How would I know the id? Let's say the 10th out of 50 generated views? Dec 20, 2015 at 16:36
  • The light bulb->inspection 'Constant and Resource Type Mismatches options'->Disable inspection trick was just what I needed!
    – SMBiggs
    Apr 13, 2017 at 15:59
  • Disabling inspection is bad practice. There are much better ways to disable the lint check on an instance without crippling lint altogether. May 5, 2017 at 5:25
25

You can also disable lint at build.gradle file. Add these lines in your build.gradle file.

android { 
       lintOptions{
             disable "ResourceType"
       }
}
1
  • @Erwinus it will remove the lint flag for any issue related to ResourceType. It works to take away yellow marks, but is bad practice in coding. I have posted an alternative for only removing the lint flag for the specific instance. May 5, 2017 at 5:22
9

I am including this as an alternative to "fixing" the issue for those that cannot generate a view ID (ie. defining the ID before the view is actually present) and know what they are doing.

Directly above a variable declaration or method that contains the issue, simply include @SuppressWarnings("ISSUE_IDENTIFIER") to disable the lint warning for that instance.

In this case, it would be @SuppressWarnings("ResourceType")

Using general methods to disable the warning type is bad practice and can lead to unforeseen issues, such as memory leaks and unstable code. Don't publish garbage.

Make sure to undo the option to Disable inspection and remove these lines from the build.gradle:

android {
    lintOptions{
        disable "ResourceType"
    }
}

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