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So I have a submenu that I have for an options menu item. I want a list of checkable entries that the user can select/deselect as many as they want. The only problem I can't solve is how to prevent the option menu from closing when one of the checkboxes is clicked. I saw the performShortcut has a FLAG_PERFORM_NO_CLOSE flag, but I'm not sure how to use that method. I've tried many things, but I'm confused on where the keyevent is supposed to come from or if this is even the right method I should be looking at.

So tl;dr: How do I prevent options menus/submenus from closing when an option is selected?

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  • Probably returning true/false from a menu handler will do it. Check your menu handlers.
    – Pentium10
    Jul 12, 2010 at 9:25
  • I tried returning false from onOptionsItemSelected. That doesn't work.
    – Falmarri
    Jul 12, 2010 at 15:30
  • True is the default to return. That didn't work so I tried false. Same behavior
    – Falmarri
    Jul 12, 2010 at 16:37
  • I don't think return value has any affect the menu closing. It is just a signel indicating whether or not a menu item was successfully selected. I'm not sure that menu options are meant to work as you've described. Did you consider opening up a dialog with your options, instead of using a submenu? Jul 12, 2010 at 16:44
  • Hmm, that seems like a totally reasonable thing to do. That will probably work a lot better too so I don't have to use onPrepareOptionsMenu to change the check boxes. But I'm pretty sure options menus CAN work like this. Apparently most people just do it the easy way with a dialog.
    – Falmarri
    Jul 12, 2010 at 16:55

1 Answer 1

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The way I would handle this is using the standard alert dialog class. In your menu handler, create an AlertDialog and pass an array of your options to the Builder.

The method you should pay attention to is AlertDialog.Builder.setMultiChoiceItems(CharSequence[] items, boolean[] checkedItems, DialogInterface.OnMultiChoiceClickListener listener)

Pass an array to this method and put your submenu selection code in the ClickListener.

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  • Is this method preferred over creating an entirely new activity, and declaring it as a dialog in my manifest, and then creating the checklist views myself? I know it's more work, and I know how to do both. But is one choice clearly better than the other?
    – Falmarri
    Jul 14, 2010 at 17:28
  • @Falmarri If you don't need any customization beyond a list of text items, the standard alertdialog is the way to go. You should do it through the Activity's ShowDialog() method though. That handles a lot of the threading and control issues for you. Jul 14, 2010 at 18:22

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