You do this by implementing View#onSaveInstanceState and View#onRestoreInstanceState and extending the View.BaseSavedState class.
public class CustomView extends View {
private int stateToSave;
...
@Override
public Parcelable onSaveInstanceState() {
//begin boilerplate code that allows parent classes to save state
Parcelable superState = super.onSaveInstanceState();
SavedState ss = new SavedState(superState);
//end
ss.stateToSave = this.stateToSave;
return ss;
}
@Override
public void onRestoreInstanceState(Parcelable state) {
//begin boilerplate code so parent classes can restore state
if(!(state instanceof SavedState)) {
super.onRestoreInstanceState(state);
return;
}
SavedState ss = (SavedState)state;
super.onRestoreInstanceState(ss.getSuperState());
//end
this.stateToSave = ss.stateToSave;
}
static class SavedState extends BaseSavedState {
int stateToSave;
SavedState(Parcelable superState) {
super(superState);
}
private SavedState(Parcel in) {
super(in);
this.stateToSave = in.readInt();
}
@Override
public void writeToParcel(Parcel out, int flags) {
super.writeToParcel(out, flags);
out.writeInt(this.stateToSave);
}
//required field that makes Parcelables from a Parcel
public static final Parcelable.Creator<SavedState> CREATOR =
new Parcelable.Creator<SavedState>() {
public SavedState createFromParcel(Parcel in) {
return new SavedState(in);
}
public SavedState[] newArray(int size) {
return new SavedState[size];
}
};
}
}
The work is split between the View and the View's SavedState class. You should do all the work of reading and writing to and from the Parcel in the SavedState class. Then your View class can do the work of extracting the state members and doing the work necessary to get the class back to a valid state.
Notes: View#onSavedInstanceState and View#onRestoreInstanceState are called automatically for you if View#getId returns a value >= 0. This happens when you give it an id in xml or call setId manually. Otherwise you have to call View#onSaveInstanceState and write the Parcelable returned to the parcel you get in Activity#onSaveInstanceState to save the state and subsequently read it and pass it to View#onRestoreInstanceState from Activity#onRestoreInstanceState.
Another simple example of this is the CompoundButton