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I don't understand why this piece of code is not working. Only backspace and return key are detected. Listener doesn't fire for any other key. My device is Nexus One.

I tried to override activity's OnKeyDown method and that's even worse. The only detected button was hardware back button.

I am seeing around a suggestion to use TextWatcher and onTextChanged, while that might work in some cases, it's not a real work around. For example, if textbox is empty, you won't detect if user press BackSpace(Delete) button. So any ideas?

        TextView txtInput = (TextView)findViewById(R.id.txtInput);
    txtInput.setOnKeyListener(new View.OnKeyListener() {
        @Override
        public boolean onKey(View v, int keyCode, KeyEvent event) {
            makeToast(keyCode + " key pressed");
            return true;
        }
    });
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Well, I spent good 4 hours on this problem. It seems that nobody has solution for this. Few people are also suggesting to use OnKeyboardActionListener, but can't find any example on how to use it. – bobetko Nov 26 '10 at 3:41
I am not sure that softkeyboard example will work for me. I don't won't to write another input method. I simply want to show default input method on the screen (android keyboard usually) and capture any key press. Why this seems so daunting task? I am getting frustrated. – bobetko Nov 26 '10 at 19:30

4 Answers

up vote 9 down vote accepted

Ok. I finally figured how to do what I want, and I am not proud on Android for this.

I am writing server/client application where on client I have to open SoftKeyboard and send pressed keys (characters and DEL key)... Each time key is pressed, that character is sent to server. If DEL is pressed I am sending sequence {BS} to server.

In order to do that I had to implement TextWatcher and onTextChange which works well except for situation when EditText is empty and user press DEL key. Since there is no change in EditText there is no way to detect that DEL key is pressed.

In addition to TextWatcher, I had to implement onKeyListener which I attached to my EditText control. This onKeyListener ignores all keys on SoftKeyboard except DEL and RETURN. Not sure why? A bug maybe?

Here is my code:

    TextView txtInput = (TextView)findViewById(R.id.txtInput);
    txtInput.addTextChangedListener(inputTextWatcher);

    txtInput.setOnKeyListener(new View.OnKeyListener() {
        @Override
        public boolean onKey(View v, int keyCode, KeyEvent event) {
            Log.d(TAG, keyCode + " character(code) to send");
            return false;
        }
    });

and TextWatcher....

private TextWatcher inputTextWatcher = new TextWatcher() {
    public void afterTextChanged(Editable s) { }
    public void beforeTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int count, int after)
        { }
    public void onTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int before, int count) {
        Log.d(TAG, s.charAt(count-1) + " character to send");;          
    }
};
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You have done one mistake here.
it should return true,If you handled the event. If you want to allow the event to be handled by the next receiver, return false
You are always returning true

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Thanks for clarifying that. I actually tried to return false too. Reading around I figured I have to use onKeyboardActionListener. Will spend some time on it tomorrow. Thx. – bobetko Nov 26 '10 at 5:08

We had the TextWatcher problem on iPhone as well -- if buffer is empty, keyboard does not send del event. We worked around it by preloading the keyboard buffer with 1000 characters. Luckily, our app hid the edit field behind the keyboard so the 1000 characters are not seen. It's ugly, but it works (unless the user hits 1000 deletes in a a row prior to entering any data!)

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Have you tried using the specific listener sub-class for that view?

I had a similar problem with an EditText. The code below worked:

private OnKeyListener keyListener = new EditText.OnKeyListener(){

    @Override
    public boolean onKey(View v, int keyCode, KeyEvent event) {
        EditText et = (EditText) v;
        Log.i("APPEVENT", "Key hit: "+ event);
        //...
        return false;
    }

};

But if I used the View.OnKeyListener, I only record backspace and enter. It could be a similar problem with TextView. Perhaps the subclass key listeners are sensitive to more events for the given View subclass.

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