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If I have variables that are declared within the onCreateView of a fragment; is there a way I can access those variables from outside the onCreateView?

 public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater viewInflation, ViewGroup container,
            Bundle SavedInstantState) {
        superContext = getActivity().getApplicationContext();
        digitalfragmentview = viewInflation.inflate(
                R.layout.digitalfragment_page, container, false);

        digitalIO0Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio0mode);
        digitalIO1Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio1mode);
        digitalIO2Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio2mode);
        digitalIO3Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio3mode);
        digitalIO4Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio4mode);
        digitalIO5Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio5mode);
        digitalIO6Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio6mode);
        digitalIO7Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio7mode);
        digitalIO8Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio8mode);
        digitalIO9Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio9mode);


        centralDigitalTable = (TableLayout) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalTable);

        Switch[] digitalIOModeSwitchArray = {digitalIO0Mode, digitalIO1Mode,
                digitalIO2Mode, digitalIO3Mode, digitalIO4Mode, digitalIO5Mode,
                digitalIO6Mode, digitalIO7Mode, digitalIO8Mode, digitalIO9Mode};


        return digitalfragmentview;
    }

Now I have these methods within the class:

   public Switch getIOModeSwitch(int index) {
        return digitalIOModeSwitchArray[index];
    }

    public void getIOModeSwitch(int index, boolean status) {
        digitalIOModeSwitchArray[index].setActivated(status);
    }

However; they obviously cannot access digitalIOModeSwitchArray as it is out of their scope and localized to the onCreateView method.

I tried to put all of the initiation of the variables after the class's header however the arrays seem to fill with null if I do it that way so I apparently cannot do it that way.

EDIT 1:

For instance,

if I did this -

public class digitalFragment extends FragmentActivity{
digitalIO0Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio0mode);
        digitalIO1Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio1mode);
        digitalIO2Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio2mode);
        digitalIO3Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio3mode);
        digitalIO4Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio4mode);
        digitalIO5Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio5mode);
        digitalIO6Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio6mode);
        digitalIO7Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio7mode);
        digitalIO8Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio8mode);
        digitalIO9Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                .findViewById(R.id.digitalio9mode);
Switch[] digitalIOModeSwitchArray = {digitalIO0Mode, digitalIO1Mode,
                digitalIO2Mode, digitalIO3Mode, digitalIO4Mode, digitalIO5Mode,
                digitalIO6Mode, digitalIO7Mode, digitalIO8Mode, digitalIO9Mode};


    public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater viewInflation, ViewGroup container,
            Bundle SavedInstantState) {
        superContext = getActivity().getApplicationContext();
        digitalfragmentview = viewInflation.inflate(
                R.layout.digitalfragment_page, container, false);



        // sets the listener for the mode switches
        for (int i = 0; i < digitalIOModeSwitchArray.length; i++) {
            if (digitalIOModeSwitchArray[i] == null) {
                Log.d(TAG, "Array is null at:" + i);
            }
        }

        return digitalfragmentview;
    }

}

the logcat output looks like:

Array is null at: 1
Array is null at: 2
Array is null at: 3
Array is null at: 4
Array is null at: 5
Array is null at: 6
Array is null at: 7
Array is null at: 8
Array is null at: 9
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3 Answers 3

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No, you cannot access local variables from outside the scope they were declared in.

You would have to declare them as member fields in the class. Check out the official tutorial on Member Variables.

class Example {

    int field;
    int hello = 2; // initialized to 2
    int there;
    Object[] array = new Object[50]; // array initialized here, all elements null

    Example () {
       there = 2; // can also be initialized in constructor
       // initialize each element of array:
       for (int n = 0; n < array.length; ++ n)
           array[n] = new Object();
    }

    void a () {
       int local;
       local = 1; // ok
       field = 1; // ok
       hello = 1; // ok
       there = 1; // ok
    }

    void b () {
       System.out.println(local); // no 'local' declared here
       System.out.println(field); // ok
       System.out.println(hello); // ok
       System.out.println(there); // ok
    }

}

Edit: Expanded example re: comments and edit to post.

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  • However; if I declare them as fields (I.E. just copying and pasting them from the onCreateView();) they instantiate as null when I do a log output check on the array? Mar 3, 2014 at 16:42
  • 1
    Typical practice is create them as a field, but instantiate (give them a value, so they're non-null) them in onCreateView (or in the constructor if it's not specifically an Android Activity). Mar 3, 2014 at 16:45
  • 1
    @Tukajo Yes, fields are initialized to null. You can initialize them when they are declared, or in the constructor, though, if you want them to never be null. You can also declare them as final if they shouldn't be modified. You can also initialize them on first use (if (x == null) x = new Whatever()).
    – Jason C
    Mar 3, 2014 at 16:45
  • @EmbattledSwag I tried that before; and they still instantiated to null after I create them as fields and initiated them in onCreateView. Mar 3, 2014 at 16:48
  • @Tukajo If you create a new array of objects its values will be null. You would have to loop through the array and instantiate each element if you want that to not be the case. See updated example.
    – Jason C
    Mar 3, 2014 at 16:48
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As per your edit, you're trying to initialize your varaibles (digitalIO1Mode, etc.) to Views before the Activity is even aware of them, thus they're all null.

Try just putting Switch digitalIO1Mode;,Switch digitalIO2Mode;, etc. before your onCreate and then, after you call setContenView, THATS when you set them equal to the Views.

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Just going to explain why this doesn't work for the OP

public class digitalFragment extends FragmentActivity{

digitalIO0Mode = (Switch) digitalfragmentview
                 .findViewById(R.id.digitalio0mode);

You haven't inflated a view into digitalfragmentview yet, so it cannot find R.id.digitalio0mode. I'm surprised you actually didn't crash here with a NullPointerException since digitalfragmentview should probably be null here, but I don't see your declaration statement for that view, so it's plausible you had some other view loaded into it.

Switch[] digitalIOModeSwitchArray = {digitalIO0Mode, digitalIO1Mode,
            digitalIO2Mode, digitalIO3Mode, digitalIO4Mode, digitalIO5Mode,
            digitalIO6Mode, digitalIO7Mode, digitalIO8Mode, digitalIO9Mode};

This doesn't work, because as we said above, the switches aren't findable until you inflate the view, so at best you're just placing nulls here.

The way you do it is simply declare the definition of switch as a field.

Switch[] digitalIOModeSwitchArray;

and then in your on create, just keep the same code you have in your original post, except don't define a local Switch[] digitalIOModeSwitchArray, refer to your global one so it points to a value.

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