What is the difference between android.app.Fragment
and android.support.v4.app.Fragment
, and what are the circumstances in which each should be used?
6 Answers
android.support.v4.app.Fragment
is the Fragment class in the android support library, which is a compatibility package that allows you to use some of the newer features of Android on older versions of Android.
android.app.Fragment
is the Fragment class in the native version of the Android SDK. It was introduced in Android 3 (API 11).
If you want to make your app use fragments, and want to target devices before API 11, you must use android.support.v4.app.Fragment
. However, if you're only targeting devices running API 11 or above, you can use android.app.Fragment
.
Edit: the OS-contained android.app.Fragment
is now deprecated (as of API level 28), and everyone should move to using the support library implementations.
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4Also see "Using FragmentStatePagerAdapter WITHOUT support library": stackoverflow.com/questions/18512294/…– CJBSAug 1, 2014 at 20:30
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If you override onAttach(), please see this thread to avoid it not being called under some circumstances with android.app.Fragment: stackoverflow.com/questions/32083053/…– HongJul 26, 2017 at 22:11
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3
As of 2018:
From android.app.Fragment
documentation:
This class was deprecated in API level 28.
Use the Support LibraryFragment
for consistent behavior across all devices and access to Lifecycle.
So support fragments (android.support.v4.app.Fragment
) should be used everywhere instead of native fragments(android.app.Fragment
) now.
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@Artyom, as a noob to android development, I expected that when the
android.app.Fragment
class was deprecated, that API level 28 would have an alternate, possibly radical replacement approach. Is there a forward approach or is this backwards compatibleandroid.support.v4.app.Fragment
the proper approach?– ergohackSep 11, 2018 at 16:04 -
1@ergohack See it that way: for java code you can either include the bytecode inside the runtime of the device or inside the jar file of the application. Support library code will be put in your jar, and provide the same feature as the runtime-provided code, so there's no reason not to use the modern and maintained support library instead of the ageing and unmaintained code of your target phone.– PierreMay 24, 2020 at 16:41
I use android.support.v4.app.Fragment
exclusively.
All the apps I write need to support right back to Android 2.3 and this is the easiest way to do it.
If you're supporting 11+ then stick to android.app.Fragment
.
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18In that case you're missing out on a lot of features that exists in the support library but only in the native one after a certain API level. getChildFragmentManager() for example is not available until level 17. My advice is to only use the support Fragments and pretend that the native one does not exist.– JohanAug 6, 2015 at 9:09
If your application is targeted for API 11 or above, You can use android.app.Fragment
and your APK file will be smaller.
Otherwise, add the android.support.v4.app.Fragment
library to your project in order to support older android API versions (Android 3.x).
android.support.v4.app.Fragment
is a library that you can use to get backwards-compatibility for older API version.
Fragments were added on API level 11 (along with other features) you should include that library to extend those function to pre-API 11 devices. That is a useful library and I suggest having a look at ActionBarSherlock, which extends the action bar to pre-API v11 devices.
If your application is targeted for API 11 or above level, You can use android.app.Fragment and it will reduce the APK size. Otherwise use android.support.v4.app.Fragment