I'm trying to write a simple Android app in Kotlin. I have an EditText and a Button in my layout. After writing in the edit field and clicking on the Button, I want to hide the virtual keyboard.

There is a popular question Close/hide the Android Soft Keyboard about doing it in Java, but as far as I understand, there should be an alternative version for Kotlin. How should I do it?

I think we can improve Viktor's answer a little. Based on it's always attached to a view, there will be context, if there is context then there is InputMethodManager

fun View.hideKeyboard() {
    val imm = context.getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE) as InputMethodManager
    imm.hideSoftInputFromWindow(windowToken, 0)
}

In this case the context automatically means the context of the view. What do you think?

  • i want to add this method in one utility class , then how to call this method from activity/fragment/adapter ?? – chandani c patel Jan 4 at 6:44

Use the following utility functions within your Activities, Fragments to hide the soft keyboard.

fun Fragment.hideKeyboard() {
    activity.hideKeyboard(view)
}

fun Activity.hideKeyboard() {
    hideKeyboard(if (currentFocus == null) View(this) else currentFocus)
}

fun Context.hideKeyboard(view: View) {
    val inputMethodManager = getSystemService(Activity.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE) as InputMethodManager
    inputMethodManager.hideSoftInputFromWindow(view.windowToken, 0)
}

This will close the keyboard regardless of your code either in dialog fragment and/or activity etc.

Usage in Activity/Fragment:

hideKeyboard()
  • Where would you recommend these three functions live in the application? – Dan Jul 24 at 21:18
  • 1
    @Dan I keep these functions in ContextExtensions.kt file of mine but you can keep them anywhere you find suitable. – Gunhan Jul 25 at 10:45
  • This worked perfectly for me. Funny thing is I only needed this code when the app was running on a physical device. On the simulator (AVD) the keyboard dismissed itself like a good keyboard does. – Dan Jul 26 at 14:10

Peter's solution solves neatly the problem by extending functionality of View class. Alternative approach could be to extend functionality of Activity class and thus bind operation of hiding keyboard with View's container rather than View itself.

fun Activity.hideKeyboard() {
    val imm = getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE) as InputMethodManager
    imm.hideSoftInputFromWindow(findViewById(android.R.id.content).getWindowToken(), 0);
}

You can use Anko to make life easier, so the line would be:

inputMethodManager.hideSoftInputFromWindow(view.windowToken, 0)

or maybe better to create extension function:

fun View.hideKeyboard(inputMethodManager: InputMethodManager) {
    inputMethodManager.hideSoftInputFromWindow(windowToken, 0)
}

and call it like this:

view?.hideKeyboard(activity.inputMethodManager)
  • which Anko lib we have to use ? because it's not working with me – Jéwôm' Mar 18 at 7:47
  • inputMethodManager is not founded – Jéwôm' Mar 18 at 7:49

I found the answer that worked for me here: http://programminget.blogspot.com/2017/08/how-to-close-android-soft-keyboard.html

val inputManager:InputMethodManager = getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE) as InputMethodManager
inputManager.hideSoftInputFromWindow(currentFocus.windowToken, InputMethodManager.SHOW_FORCED)

This works well with API 26.

val view: View = if (currentFocus == null) View(this) else currentFocus
val inputMethodManager = getSystemService(Activity.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE) as InputMethodManager
inputMethodManager.hideSoftInputFromWindow(view.windowToken, 0)

You can use from bellow code, I write bellow code in my fragment:

private val myLayout = ViewTreeObserver.OnGlobalLayoutListener {
    yourTextView.isCursorVisible = KeyboardTool.isSoftKeyboardShown(myRelativeLayout.rootView)
}

Then in onViewCreated of fragment:

......
super.onViewCreated(view, savedInstanceState)
myRelativeLayout.viewTreeObserver.addOnGlobalLayoutListener(myLayout)
......

And in onDestroyView use too:

override fun onDestroyView() {
    super.onDestroyView()
 myRelativeLayout.viewTreeObserver.removeOnGlobalLayoutListener(myLayout)
}

And:

object KeyboardTool {
    fun isSoftKeyboardShown(rootView: View): Boolean {
        val softKeyboardHeight = 100
        val rect = Rect()

        rootView.getWindowVisibleDisplayFrame(rect)

        val dm = rootView.resources.displayMetrics
        val heightDiff = rootView.bottom - rect.bottom
        return heightDiff > softKeyboardHeight * dm.density
    }
}

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