31

I have a GridView which is pretty similar to the Google tutorial, except that I want to add the ImageViews on runtime (via a subactivity). The results are okay, but the layout of the View is messed up: The GridView doesn't fill the content of its parent, what do I have to do to design it properly?

Here the code of adding the children:

public void initializeWorkbench(GridView gv, Vector<String> items) {
        Prototype.workbench.setDimension(screenWidth, divider.height()+workbenchArea.height());
        Prototype.workbench.activateWorkbench();
        // this measures the workbench correctly
        Log.d(Prototype.TAG, "workbench width: "+Prototype.workbench.getMeasuredWidth());
        // 320
        Log.d(Prototype.TAG, "workbench height: "+Prototype.workbench.getMeasuredHeight());
        // 30
        ImageAdapter imgAdapter = new ImageAdapter(this.getContext(), items);
        gv.setAdapter(imgAdapter);
        gv.measure(screenWidth, screenHeight);
        gv.requestLayout();
        gv.forceLayout();
        Log.d(Prototype.TAG, "gv width: "+gv.getMeasuredWidth());
        // 22
        Log.d(Prototype.TAG, "gv height: "+gv.getMeasuredHeight());
        // 119
        Prototype.workbench.setDimension(screenWidth, divider.height()+workbenchArea.height());
    }
}

activateWorkbench, setDimension and measure in the workbench (LinearLayout above the GridView):

public void activateWorkbench() {
    if(this.equals(Prototype.workbench)) {
        this.setOrientation(VERTICAL);
        show = true;
        measure();
    }
}

public void setDimension(int w, int h) {
    width = w;
    height = h;
    this.setLayoutParams(new LinearLayout.LayoutParams(width, height));
    this.invalidate();
}

private void measure() {
    if (this.getOrientation() == LinearLayout.VERTICAL) {
        int h = 0;
        int w = 0;
        this.measureChildren(0, 0);
        for (int i = 0; i < this.getChildCount(); i++) {
            View v = this.getChildAt(i);
            h += v.getMeasuredHeight();
            w = (w < v.getMeasuredWidth()) ? v.getMeasuredWidth() : w;
        }
        if (this.equals(Prototype.tagarea))
            height = (h < height) ? height : h;
        if (this.equals(Prototype.tagarea))
            width = (w < width) ? width : w;
    }
    this.setMeasuredDimension(width, height);
}

The ImageAdapter constructor:

public ImageAdapter(Context c, Vector<String> items) {
    mContext = c;

    boolean mExternalStorageAvailable = false;
    boolean mExternalStorageWriteable = false;
    String state = Environment.getExternalStorageState();

    if (Environment.MEDIA_MOUNTED.equals(state)) {
        // We can read and write the media
        mExternalStorageAvailable = mExternalStorageWriteable = true;
    } else if (Environment.MEDIA_MOUNTED_READ_ONLY.equals(state)) {
        // We can only read the media
        mExternalStorageAvailable = true;
        mExternalStorageWriteable = false;
    } else {
        // Something else is wrong. It may be one of many other states, but
        // all we need
        // to know is we can neither read nor write
        mExternalStorageAvailable = mExternalStorageWriteable = false;
    }

    if (mExternalStorageAvailable && mExternalStorageWriteable) {
        for (String item : items) {
            File f = new File(item);
            if (f.exists()) {
                try {
                    FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(f);
                    Bitmap b = BitmapFactory.decodeStream(fis);
                    bitmaps.add(b);
                    files.add(f);
                } catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
                    Log.e(Prototype.TAG, "", e);
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

And the xml layout:

<LinearLayout   xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" 
            android:layout_width="fill_parent" 
            android:layout_height="fill_parent"
                android:orientation="vertical"
                android:gravity="bottom"

                android:paddingLeft="0px"
                android:paddingTop="0px"
                android:paddingRight="0px">

    <com.unimelb.pt3.ui.TransparentPanel
            android:id="@+id/workbench" 
            android:layout_width="fill_parent"
            android:layout_height="10px"
            android:paddingTop="0px"
            android:paddingLeft="0px"
            android:paddingBottom="0px"
            android:paddingRight="0px">

        <GridView xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" 
            android:id="@+id/gridview"
            android:layout_width="fill_parent" 
            android:layout_height="fill_parent"
            android:columnWidth="90dp"
            android:numColumns="auto_fit"
            android:verticalSpacing="10dp"
            android:horizontalSpacing="10dp"
            android:stretchMode="columnWidth"
            android:gravity="center" />

    </com.unimelb.pt3.ui.TransparentPanel>

</LinearLayout>

9 Answers 9

44

the GridView has an invalidateViews() method.

when you call this method: "all the views to be rebuilt and redrawn." http://developer.android.com/reference/android/widget/GridView.html

i think this is what you need:)

2
  • Only the original thread that created a view hierarchy can touch its views. When you're refreshing a gridview, you're often doing so because you're retrieving information from the web, in which case this will not be the case.
    – AndrewPK
    Jun 6, 2016 at 19:17
  • This did not force a redrawing of the view for me. Jun 14, 2017 at 15:33
34

You must, first tell the adapter to notify that the data has changed and set the adapter again to the grid

adapter.notifyDataChanged();
grid.setAdapter(adapter);
1
18

This may be helpful. I refresh a gridview of book image thumbnails after a delete is executed on an item. Using adapter.notifyDataChanged(); as mentioned above didn't work for me as it's called in my adapter.

//this is a call that retrieves cached data.
//your constructor can be designed and used without it.
final Object data = getLastNonConfigurationInstance();

I essentially just reload the adapter and bind it to the same view.

//reload the adapter
adapter = new BooksAdapter(MyBooks.this, MyBooks.this, data, show_collection );
grid.invalidateViews();
grid.setAdapter(adapter);
1
  • thank you! your method worked for me. my adapter use random items and for it to re-create them all the time i needed to create a new adapter object. you saved me lots of search time. thanks a lot.
    – ufk
    Jun 22, 2012 at 5:22
10

@flyerz @snagnever

Together you guys have got it. It should be:

adapter.notifyDataChanged();
grid.invalidateViews();

This will flag the adapter that its data has changed, which will then be propagated to the grid whenever after the invalidateViews() method is called.

Glad I found this question because I could not figure out how to add items to the grid after its been rendered.

10

None of these answers actually worked for me and I had to mash all of them together. To actually get the GridView to update, you need to do this:

 adapter.notifyDataChanged();
 grid.invalidateViews();
 grid.setAdapter(adapter);

Hope this helps anyone who couldn't get the other solutions to work.

2
  • Don't you have to create the a new adapter with the new values? Jun 18, 2014 at 2:41
  • I confirm this, and I am awkwardly I use the old adapter since only the data that change, not the whole adapter. Apr 11, 2020 at 18:55
5

You should not call invalidateViews and setAdapter to refresh your grid view. This is not a good idea to keep your grid view updated, if you update in that way it would cost a lot of time and memory.

If you have a chance to look at getView method you will see that convertView is created just once. When you call notifyDataChanged, it will update this view. Whereas if you call invalidateViews, previously created views will be recreated. This is not a good solution.

Your getView method is called when you call notifyDataChanged. So your getView method should look something like the code below.

public List list;

public class SimpleItemViewHolder extends Object
{
    public TextView textView;
    public ImageView imageView;
}

public View getView(int position, View convertView, ViewGroup parent){

    View itemView = convertView;
    SimpleItemViewHolder viewHolder;

    if(convertView==null)
    {
        viewHolder = (SimpleItemViewHolder)itemView.getTag();

    }else{
        LayoutInflater inflater = (LayoutInflater) context.getSystemService(Context.LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE);
        itemView = inflater.inflate(R.layout.layout_name, null);
        TextView labelField = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.label_field);
        labelField.setText(list.get(position).Name);
        //Typeface boldFont = Typeface.createFromAsset(context.getAssets(), "fonts/Font-Bold.ttf");
        //labelField.setTypeface(boldFont);

        ImageView imageView = (ImageView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.image_view);
        //Bitmap bitmap = init your bitmap here;
        //imageView.setImageBitmap(bitmap);  

        viewHolder = new SimpleItemViewHolder();
        viewHolder.imageView = imageView;
        viewHolder.textView = labelField;
        itemView.setTag(viewHolder);

    }

    //don't create new views, instead use previous ones and update them.
    viewHolder.textView.setText(list.get(position).Name);
    //viewHolder.imageView.setImageBitmap(your_bitmap);  
    return itemView;
}
6
  • Yes. This is theory. And what do you do if the Grid don't update its layout on when convertViews change their sizes ? Jan 17, 2017 at 8:04
  • 1
    @EmrysMyrooin I think it would not make any difference if you change the size of a cell. You just need set layoutparams of the itemView. Also overriding and calling onMeasure method of the gridview may help.
    – aytek
    Jan 17, 2017 at 13:05
  • No, it's not working. If an itemView height change over the time, the GridView will not detect the changes, even with an adapter.notifySetChanges() or a gridView.invalidateViews(). Perhaps it works with onMeasure overriding, but I just don't wont to implement a custom GridView just to achieve such a basic behavior... Jan 17, 2017 at 13:11
  • @EmrysMyrooin It's all for performance, you can use invalidateViews either, but if you have hundreds of cells in your gridview, you will see that your app hangs up a few seconds when you call invalidateViews. So I recommend you to use onMeasure method.
    – aytek
    Jan 17, 2017 at 13:22
  • Calling invalidateViews() doesn't solve the problem... The only working is effectively to manually set height of each sell... Jan 17, 2017 at 13:36
2
adapter.notifyDataChanged();

may not works just because data for the adapter is stale (if Activity or fragment was not destroyed and have been sitting in the back stack for instance).

So, if firstly refresh data, then after it will be working.

0
0

You are placing the GridView inside com.unimelb.pt3.ui.TransparentPanel which is 10px tall.

  • You shouldn't use px, you should use dp.
  • Change com.unimelb.pt3.ui.TransparentPanel's android:layout_height="10px" to android:layout_height="fill_parent"
1
  • I changed that, but it doesn't help. The problem is not the height of the GridView, which is placed fullsize in TransparentPanel and has a scrolling bar for oversized content, but the width. This is just 22, although its LayoutParams are fill_parent and the TransparentPanel has a fullsize width of 320. I think I need to update/refresh the layout process, but don't know how to do that correctly.
    – Daniel
    Dec 14, 2010 at 22:25
0

In your adapter :

class MAdapter extends BaseAdapter{
   List<Objects> mObjects;
...

 public void clearAdapter(){
        mObjects.clear();
    }

 public void addNewValues(List<Objects> mObjects){
        this.mObjects = mObjects;
    }

...

}


adapter.clearAdapter(); // clear old values
adapter.addNewValues(MObjects);
adapter.notifyDataChanged();

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