328

Is there a way in Android to detect if the software (a.k.a. "soft") keyboard is visible on screen?

5

37 Answers 37

327

This works for me. Maybe this is always the best way for all versions.

It would be effective to make a property of keyboard visibility and observe this changes delayed because the onGlobalLayout method calls many times. Also it is good to check the device rotation and windowSoftInputMode is not adjustNothing.

boolean isKeyboardShowing = false;
void onKeyboardVisibilityChanged(boolean opened) {
    print("keyboard " + opened);
}

// ContentView is the root view of the layout of this activity/fragment    
contentView.getViewTreeObserver().addOnGlobalLayoutListener(
    new ViewTreeObserver.OnGlobalLayoutListener() {
    @Override
    public void onGlobalLayout() {

        Rect r = new Rect();
        contentView.getWindowVisibleDisplayFrame(r);
        int screenHeight = contentView.getRootView().getHeight();

        // r.bottom is the position above soft keypad or device button.
        // if keypad is shown, the r.bottom is smaller than that before.
        int keypadHeight = screenHeight - r.bottom;

        Log.d(TAG, "keypadHeight = " + keypadHeight);

        if (keypadHeight > screenHeight * 0.15) { // 0.15 ratio is perhaps enough to determine keypad height.
            // keyboard is opened
            if (!isKeyboardShowing) {
                isKeyboardShowing = true;
                onKeyboardVisibilityChanged(true);
            }
        }
        else {
            // keyboard is closed
            if (isKeyboardShowing) {
                isKeyboardShowing = false;
                onKeyboardVisibilityChanged(false);
            }
        }
    }
});
14
  • 3
    Here is a working gist: gist.github.com/faruktoptas/e9778e1f718214938b00c2dcd2bed109 Jan 25, 2017 at 10:19
  • 1
    Put this in a utils class and pass in the activity - now useful across the whole app.
    – Justin
    Apr 11, 2017 at 14:21
  • 2
    And where is contentView declared? Jun 26, 2017 at 18:42
  • 1
    @Code-Apprentice In the activity/fragment you're looking to respond to soft keyboard changes. ContentView is the root view of the layout of this activity/fragment.
    – airowe
    Jun 27, 2017 at 20:21
  • 1
    Worked for me on Android 6 and 7.
    – V.March
    May 16, 2018 at 7:58
85

try this:

InputMethodManager imm = (InputMethodManager) getActivity()
            .getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);

    if (imm.isAcceptingText()) {
        writeToLog("Software Keyboard was shown");
    } else {
        writeToLog("Software Keyboard was not shown");
    }
11
  • 12
    This does not work for me. The keyboard shown branch triggers even in instance when the keyboard was never shown or was shown and then closed. Feb 16, 2012 at 1:28
  • 37
    it always return true. Sep 19, 2013 at 12:41
  • For me it sometimes returns false - when the keyboard is actually visible. Aug 7, 2015 at 14:05
  • 242
    It is pathetic that the Android framework is lacking, and worse, inconsistent in this regard. This ought to be super-simple. Aug 17, 2015 at 17:36
  • 3
    This obviously won't work since it's not a listener that listens to the soft keyboard's behavior.
    – 6rchid
    Dec 3, 2018 at 2:23
80

I created a simple class that can be used for this: https://github.com/ravindu1024/android-keyboardlistener. Just copy it in to your project and use as follows:

KeyboardUtils.addKeyboardToggleListener(this, new KeyboardUtils.SoftKeyboardToggleListener()
{
    @Override
    public void onToggleSoftKeyboard(boolean isVisible)
    {
        Log.d("keyboard", "keyboard visible: "+isVisible);
    }
});
12
  • Where in the code exaclty do I have to put this? I put this into an activity, however, it does not detect any keyboard appearance or disappearance.
    – toom
    Aug 29, 2016 at 10:10
  • Well, you can put it anywhere inside your activity. Just put it in the onCreate() method after the setContentView() call and you should be getting callbacks. Btw, what device are you trying it on? Aug 30, 2016 at 5:32
  • @MaulikDodia I checked and it works fine in fragments. Set it up like this: KeyboardUtils.addKeyboardToggleListener(getActivity(), this); and it should work. What device are you trying it on? Jun 14, 2017 at 6:45
  • I'm trying on Moto-G3 device.@ravindu1024 Jun 14, 2017 at 11:33
  • Thanks for this snippet, I have one question that is this code required to remove listener? Aug 16, 2019 at 6:54
79

There is no direct way - see http://groups.google.com/group/android-platform/browse_thread/thread/1728f26f2334c060/5e4910f0d9eb898a where Dianne Hackborn from the Android team has replied. However, you can detect it indirectly by checking if the window size changed in #onMeasure. See How to check visibility of software keyboard in Android?.

2
  • 7
    this actually breaks when user do split screen apps. Oct 20, 2020 at 6:25
  • You can write an extension function like this for API 21 and above. fun View.isKeyboardVisible(): Boolean { val insets = ViewCompat.getRootWindowInsets(this) return insets?.isVisible(WindowInsetsCompat.Type.ime()) ?: false } Jun 23, 2021 at 10:49
41

With the new feature WindowInsetsCompat in androidx core release 1.5.0-alpha02 you could check the visibility of the soft keyboard easily as below

Quoting from reddit comment

val View.keyboardIsVisible: Boolean
    get() = WindowInsetsCompat
        .toWindowInsetsCompat(rootWindowInsets)
        .isVisible(WindowInsetsCompat.Type.ime())

Some note about backward compatibility, quoting from release notes

New Features

The WindowInsetsCompat APIs have been updated to those in the platform in Android 11. This includes the new ime() inset type, which allows checking the visibility and size of the on-screen keyboard.

Some caveats about the ime() type, it works very reliably on API 23+ when your Activity is using the adjustResize window soft input mode. If you’re instead using the adjustPan mode, it should work reliably back to API 14.

References

5
  • 1
    See this video which also references this question! youtube.com/watch?v=acC7SR1EXsI 😁
    – Tom Gilder
    Aug 27, 2020 at 6:25
  • @TomGilder just go ahead and make an edit to add the video to references.
    – user158
    Aug 28, 2020 at 3:43
  • requires api 20 at least Mar 6, 2021 at 10:29
  • 6
    I had to replace WindowInsetsCompat.toWindowInsetsCompat(rootWindowInsets) with ViewCompat.getRootWindowInsets(this) to get it working. Found it in Android video: youtu.be/acC7SR1EXsI?t=319
    – AndrazP
    May 12, 2021 at 17:38
  • 1
    this returns true for Android 23-29 even if keyboard is not opened, it only works ok for Android 30
    – user924
    Oct 8, 2021 at 13:41
32

Very Easy

1. Put id on your root view

rootView is just a view pointing to my root view in this case a relative layout:

<RelativeLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
                android:layout_width="match_parent"
                android:layout_height="match_parent"
                android:id="@+id/addresses_confirm_root_view"
                android:background="@color/WHITE_CLR">

2. Initialize your root view in your Activity:

RelativeLayout rootView = (RelativeLayout) findViewById(R.id.addresses_confirm_root_view);

3. Detect if keyboard is opened or closed by using getViewTreeObserver()

    rootView.getViewTreeObserver().addOnGlobalLayoutListener(new ViewTreeObserver.OnGlobalLayoutListener() {
            @Override
            public void onGlobalLayout() {
                int heightDiff = rootView.getRootView().getHeight() - rootView.getHeight();
                
                if (heightDiff > 100) { // Value should be less than keyboard's height 
                    Log.e("MyActivity", "keyboard opened");
                } else { 
                    Log.e("MyActivity", "keyboard closed");
                }
            }
        });
8
  • 30
    hey mate, could you please tell me where this magic 100 comes from? Why not 101 or 99? Thanks
    – narancs
    May 12, 2017 at 18:29
  • @Karoly i think this may be and 1. No matter. Only this must be less than the real length of keyboard
    – Vlad
    Aug 19, 2017 at 12:52
  • @Karoly basically, he's comparing the window size with your activity's root view size. the appearance of the soft keyboard doesn't affect the size of the main window. so you can still lower the value of 100.
    – mr5
    Sep 5, 2017 at 6:43
  • 2
    The magic number is dependent on your layout of topbar among other things. So it is relative to your app. I used 400 in one of mine. Aug 8, 2019 at 18:35
  • 5
    this will not be helpful if your layout involves a bottom sheet. Can't distinguish between a keyboard and bottom sheet. Jan 9, 2020 at 10:57
14

So after a long time of playing around with AccessibilityServices, window insets, screen height detection, etc, I think I found a way to do this.

Disclaimer: it uses a hidden method in Android, meaning it might not be consistent. However, in my testing, it seems to work.

The method is InputMethodManager#getInputMethodWindowVisibleHeight(), and it's existed since Lollipop (5.0).

Calling that returns the height, in pixels, of the current keyboard. In theory, a keyboard shouldn't be 0 pixels tall, so I did a simple height check (in Kotlin):

val imm by lazy { context.getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE) as InputMethodManager }
if (imm.inputMethodWindowVisibleHeight > 0) {
    //keyboard is shown
else {
    //keyboard is hidden
}

I use Android Hidden API to avoid reflection when I call hidden methods (I do that a lot for the apps I develop, which are mostly hacky/tuner apps), but this should be possible with reflection as well:

val imm by lazy { context.getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE) as InputMethodManager }
val windowHeightMethod = InputMethodManager::class.java.getMethod("getInputMethodWindowVisibleHeight")
val height = windowHeightMethod.invoke(imm) as Int
//use the height val in your logic
3
  • 2
    Amazing use of reflections Jun 9, 2020 at 16:22
  • They did hide this method
    – Rafael
    Jul 16, 2020 at 12:16
  • 1
    Yes this works. Shame that we have to poll this, and some callback doesn't tell us when this changes. Nov 26, 2020 at 10:01
11

You can use WindowInsetsCompat from androidx.core (version 1.5.0-rc01). This code will work from API 21 and above. Kotlin code example:

ViewCompat.setOnApplyWindowInsetsListener(root) { v, insets ->
    val isKeyboardVisible = insets.isVisible(WindowInsetsCompat.Type.ime())
    if (isKeyboardVisible) {
    }
}

root is the root view of your Activity.

Update

Today I was looking for how to detect keyboard visibility. At first, this code was not working. So I had to:

  1. Add android:windowSoftInputMode="adjustResize" to my AndroidManifest.xml file:
xml
        <activity android:name="com.soumicslabs.activitykt.StartActivity"
            android:theme="@style/AccountKitTheme.Default"
          android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize"
          android:screenOrientation="portrait"
          android:windowSoftInputMode="adjustResize"
          />
  1. In your activity, set WindowCompat.setDecorFitsSystemWindows(window, false), this tells android that we want to manually handle things/don't want to use system defaults:
        val window = this.window
        WindowCompat.setDecorFitsSystemWindows(window, false)  // <-- this tells android not to use system defaults, so we have to setup quite a lot of behaviors manually
  1. Finally, set you onApplyWindowInsetsListener:
val callBack = OnApplyWindowInsetsListener { view, insets ->
            val imeHeight = insets?.getInsets(WindowInsetsCompat.Type.ime())?.bottom?:0
            Log.e("tag", "onKeyboardOpenOrClose imeHeight = $imeHeight")
// todo: logic
val isKeyboardVisible = insets.isVisible(WindowInsetsCompat.Type.ime())
    if (isKeyboardVisible) {
       // do something
    }else{
        // do something else
    }
    insets?: WindowInsetsCompat(null)
  }

ViewCompat.setOnApplyWindowInsetsListener(mainContainer, callBack)

This worked for me.

1
  • this works but makes a mess of all other layouts that depend on setDecorFitsSystemWindows
    – MeLean
    Mar 1 at 13:44
10

I used this as a basis: https://rogerkeays.com/how-to-check-if-the-software-keyboard-is-shown-in-android

/**
* To capture the result of IMM hide/show soft keyboard
*/
public class IMMResult extends ResultReceiver {
     public int result = -1;
     public IMMResult() {
         super(null);
}

@Override 
public void onReceiveResult(int r, Bundle data) {
    result = r;
}

// poll result value for up to 500 milliseconds
public int getResult() {
    try {
        int sleep = 0;
        while (result == -1 && sleep < 500) {
            Thread.sleep(100);
            sleep += 100;
        }
    } catch (InterruptedException e) {
        Log.e("IMMResult", e.getMessage());
    }
    return result;
}
}

Then wrote this method:

public boolean isSoftKeyboardShown(InputMethodManager imm, View v) {
    
    IMMResult result = new IMMResult();
    int res;
    
    imm.showSoftInput(v, 0, result);

    // if keyboard doesn't change, handle the keypress
    res = result.getResult();
    if (res == InputMethodManager.RESULT_UNCHANGED_SHOWN ||
            res == InputMethodManager.RESULT_UNCHANGED_HIDDEN) {

        return true;
    }
    else
        return false;

}

You may then use this to test all fields (EditText, AutoCompleteTextView, etc) that may have opened a softkeyboard:

    InputMethodManager imm = (InputMethodManager) getActivity().getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
    if(isSoftKeyboardShown(imm, editText1) | isSoftKeyboardShown(imm, autocompletetextview1))
        //close the softkeyboard
        imm.toggleSoftInput(InputMethodManager.SHOW_FORCED, 0);

Addmittely not an ideal solution, but it gets the job done.

3
  • 2
    This works. If you implement as singelton you can apply to all edittexts on focus change and have one global keyboard listener
    – Rarw
    Mar 6, 2016 at 0:43
  • 1
    @depperm getActivity() is specific to Fragments, try YourActivityName.this instead. See also: stackoverflow.com/questions/14480129/… Apr 10, 2016 at 8:12
  • Thead.sleep - what is that? Making Main thread sleep?
    – user924
    Oct 8, 2021 at 13:39
7

You can use the callback result of showSoftInput() and hideSoftInput() to check for the status of the keyboard. Full details and example code at

https://rogerkeays.com/how-to-check-if-the-software-keyboard-is-shown-in-android

1
  • Thead.sleep - what is that? Making Main thread sleep?
    – user924
    Oct 8, 2021 at 13:39
7

There's finally a direct way starting from Android R based on Kotlin now.

 val imeInsets = requireView().rootWindowInsets.isVisible(WindowsInsetsCompat.Type.ime()) 
    if (imeInsets) { 
     //Ime is visible
     //Lets move our view by the height of the IME
     view.translationX = imeInsets.bottom }
2
  • can't resolve WindowsInsetsCompat Nov 27, 2022 at 17:04
  • @ShoaibKhalid maybe it requires androidx.core:core-ktx:1.9.0
    – anhtuannd
    Jan 9 at 11:18
6

This was much less complicated for the requirements I needed. Hope this might help:

On the MainActivity:

public void dismissKeyboard(){
    InputMethodManager imm =(InputMethodManager)this.getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
    imm.hideSoftInputFromWindow(mSearchBox.getWindowToken(), 0);
    mKeyboardStatus = false;
}

public void showKeyboard(){
    InputMethodManager imm =(InputMethodManager)this.getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
    imm.toggleSoftInput(InputMethodManager.SHOW_FORCED, InputMethodManager.HIDE_IMPLICIT_ONLY);
    mKeyboardStatus = true;
}

private boolean isKeyboardActive(){
    return mKeyboardStatus;
}

The default primative boolean value for mKeyboardStatus will be initialized to false.

Then check the value as follows, and perform an action if necessary:

 mSearchBox.requestFocus();
    if(!isKeyboardActive()){
        showKeyboard();
    }else{
        dismissKeyboard();
    }
1
  • easier solution ever for this situation ;) Aug 18, 2020 at 16:56
6

This should work if you need to check keyboard status:

fun Activity.isKeyboardOpened(): Boolean {
    val r = Rect()

    val activityRoot = getActivityRoot()
    val visibleThreshold = dip(UiUtils.KEYBOARD_VISIBLE_THRESHOLD_DP)

    activityRoot.getWindowVisibleDisplayFrame(r)

    val heightDiff = activityRoot.rootView.height - r.height()

    return heightDiff > visibleThreshold;
}

fun Activity.getActivityRoot(): View {
    return (findViewById<ViewGroup>(android.R.id.content)).getChildAt(0);
}

Where UiUtils.KEYBOARD_VISIBLE_THRESHOLD_DP = 100 and dip() is an anko func that convert dpToPx:

fun dip(value: Int): Int {
    return (value * Resources.getSystem().displayMetrics.density).toInt()
}
2
  • 2
    Спасибо! Ты спас мое время =) Aug 20, 2020 at 12:37
  • This workaround will work only when we have the below properties for activity in the Manifest file. android:windowSoftInputMode="adjustResize" or android:windowSoftInputMode="adjustPan" It will not work for below android:windowSoftInputMode="adjustNothing" Mar 8, 2022 at 11:37
5

You can refer to this answer - https://stackoverflow.com/a/24105062/3629912

It worked for me everytime.

adb shell dumpsys window InputMethod | grep "mHasSurface"

It will return true, if software keyboard is visible.

1
  • 12
    This is only useful during development - not a solution for use in an app. (Users won't have adb running.) Nov 30, 2015 at 22:38
4

There is finally official support for this now in 2023!

Here is the documentation

To check if the Keyboard is visible, do this:

val insets = ViewCompat.getRootWindowInsets(view) ?: return
val imeVisible = insets.isVisible(WindowInsetsCompat.Type.ime())
val imeHeight = insets.getInsets(WindowInsetsCompat.Type.ime()).bottom

To listen to changes in Keyboard visibility, do this:

ViewCompat.setOnApplyWindowInsetsListener(view) { _, insets ->
  val imeVisible = insets.isVisible(WindowInsetsCompat.Type.ime())
  val imeHeight = insets.getInsets(WindowInsetsCompat.Type.ime()).bottom
  insets
}

Note: Google recommends that you configure your app to display edge to edge in order for this to work properly. They also say "to achieve the best backward compatibility with this AndroidX implementation, set android:windowSoftInputMode="adjustResize" to the activity in AndroidManifest.xml."

3

I did this by setting a GlobalLayoutListener, as follows:

final View activityRootView = findViewById(R.id.activityRoot);
activityRootView.getViewTreeObserver().addOnGlobalLayoutListener(
        new OnGlobalLayoutListener() {
            @Override
            public void onGlobalLayout() {
                int heightView = activityRootView.getHeight();
                int widthView = activityRootView.getWidth();
                if (1.0 * widthView / heightView > 3) {
                    //Make changes for Keyboard not visible
                } else {
                    //Make changes for keyboard visible
                }
            }
        });
3
  • This will be called VERY often Sep 25, 2014 at 16:27
  • In what instances will this be different than @BrownsooHan answer? I'm looking for a way that an app that draws over other apps to get out of the way of the keyboard is showing. Jan 11, 2017 at 6:35
  • His answer is fundamentally the same as mine, only I did mine many months before his, and he has more upvotes. Jan 11, 2017 at 12:54
3

Try this code it's really working if KeyboardShown is Shown then this function return true value....

private final String TAG = "TextEditor";
private TextView mTextEditor;

@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
    setContentView(R.layout.activity_editor);
    mTextEditor = (TextView) findViewById(R.id.text_editor);
    mTextEditor.getViewTreeObserver().addOnGlobalLayoutListener(new ViewTreeObserver.OnGlobalLayoutListener() {
        @Override
        public void onGlobalLayout() {
            isKeyboardShown(mTextEditor.getRootView());
        }
    });
}

private boolean isKeyboardShown(View rootView) {
    /* 128dp = 32dp * 4, minimum button height 32dp and generic 4 rows soft keyboard */
    final int SOFT_KEYBOARD_HEIGHT_DP_THRESHOLD = 128;

    Rect r = new Rect();
    rootView.getWindowVisibleDisplayFrame(r);
    DisplayMetrics dm = rootView.getResources().getDisplayMetrics();
    /* heightDiff = rootView height - status bar height (r.top) - visible frame height (r.bottom - r.top) */
    int heightDiff = rootView.getBottom() - r.bottom;
    /* Threshold size: dp to pixels, multiply with display density */
    boolean isKeyboardShown = heightDiff > SOFT_KEYBOARD_HEIGHT_DP_THRESHOLD * dm.density;

    Log.d(TAG, "isKeyboardShown ? " + isKeyboardShown + ", heightDiff:" + heightDiff + ", density:" + dm.density
            + "root view height:" + rootView.getHeight() + ", rect:" + r);

    return isKeyboardShown;
}
1
  • The isKeyboardShown keep on calling itself when its not shown. Sep 19, 2019 at 17:03
3

As you might know android Software keyboard will be visible only when there is a possible event of typing. In other words Keyboard get visible only when EditText is focused. that means you can get weather the Keyboard is visible or not by using OnFocusChangeListener.

//Declare this Globally

public boolean isKeyBoardVisible = false;

//In OnCreate *[For Activity]*, OnCreateView *[For Fragment]*

text_send.setOnFocusChangeListener(new View.OnFocusChangeListener() {

    @Override
    public void onFocusChange(View v, boolean hasFocus) {
        if(hasFocus)
            isKeyBoardVisible = true;
        else
            isKeyBoardVisible = false;
    }
});

Now you can use isKeyBoardVisible variable anywhere in the class to get weather the keyboard is Open or Not. It worked well for me.

Note: This process doesn't work when the Keyboard is opened programmatically using InputMethodManager because that doesn't invoke OnFocusChangeListener.

1
  • not really a hack, didnt work in a nested fragment case. Can't say on activities as i didnt try this on that yet.
    – Antroid
    Jun 3, 2019 at 1:28
3

Thanks all answers, I figure it out for my own circumstances

/**
 * Add global layout listener to observe system keyboard visibility
 */
private void initObserverForSystemKeyboardVisibility() {
    getRootView().getViewTreeObserver().addOnGlobalLayoutListener(new ViewTreeObserver.OnGlobalLayoutListener() {
        @Override
        public void onGlobalLayout() {
            //Add your own code here
            Log.d("TEST_CODE", "isSystemKeyboardVisible:" + isSystemKeyboardVisible())
        }
    });
}


/**
 * Check system keyboard visibility
 * @return true if visible
 */
public boolean isSystemKeyboardVisible() {
    try {
        final InputMethodManager manager = (InputMethodManager) getContext().getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
        final Method windowHeightMethod = InputMethodManager.class.getMethod("getInputMethodWindowVisibleHeight");
        final int height = (int) windowHeightMethod.invoke(manager);
        return height > 0;
    } catch (Exception e) {
        return false;
    }
}
2
  • your code should have getWindow().getDecorView() /** * Add global layout listener to observe system keyboard visibility */ private void initObserverForSystemKeyboardVisibility() { getWindow().getDecorView().getRootView().getViewTreeObserver().addOnGlobalLayoutListener(new ViewTreeObserver.OnGlobalLayoutListener() { @Override public void onGlobalLayout() { //Add your own code here Log.d("TEST_CODE", "isSystemKeyboardVisible:" + isSystemKeyboardVisible()); } }); } Sep 24, 2021 at 16:12
  • getInputMethodWindowVisibleHeight method is blocked as part of using non-SDK API lists. You cannot use this reflection in production. See more info here: developer.android.com/guide/app-compatibility/…
    – RufusInZen
    Dec 11, 2021 at 20:23
3
private fun isKeyboardVisible(rootView: View) =
    ViewCompat.getRootWindowInsets(rootView)!!.isVisible(WindowInsetsCompat.Type.ime())
3
  • You need a very good reason to answer an old, abundantly answered question like this. New answers without any explanation how they complement other answers tend to get deleted in the review process. Oct 17, 2021 at 19:30
  • @GertArnold If this -1 is from you, it would be more professional to at least explain what is wrong with the answer. Oct 25, 2021 at 18:10
  • Didn't I do that? For all answers an explanation why it does what it does (and it's the best way) is always welcome, but new answers to old questions should also explain how they improve other answers. You don't want to how many people just drop answers without ever looking at existing answers and, thus, effectively only add noise. Either way, code-only answers are always deemed low quality answers and many of them get deleted by community moderation. Oct 25, 2021 at 19:20
2

In my case i had only one EditText to manage in my layout so i came up whit this solution. It works well, basically it is a custom EditText which listens for focus and sends a local broadcast if the focus changes or if the back/done button is pressed. To work you need to place a dummy View in your layout with android:focusable="true" and android:focusableInTouchMode="true" because when you call clearFocus() the focus will be reassigned to the first focusable view. Example of dummy view:

<View
android:layout_width="1dp"
android:layout_height="1dp"
android:focusable="true"
android:focusableInTouchMode="true"/>

Additional infos

The solution which detects the difference in layout changes doesn't work very well because it strongly depends on screen density, since 100px can be a lot in a certain device and nothing in some others you could get false positives. Also different vendors have different keyboards.

2

A little bit more compacted Kotlin version based on the answer of @bohdan-oliynyk

private const val KEYBOARD_VISIBLE_THRESHOLD_DP = 100

fun Activity.isKeyboardOpen(): Boolean {
    fun convertDpToPx(value: Int): Int =
        (value * Resources.getSystem().displayMetrics.density).toInt()

    val rootView = findViewById<View>(android.R.id.content)
    val visibleThreshold = Rect()
    rootView.getWindowVisibleDisplayFrame(visibleThreshold)
    val heightDiff = rootView.height - visibleThreshold.height()

    val accessibleValue = convertDpToPx(KEYBOARD_VISIBLE_THRESHOLD_DP)

    return heightDiff > accessibleValue
}

fun Activity.isKeyboardClosed(): Boolean {
    return isKeyboardOpen().not()
}
1

In Android you can detect through ADB shell. I wrote and use this method:

{
        JSch jsch = new JSch();
        try {
            Session session = jsch.getSession("<userName>", "<IP>", 22);
            session.setPassword("<Password>");
            Properties config = new Properties();
            config.put("StrictHostKeyChecking", "no");
            session.setConfig(config);
            session.connect();

            ChannelExec channel = (ChannelExec)session.openChannel("exec");
            BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new    
            InputStreamReader(channel.getInputStream()));
            channel.setCommand("C:/Android/android-sdk/platform-tools/adb shell dumpsys window 
            InputMethod | findstr \"mHasSurface\"");
            channel.connect();

            String msg = null;
            String msg2 = " mHasSurface=true";

            while ((msg = in.readLine()) != null) {
                Boolean isContain = msg.contains(msg2);
                log.info(isContain);
                if (isContain){
                    log.info("Hiding keyboard...");
                    driver.hideKeyboard();
                }
                else {
                    log.info("No need to hide keyboard.");
                }
            }

            channel.disconnect();
            session.disconnect();

        } catch (JSchException | IOException | InterruptedException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
    }
}
1
  • 1
    Can you improve this answer with a more concrete example, with all imports and a working example?
    – User3
    Oct 22, 2015 at 7:16
1
final View activityRootView = findViewById(R.id.rootlayout);
activityRootView.getViewTreeObserver().addOnGlobalLayoutListener(new ViewTreeObserver.OnGlobalLayoutListener() {
        @Override
        public void onGlobalLayout() {

            Rect r = new Rect();
            activityRootView.getWindowVisibleDisplayFrame(r);

            int screenHeight = activityRootView.getRootView().getHeight();
            Log.e("screenHeight", String.valueOf(screenHeight));
            int heightDiff = screenHeight - (r.bottom - r.top);
            Log.e("heightDiff", String.valueOf(heightDiff));
            boolean visible = heightDiff > screenHeight / 3;
            Log.e("visible", String.valueOf(visible));
            if (visible) {
                Toast.makeText(LabRegister.this, "I am here 1", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
            } else {
                Toast.makeText(LabRegister.this, "I am here 2", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
            }
        }
});
1

Answer of @iWantScala is great but not working for me
rootView.getRootView().getHeight() always has the same value

one way is to define two vars

private int maxRootViewHeight = 0;
private int currentRootViewHeight = 0;

add global listener

rootView.getViewTreeObserver()
    .addOnGlobalLayoutListener(new ViewTreeObserver.OnGlobalLayoutListener() {
        @Override
        public void onGlobalLayout() {
            currentRootViewHeight = rootView.getHeight();
            if (currentRootViewHeight > maxRootViewHeight) {
                maxRootViewHeight = currentRootViewHeight;
            }
        }
    });

then check

if (currentRootViewHeight >= maxRootViewHeight) {
    // Keyboard is hidden
} else {
    // Keyboard is shown
}

works fine

1

You can get from WindowInsetsCompat which has isVisible function. Like this:

    val isShown = WindowInsetsCompat
        .toWindowInsetsCompat(binding.root.rootWindowInsets)
        .isVisible(WindowInsetsCompat.Type.ime())

    if (isShown) {
        // keyboard is opened here you can make what do you want. 
        // Also this can be inside a global layout listener
    } 
0

There is a direct method to find this out. And, it does not require the layout changes.
So it works in immersive fullscreen mode, too.
But, unfortunately, it does not work on all devices. So you have to test it with your device(s).

The trick is that you try to hide or show the soft keyboard and capture the result of that try.
If it works correct then the keyboard is not really shown or hidden. We just ask for the state.

To stay up-to-date, you simply repeat this operation, e.g. every 200 milliseconds, using a Handler.

The implementation below does just a single check.
If you do multiple checks, then you should enable all the (_keyboardVisible) tests.

public interface OnKeyboardShowHide
{
    void    onShowKeyboard( Object param );
    void    onHideKeyboard( Object param );
}

private static Handler      _keyboardHandler    = new Handler();
private boolean             _keyboardVisible    = false;
private OnKeyboardShowHide  _keyboardCallback;
private Object              _keyboardCallbackParam;

public void start( OnKeyboardShowHide callback, Object callbackParam )
{
    _keyboardCallback      = callback;
    _keyboardCallbackParam = callbackParam;
    //
    View view = getCurrentFocus();
    if (view != null)
    {
        InputMethodManager imm = (InputMethodManager) getSystemService( Activity.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE );
        imm.hideSoftInputFromWindow( view.getWindowToken(), InputMethodManager.HIDE_IMPLICIT_ONLY, _keyboardResultReceiver );
        imm.showSoftInput( view, InputMethodManager.SHOW_IMPLICIT, _keyboardResultReceiver );
    }
    else // if (_keyboardVisible)
    {
        _keyboardVisible = false;
        _keyboardCallback.onHideKeyboard( _keyboardCallbackParam );
    }
}

private ResultReceiver      _keyboardResultReceiver = new ResultReceiver( _keyboardHandler )
{
    @Override
    protected void onReceiveResult( int resultCode, Bundle resultData )
    {
        switch (resultCode)
        {
            case InputMethodManager.RESULT_SHOWN :
            case InputMethodManager.RESULT_UNCHANGED_SHOWN :
                // if (!_keyboardVisible)
                {
                    _keyboardVisible = true;
                    _keyboardCallback.onShowKeyboard( _keyboardCallbackParam );
                }
                break;
            case InputMethodManager.RESULT_HIDDEN :
            case InputMethodManager.RESULT_UNCHANGED_HIDDEN :
                // if (_keyboardVisible)
                {
                    _keyboardVisible = false;
                    _keyboardCallback.onHideKeyboard( _keyboardCallbackParam );
                }
                break;
        }
    }
};
1
  • how to call it and where? Sep 6, 2016 at 7:15
0

Here is a workaround to know if softkeyboard is visible.

  1. Check for running services on the system using ActivityManager.getRunningServices(max_count_of_services);
  2. From the returned ActivityManager.RunningServiceInfo instances, check clientCount value for soft keyboard service.
  3. The aforementioned clientCount will be incremented every time, the soft keyboard is shown. For example, if clientCount was initially 1, it would be 2 when the keyboard is shown.
  4. On keyboard dismissal, clientCount is decremented. In this case, it resets to 1.

Some of the popular keyboards have certain keywords in their classNames:

  1. Google AOSP = IME
  2. Swype = IME
  3. Swiftkey = KeyboardService
  4. Fleksy = keyboard
  5. Adaptxt = IME (KPTAdaptxtIME)
  6. Smart = Keyboard (SmartKeyboard)

From ActivityManager.RunningServiceInfo, check for the above patterns in ClassNames. Also, ActivityManager.RunningServiceInfo's clientPackage=android, indicating that the keyboard is bound to system.

The above mentioned information could be combined for a strict way to find out if soft keyboard is visible.

0

I converted the answer to the kotlin, hope this helps for kotlin users.

private fun checkKeyboardVisibility() {
    var isKeyboardShowing = false

    binding.coordinator.viewTreeObserver.addOnGlobalLayoutListener {
        val r = Rect()
        binding.coordinator.getWindowVisibleDisplayFrame(r)
        val screenHeight = binding.coordinator.rootView.height

        // r.bottom is the position above soft keypad or device button.
        // if keypad is shown, the r.bottom is smaller than that before.
        val keypadHeight = screenHeight - r.bottom


        if (keypadHeight > screenHeight * 0.15) { // 0.15 ratio is perhaps enough to determine keypad height.
            // keyboard is opened
            if (!isKeyboardShowing) {
                isKeyboardShowing = true

            }
        } else {
            // keyboard is closed
            if (isKeyboardShowing) {
                isKeyboardShowing = false

            }
        }
    }
}
2
  • And what is "binding"
    – Andrew
    Sep 13, 2020 at 16:13
  • @Andrew it is root layout
    – Emre Akcan
    Sep 13, 2020 at 17:13
0

If you support apis for AndroidR in your app then you can use the below method.

In kotlin :
    var imeInsets = view.rootWindowInsets.getInsets(Type.ime()) 
    if (imeInsets.isVisible) { 
        view.translationX = imeInsets.bottom 
    }

Note: This is only available for the AndroidR and below android version needs to follow some of other answer or i will update it for that.

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