164

I'm using the new support library ListAdapter. Here's my code for the adapter

class ArtistsAdapter : ListAdapter<Artist, ArtistsAdapter.ViewHolder>(ArtistsDiff()) {
    override fun onCreateViewHolder(parent: ViewGroup, viewType: Int): ViewHolder {
        return ViewHolder(parent.inflate(R.layout.item_artist))
    }

    override fun onBindViewHolder(holder: ViewHolder, position: Int) {
        holder.bind(getItem(position))
    }

    class ViewHolder(view: View) : RecyclerView.ViewHolder(view) {
        fun bind(artist: Artist) {
            itemView.artistDetails.text = artist.artistAlbums
                    .plus(" Albums")
                    .plus(" \u2022 ")
                    .plus(artist.artistTracks)
                    .plus(" Tracks")
            itemView.artistName.text = artist.artistCover
            itemView.artistCoverImage.loadURL(artist.artistCover)
        }
    }
}

I'm updating the adapter with

musicViewModel.getAllArtists().observe(this, Observer {
            it?.let {
                artistAdapter.submitList(it)
            }
        })

My diff class

class ArtistsDiff : DiffUtil.ItemCallback<Artist>() {
    override fun areItemsTheSame(oldItem: Artist?, newItem: Artist?): Boolean {
        return oldItem?.artistId == newItem?.artistId
    }

    override fun areContentsTheSame(oldItem: Artist?, newItem: Artist?): Boolean {
        return oldItem == newItem
    }
}

What's happening is when submitList is called the first time the adapter renders all the items, but when submitList is called again with updated object properties it does not re-render the view which has changed.

It re-renders the view as I scroll the list, which in turn calls bindView()

Also, I've noticed that calling adapter.notifyDatasSetChanged() after submit list renders the view with updated values, but I don't want to call notifyDataSetChanged() because the list adapter has diff utils built-in

Can anyone help me here?

6
  • The problem might be related to ArtistsDiff and thus to the implementation of Artist itself.
    – tynn
    Apr 9, 2018 at 8:05
  • Yes, I too think the same, but I can't seem to pin point it Apr 9, 2018 at 8:07
  • You can debug it or add log statements. Also you could add the relevant code to the question.
    – tynn
    Apr 9, 2018 at 9:03
  • also check this question, i solved it differently stackoverflow.com/questions/58232606/…
    – MisterCat
    Oct 5, 2019 at 5:16
  • 2
    DiffUtil uses Eugene W. Myers's difference algorithm to calculate the minimal number of updates to convert one list into another. In short, this algorithm runs on two different lists. DiffUtil is used by AsyncListDiffer which runs the algorithm in the background thread and updates the recycler view on the main thread. AsyncListDiffer maintains a list itself as the previous list container because of which we have to provide a new instance of the list if we want an optimal performance out of Diffutils. Feb 24, 2021 at 6:07

29 Answers 29

195

Edit: I understand why this happens that wasn't my point. My point is that it at least needs to give a warning or call the notifyDataSetChanged() function. Because apparently I am calling the submitList(...) function for a reason. I am pretty sure people are trying to figure out what went wrong for hours until they figure out the submitList() ignores silently the call.

This is because of Googles weird logic. So if you pass the same list to the adapter it does not even call the DiffUtil.

public void submitList(final List<T> newList) {
    if (newList == mList) {
        // nothing to do
        return;
    }
....
}

I really don't understand the whole point of this ListAdapter if it can't handle changes on the same list. If you want to change the items on the list you pass to the ListAdapter and see the changes then either you need to create a deep copy of the list or you need to use regular RecyclerView with your own DiffUtill class.

8
  • 13
    Because it requires the previous state to perform the diff. Of course it can't handle it if you overwrite the previous state. O_o Apr 27, 2018 at 12:26
  • 56
    Yes but at that point, there is a reason why I call the submitList, right? It should at least call the notifyDataSetChanged() instead of silently ignoring the call. I am pretty sure people are trying to figure out what went wrong for hours until they figure out the submitList() ignores silently the call.
    – insa_c
    Apr 27, 2018 at 15:25
  • 29
    So I am back to RecyclerView.Adapter<VH> and notifyDataSetChanged() . LIfe is good now. Wasted good number of hours Mar 19, 2020 at 11:40
  • 10
    @insa_c You can add 3 hours to your count, that's how much I wasted trying to understand why my listview wasn't updating in some edge cases ...
    – Bencri
    Jun 23, 2020 at 15:14
  • 3
    This is why mutable list are evil. Submitting the list, modifying it after and submitting the same instance? ouch! Why to submit the same list again? If you silently modified the list just call notifyDataSetChanged() to inform the adapter, there is no point of passing same reference again.
    – RadekJ
    May 26, 2021 at 7:03
117

The library assumes you are using Room or any other ORM which offers a new async list every time it gets updated, so just calling submitList on it will work, and for sloppy developers, it prevents doing the calculations twice if the same list is called.

The accepted answer is correct, it offers the explanation but not the solution.

What you can do in case you're not using any such libraries is:

submitList(null);
submitList(myList);

Another solution would be to override submitList (which doesn't cause that quick blink) as such:

@Override
public void submitList(final List<Author> list) {
    super.submitList(list != null ? new ArrayList<>(list) : null);
}

Or with Kotlin code:

override fun submitList(list: List<CatItem>?) {
    super.submitList(list?.let { ArrayList(it) })
}

Questionable logic but works perfectly. My preferred method is the second one because it doesn't cause each row to get an onBind call.

19
  • 13
    That's a hack. Just pass a copy of the list. .submitList(new ArrayList(list)) Aug 21, 2018 at 13:48
  • 5
    I have spent the last hour trying to figure out what the issue is with my logic. Such a weird logic. Oct 10, 2018 at 13:04
  • 13
    @PaulWoitaschek This is not a hack, this is using JAVA :) it's used to fix many problems in libraries where the developer is "sleeping". The reason why you'd choose this instead of passing .submitList(new ArrayList(list)) is because you may submit lists in multiple places in your code. You might forget to create a new array every time, that's why you override. Oct 10, 2018 at 13:20
  • 2
    Even with using Room I’m running into a similar issue.
    – Bink
    Dec 19, 2018 at 23:59
  • 6
    Apparently this works when updating a list in viewmodel with new items, but when I update a property (boolean - isSelected) of an item in a list this still wont work.. Idk why but DiffUtil returns the same old and new item as I've checked. Any idea where the problem might occur?
    – Ralph
    Apr 10, 2019 at 3:01
47

with Kotlin just you need to convert your list to new MutableList like this or another type of list according to your usage

.observe(this, Observer {
            adapter.submitList(it?.toMutableList())
        })
6
  • 1
    That's weird but converting the list to mutableList works for me. Thanks! Mar 26, 2020 at 10:25
  • 4
    Why in hell is this working? It works but very curious why this happens. Apr 21, 2020 at 7:45
  • 1
    in my opinion, the ListAdapter must do not about your list reference, so wit it?.toMutableList() you submit a new instance list to the adapter. I hope that clear enough for you. @March3April4
    – Mina Samir
    May 16, 2020 at 1:38
  • Thanks. According to your comment, I guessed that the ListAdapter receives it's dataset as a form of List<T>, which can be a mutable list, or even an immutable list. If i pass out an immutable list, the changes I've made is being blocked by the dataset itself, not by the ListAdapter. May 19, 2020 at 6:33
  • 1
    This works because .toMutableList() creates a copy
    – Trevor
    Jul 30, 2021 at 15:39
29

I had a similar problem but the incorrect rendering was caused by a combination of setHasFixedSize(true) and android:layout_height="wrap_content". For the first time, the adapter was supplied with an empty list so the height never got updated and was 0. Anyway, this resolved my issue. Someone else might have the same problem and will think it is problem with the adapter.

1
  • 3
    Yeah, set the recycleview to wrap_content will update the list, if you set it to match_parent it will not call the adapter Jun 17, 2020 at 17:33
17

If you encounter some issues when using

recycler_view.setHasFixedSize(true)

you should definitly check this comment: https://github.com/thoughtbot/expandable-recycler-view/issues/53#issuecomment-362991531

It solved the issue on my side.

(Here is a screenshot of the comment as requested)

enter image description here

2
  • 1
    A link to a solution is welcome, but please ensure your answer is useful without it: add context around the link so your fellow users will have some idea what it is and why it’s there, then quote the most relevant part of the page you're linking to in case the target page is unavailable. Sep 3, 2019 at 18:51
  • Worked for me, Thanks @Yoann.G
    – Dev4Life
    Jun 9 at 15:55
12

Wasted so much time to figure out the problem in same case.

But in my situation the problem was that i forgot to specify a layoutManager for my recyclerView: vRecyclerView.layoutManager = LinearLayoutManager(requireContext())

I hope no one will repeat my mistake...

2
  • 1
    app:layoutManager="androidx.recyclerview.widget.LinearLayoutManager" is so much nicer nowadays :)
    – Aetherna
    Feb 5, 2021 at 20:17
  • Just want to upvote for this coz I just made the same silly mistake.
    – pqtuan86
    Apr 14, 2021 at 8:32
11

According to the official docs :

Whenever you call submitList it submits a new list to be diffed and displayed.

This is why whenever you call submitList on the previous (already submitted list), it does not calculate the Diff and does not notify the adapter for change in the dataset.

8

Today I also stumbled upon this "problem". With the help of insa_c's answer and RJFares's solution I made myself a Kotlin extension function:

/**
 * Update the [RecyclerView]'s [ListAdapter] with the provided list of items.
 *
 * Originally, [ListAdapter] will not update the view if the provided list is the same as
 * currently loaded one. This is by design as otherwise the provided DiffUtil.ItemCallback<T>
 * could never work - the [ListAdapter] must have the previous list if items to compare new
 * ones to using provided diff callback.
 * However, it's very convenient to call [ListAdapter.submitList] with the same list and expect
 * the view to be updated. This extension function handles this case by making a copy of the
 * list if the provided list is the same instance as currently loaded one.
 *
 * For more info see 'RJFares' and 'insa_c' answers on
 * https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49726385/listadapter-not-updating-item-in-reyclerview
 */
fun <T, VH : RecyclerView.ViewHolder> ListAdapter<T, VH>.updateList(list: List<T>?) {
    // ListAdapter<>.submitList() contains (stripped):
    //  if (newList == mList) {
    //      // nothing to do
    //      return;
    //  }
    this.submitList(if (list == this.currentList) list.toList() else list)
}

which can then be used anywhere, e.g.:

viewModel.foundDevices.observe(this, Observer {
    binding.recyclerViewDevices.adapter.updateList(it)
})

and it only (and always) copies the list if it is the same as currently loaded one.

6

In my case I forgot to set the LayoutManager for the RecyclerView. The effect of that is the same as described above.

6

I got some strange behavior. I'm using MutableList in LiveDate.

In kotlin, the following codes don't work:

mViewModel.products.observe(viewLifecycleOwner, {
    mAdapter.submitList(it)
})

But, when I change it to it.toList(), it works

mViewModel.products.observe(viewLifecycleOwner, {
    mAdapter.submitList(it.toList())
})

Although, "it" was the same list.

1
  • 1
    It's not the same list, it's a copy of the list. The toList() function returns a new list.
    – madbeans
    Apr 19, 2022 at 5:32
4

I had a similar problem. The issue was in the Diff functions, which didn't adequately compare the items. Anyone with this issue, make sure your Diff functions (and by extension your data object classes) contain proper comparison definitions - i.e. comparing all fields which might be updated in the new item. For example in the original post

    override fun areContentsTheSame(oldItem: Artist?, newItem: Artist?): Boolean {
    return oldItem == newItem
}

This function (potentially) does not do what it says on the label: it does not compare the contents of the two items - unless you have overridden the equals() function in the Artist class. In my case, I had not, and the definition of areContentsTheSame only checked one of the necessary fields, due to my oversight when implementing it. This is structural equality vs. referential equality, you can find more about it here

0
3

The reason your ListAdapter .submitlist is not called is because the object you updated still holds the same adress in memory.

When you update an object with lets say .setText it changes the value in the original object.

So that when you check if object.id == object2.id it will return as the same because the both have a reference to the same location in memory.

The solution is to create a new object with the updated data and insert that in your list. Then submitList will be called and it will work correctly

2
  • I made it work using this concept but did not actually know how it worked. Thanks for this explanation. Apr 30, 2022 at 11:19
  • You are the god. No answers from the above solved my issue. You did a good job man. Jun 28 at 15:33
2

For me, this issue appeared if I was using RecyclerView inside of ScrollView with nestedScrollingEnabled="false" and RV height set to wrap_content.
The adapter updated properly and the bind function was called, but the items were not shown - the RecyclerView was stuck at its' original size.

Changing ScrollView to NestedScrollView fixed the issue.

2

It solve my problem. I think the best way is not to override submitList but add a new function to add new list.

    fun updateList(list: MutableList<ScaleDispBlock>?) {
        list?.let {
             val newList = ArrayList<ScaleDispBlock>(list)
            submitList(newList)
        }
    }
0
2

I also ran into similar issue, my usecase was i had a clickHandler and item will be selected/not selected (toggle on click).

I tried most of the approach from the above answers, only thing that worked is

adapter.submitList(null)
adapter.submitList(modifiedList)

but problem with this is everytime i click on any clickHandler the whole list is being redrawn again which is very ineffecient.

What i did ?

I made a live data that will store last clicked item and observing that live data, we can tell adapter that live data has been updated like below

viewModel.lastClicked.observe(viewLifeCycleOwner, {
    adapter.notifyItemChanged(it)
}
2

Had a VERY similar issue, to this one, and decided to open a new thread and even create a GitHub project to mess around with. Most solutions didn't quite work for me, not even the toMutableList() way. In my case, the problem was solved by using immutable classes and submitting immutable Lists to the Adapter.

1

For anyone who's scenario is same as mine, I leave my solution, which I don't know why it's working, here.

The solution which worked for me was from @Mina Samir, which is submitting the list as a mutable list.

My Issue scenario :

-Loading a friend list inside a fragment.

  1. ActivityMain attaches the FragmentFriendList(Observes to the livedata of friend db items) and on the same time, requests a http request to the server to get all of my friend list.

  2. Update or insert the items from the http server.

  3. Every change ignites the onChanged callback of the livedata. But, when it's my first time launching the application, which means that there was nothing on my table, the submitList succeeds without any error of any kind, but nothing appears on the screen.

  4. However, when it's my second time launching the application, data are being loaded to the screen.

The solution is, as metioned above, submitting the list as a mutableList.

1

As has already been mentioned, you cannot submit a List with the same reference because the ListAdapter will see the lists are in the same location and will therefore not be able to use the DiffUtil.

The simplest solution would be to make a shallow copy of the list.

submitList(ArrayList(list))

Be wary converting the List to a MutableList, as that can create conditions for Exceptions and hard to find bugs.

1

enter image description here

this will work .... what happen Is when you get the current list you are pointing to the same list at same location

1
  • What would the Java code be to create a new mutable list?
    – AJW
    Nov 12, 2021 at 13:35
0

I needed to modify my DiffUtils

override fun areContentsTheSame(oldItem: Vehicle, newItem: Vehicle): Boolean {

To actually return whether the contents are new, not just compare the id of the model.

0

Using @RJFares first answer updates the list successfully, but doesn't maintain the scroll state. The entire RecyclerView starts from 0th position. As a workaround, this is what I did:

   fun updateDataList(newList:List<String>){ //new list from DB or Network

     val tempList = dataList.toMutableList() // dataList is the old list
     tempList.addAll(newList)
     listAdapter.submitList(tempList) // Recyclerview Adapter Instance
     dataList = tempList

   }

This way, I'm able to maintain the scroll state of RecyclerView along with modified data.

0

Optimal Soltion: for Kotlin

        var list :ArrayList<BaseModel> = ArrayList(adapter.currentList)
        list.add(Item("Content"))
        adapter.submitList(list) {
            Log.e("ListAdaptor","List Updated Successfully")
        }

We should not maintain another base list as adapter.currentList will return a list in which diff is already calculated.

We have to provide a new instance every time a list updated because of DiffUtil As per android documentation DiffUtil is a utility class that calculates the difference between two lists and outputs a list of update operations that converts the first list into the second one. One list is already maintained by AsyncListDiffer which runs the diffutil on the background thread and another one has to be passed using adaptor.submitList()

0

The way that worked for me is to override the submitList() and create a copy of the incoming list and each item inside it too:

override fun submitList(list: List<Item>?) {
    val listCopy =
        mutableListOf<Item>().apply {
            list?.map {
                add(Item(it.id, it.name, it.imageUrl))
            }
        }
    super.submitList(listCopy)
}
0

I encounter a very similar issue.

After the data list changed, I submit it again, the recycler view doesn't show as I wanted. It shows duplicated items.

I haven't found the root cause, but I find a workaround, that is to set the adapter to recycler view again. I guess this makes recycler viewer forget the memory before and render again correctly.

userNftListFiltered = SOME_NEW_VALUE
binding.nftSendSearchList.adapter = searchNftAdapter //set adapter again
searchNftAdapter.submitList(userNftListFiltered)
0

Once you have modify the array list, you have to let adapter know that which position that should be change

this code below is working in my case wish it may help

private fun addItem() {
  val index = myArrayList.size
  val position = myArrayList.size+1
  myArrayList.add(
    index, MyArrayClass("1", "Item Name")
  )
  myAdapter.notifyItemInserted(position) // in case of insert

  // in case of remove item
  // val index = myArrayList.size-1
  // myAdapter.notifyItemRemoved(index)
}
0

In my case i was using same object(from adadptar) to update Room database. Create new object to update database and it'll fix the issue.

Example: I was doing this ->

val playlist = adapter.getItem(position)
playlist.name = "new name"
updatePlaylistObjectInRoomDatabase(playlist)

above code will change object in adapter before room database. So no change will be detected by DiffUtil callback.

Now doing this ->

val playlist = adapter.getItem(position)
val newPlaylist = Playlist()
newPlaylist.id = playlist.id
newPlaylist.name = "new name"
updatePlaylistObjectInRoomDatabase(newPlaylist)

Above code will not change anything in adapter list and will only change data in room database. so submitList will have different values DiffUtil callback can detect.

Enjoy the little things :)

0

This is something naturally expecte to be available on the official API, but as it isn't, this can be a way to deal with it:

fun <T, VH : RecyclerView.ViewHolder> ListAdapter<T, VH>.clearItems() {
    submitList(null)
    submitList(emptyList())
}
0

The adapter can not understand that you have some updates, I don't know why!? I am adding some entities to the list ad I m expected to collect them at the consumption point. But, nothing happens. As a solution that worked for me you can use the script below:

artistAdapter.submitList(it.toMutableList())
0

Because the problem lays inside the ListAdapter, I would like to solve it inside the ListAdapter.

Thanks to Kotlin extension, we can write it like:

class MyItemAdapter() :
    ListAdapter<Item, RecyclerView.ViewHolder>(ItemDiffCallback) {

    // ...

    override fun submitList(list: List<Item>?) {
        super.submitList(list?.toList())
    }
}

It does look like a tricky hack. So I'd like to make a comment too:

super.submitList(list?.toList()) // to make submitList work, new value MUST be a new list. https://stackoverflow.com/a/50031492/9735961

And yes, thank you, RecyclerView developers.

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