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I am using an AbsoluteLayout for a Activity and have it defined in a xml file.

I added this line of code because I am trying to add a list of buttons dynamically and I get the following warning.

private AbsoluteLayout layout = (AbsoluteLayout) findViewById(R.id.viewsaved); 

The type AbsoluteLayout is deprecated

The code still appears to work properly, but I was just curious to see if anyone knows why this warning appears?

Thanks for any help!

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  • It means that you shouldn't use AbsoluteLayout anymore. FrameLayout or RelativeLayout is the new hotness.
    – EboMike
    Apr 28, 2011 at 23:16

5 Answers 5

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In computer software or authoring programs standards and documentation, the term deprecation is applied to software features that are superseded and should be avoided. Although deprecated features remain in the current version, their use may raise warning messages recommending alternative practices, and deprecation may indicate that the feature will be removed in the future. Features are deprecated—rather than being removed—in order to provide backward compatibility and give programmers who have used the feature time to bring their code into compliance with the new standard.

From Wikipedia - Deprecation

In short, the function will work for now but will likely be removed in future versions. You'll want to find something to replace it with.

AbsoluteLayout suggests you use FrameLayout, RelativeLayout or a custom layout instead.

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It appears because it is deprecated. You should not use AbsoluteLayout anyway, it was deprecated for a good reason.

The reason is that it does not allow automatic handling of multiple screen sizes which is a very important aspect of Android.

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  • I am using AbsoluteLayout, (because it is the only Layout that fits my use-case, and we have had a lot of discussions about other Layouts, but it's just a lot of time wasted for a trivial already solved problem, so, we are going ahead with using it.) Now, we want to get rid of the possibility of the Platform just removing it, so, we want to clone the code and keep a copy in our project. Just copying the code into the project doesn't work. (because Android Studio complains about mPaddingLeft which is inherited from the View class.) Is there something wrong here?
    – IcyFlame
    Jun 10, 2016 at 12:30
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Deprecated code is code that is still in the release for backwards compatibility reasons (ie for old programs to use) but has been superceeded by a newer and better peice of code.

For a list of buttons I would recommend either a ListView or a LinearLayout as these will allow you to add items in a list format. If you need to use AbsoluteLayout for its positioning then you're going to need to be more inventive with your use of LinearLayouts and RelativeLayouts

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Means that it is marked for removal and will be gone in some future version of Android. From http://developer.android.com/reference/android/widget/AbsoluteLayout.html

This class is deprecated. Use FrameLayout, RelativeLayout or a custom layout instead.

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In most Java libraries, especially the very popular ones, the maintainers try very hard to make sure if you make code against an old version of the library that it won't break with a newer version (backward compatability.)

However, sometimes they realize they have made mistakes that are fundamental to the library in general and cannot be fixed. In this case, they deprecate. It means "yes it will work exactly like it did before, but be warned: there is a serious flaw in it." Typically, they follow this up with a suggested replacement.

In a related note, while I haven't done Android, I have done a lot of Java gui development. It's so tempting to say "I'll just use absolute positioning. I have no problem keeping track of everything." But as your program grows, sure enough it gets so difficult to keep it all in check. Only now, you have tons of code that has to be refactored to change it into a more maintainable layout. Don't fall into that trap: use a good layout manager from the start!

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