I simply need nothing to change when the screen is rotated. My app displays a random image when it first loads and rotating the device should not select another random image. How can I (simply) make this behavior stop?
There are generally three ways to do this:
As some of the answers suggested, you could distinguish the cases of your activity being created for the first time and being restored from
savedInstanceState
. This is done by overridingonSaveInstanceState
and checking the parameter ofonCreate
.You could lock the activity in one orientation by adding
android:screenOrientation="portrait"
(or"landscape"
) to<activity>
in your manifest.You could tell the system that you meant to handle screen changes for yourself by specifying
android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize"
in the<activity>
tag. This way the activity will not be recreated, but will receive a callback instead (which you can ignore as it's not useful for you).
Personally I'd go with (3). Of course if locking the app to one of the orientations is fine with you, you can also go with (2).
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13So for #3 are you saying all I have to do is add that line to my manifest? Because it doesn't work. – Escobar Ceaser May 6 '11 at 15:23
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5
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2
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16@EscobarCeaser, For Android 3.2 and above, you need
android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize"
– Pacerier Nov 20 '14 at 7:34 -
6
android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize"
works for me. Thanks @Pacerier – Don Larynx May 21 '15 at 12:43
Xion's answer was close, but #3 (android:configChanes="orientation"
) won't work unless the application has an API level of 12 or lower.
In API level 13 or above, the screen size changes when the orientation changes, so this still causes the activity to be destroyed and started when orientation changes.
Simply add the "screenSize" attribute like I did below:
<activity
android:name=".YourActivityName"
android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize">
</activity>
Now, when you change orientation (and screen size changes), the activity keeps its state and onConfigurationChanged()
is called. This will keep whatever is on the screen (ie: webpage in a Webview) when the orientation changes.
Learned this from this site: http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/activity-element.html
Also, this is apparently a bad practice so read the link below about Handling Runtime Changes:
http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/resources/runtime-changes.html
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1
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Works in Samsung Galaxy Nexus android 4.2.1 !
android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize"
– Vincent Ducastel Mar 15 '14 at 13:40 -
Amazing. Have been working through code for so many hours to solve an issue i had with activity reloading and a video starting from the beginning. And here was the solution ! ++++1 – Mathias Asberg May 3 '14 at 17:28
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4Bad practice? Pfft, real life people have deadlines and if it works, it works ;) – Kacy Feb 19 '15 at 0:45
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You just have to go to the AndroidManifest.xml
and inside or in your activities labels, you have to type this line of code as someone up there said:
android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize"
So, you'll have something like this:
<activity android:name="ActivityMenu"
android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize">
</activity>
Hope it works!
<activity android:name="com.example.abc"
android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize"></activity>
Just add android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize"
in activity tab of manifest file.
So, Activity won't restart when orientation change.
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Its working. But when I am using separate layout for each orientation layout.xml and layout-land.xml. its applying landscape layout for both orientation. If I use "orientation" only , Its giving what I expect but reloading. Could you help on this ? – Karthikeyan Ve Jun 24 '15 at 7:31
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1@KarthikeyanVe That's the issue when you're trying to cheat. You'll have to restart your activity to change layout. Go ahead and just use the real solution, which is using
onSaveInstanceState()
andonCreate()
. – Marc Plano-Lesay Aug 7 '15 at 12:38 -
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@Weaboo the actual solution is linked in the question: developer.android.com/guide/topics/resources/… – Marc Plano-Lesay Jan 15 '18 at 10:16
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@MarcPlano-Lesay I've separate layout for portrait and landscape mode, if I open my app in landscape or portrait mode it works fine but whenever I try to change orientation on run time it closes my app, however when I login to my app and then navigate to MainActivity and try to change orientation it reloads that activity and works fine. Now the question is why? Is there a logical error in my code? Idk, but I've tried debugging the app several times, and I can't find anything. Moreover I don't want to restart my activity, why can't we just adapt respective layout whenever configuration changes? – Weaboo Jan 15 '18 at 13:49
It's my experience that it's actually better to just deal with the orientation changes properly instead of trying to shoehorn a non-default behavior.
You should save the image that's currently being displayed in onSaveInstanceState()
and restore it properly when your application runs through onCreate()
again.
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#3 is a perfectly valid solution. It's the exact tool made to solve this exact problem. Why do you say that it's shoehorning? – Pacerier Nov 20 '14 at 7:36
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1@Pacerier Just read the docs. "Note: Using
android:configChanges
should be avoided and used only as a last-resort. Please read Handling Runtime Changes for more information about how to properly handle a restart due to a configuration change." – Marc Plano-Lesay Aug 7 '15 at 12:42 -
This solution is by far the best working one. In your manifest file add
<activity
android:configChanges="keyboardHidden|orientation|screenSize"
android:name="your activity name"
android:label="@string/app_name"
android:screenOrientation="landscape">
</activity
And in your activity class add the following code
@Override
public void onConfigurationChanged(Configuration newConfig)
{
super.onConfigurationChanged(newConfig);
if (newConfig.orientation == Configuration.ORIENTATION_PORTRAIT) {
//your code
} else if (newConfig.orientation == Configuration.ORIENTATION_LANDSCAPE) {
//your code
}
}
add android:configChanges="keyboardHidden|orientation|screenSize"
for all the app activities tags in manifest.
In manifiest file add to each activity this. This will help
android:configChanges = "orientation|keyboard|keyboardHidden|screenLayout|screenSize"
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screenLayout worked for me, prevented refresh when resizing app for splitscreen on android – Terren Sep 25 '18 at 23:23
Just add this to your AndroidManifest.xml
<activity android:screenOrientation="landscape">
I mean, there is an activity tag, add this as another parameter. In case if you need portrait orientation, change landscape to portrait. Hope this helps.
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im not looking to take away the ability to rotate the screen. i just dont want my app to reload... as i mentioned. – Escobar Ceaser May 6 '11 at 15:11
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ps... this doesnt work anyway. it just forces the app to display in a certain orientation. rotating the screen still reloads the activity – Escobar Ceaser May 6 '11 at 15:41
All above answers are not working for me. So, i have fixed by mentioning the label
with screenOrientation
like below. Now everything fine
<activity android:name=".activity.VideoWebViewActivity"
android:label="@string/app_name"
android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize"/>
http://animeshrivastava.blogspot.in/2017/08/activity-lifecycle-oncreate-beating_3.html
@Override
protected void onSaveInstanceState(Bundle b)
{
super.onSaveInstanceState(b);
String str="Screen Change="+String.valueOf(screenChange)+"....";
Toast.makeText(ctx,str+"You are changing orientation...",Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
screenChange=true;
}
Save the image details in your onPause()
or onStop()
and use it in the onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState)
to restore the image.
EDIT:
More info on the actual process is detailed here http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/Activity.html#ActivityLifecycle as it is different in Honeycomb than previous Android versions.
just use : android:configChanges="keyboardHidden|orientation"
Add this code after the onCreate
,method in your activity containing the WebView
@Override
protected void onSaveInstanceState(Bundle outState) {
super.onSaveInstanceState(outState);
}
@Override
protected void onRestoreInstanceState(Bundle state) {
super.onRestoreInstanceState(state);
}
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1How would this work? Aren't you just saying something explicitly to the runtime, what would otherwise be done by default? – Danielson Apr 9 '15 at 10:06
Screen.lockOrientation(this)
from github.com/delight-im/Android-BaseLib/blob/master/Source/src/im/… for this. It allows unlocking which the manifest does not. – caw Mar 4 '15 at 18:34