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Am trying to do something when my EditText content is changed.

Here is 3 ways i find to do it.

1.

edittext.addTextChangedListener {
    //my code
}

edittext.doAfterTextChanged {
    //my code
}

edittext.addTextChangedListener(object : TextWatcher {
    override fun afterTextChanged(s: Editable) {
        //my code
    }

    override fun beforeTextChanged(s: CharSequence, start: Int, count: Int, after: Int) {}
    override fun onTextChanged(s: CharSequence, start: Int, before: Int, count: Int) {}
})

All works perfectly for my purpose. Can somebody explain if there is any difference between each of them, any advantage or disadvantage using a particular way or simply all of them same?

2
  • I'm not that familiar with Kotlin, but in Java only the 3rd way is valid. Also, I'm not sure how option 1 is even possible since you're not passing anything as the listener. Option 2 was probably added in Kotlin to make it easier since you only usually need that method from these 3 given in option 3.
    – Vucko
    Jul 21, 2022 at 9:53
  • Depends what exactly you are trying to do . I think the document has it all ..
    – ADM
    Jul 21, 2022 at 9:58

1 Answer 1

2

1 and 3 are basically same thing. In kotling object : TextWatcher is not needed as it can wrap the implementation with lambda using just {}

edittext.addTextChangedListener {
    //my code
}

What you did in the 3 with object : TextWatcher is same thing but the implemented functions afterTextChanged, beforeTextChanged and onTextChanged are visible.

And for 2, android in kotlin gives an inline function edittext.doAfterTextChanged which just does everything for you what you did on 3 using object : TextWatcher under the hood and gives access to only afterTextChanged functions implementation. This code is from androidx.core.widget package which shows what it's doing under the hood:

inline fun TextView.doAfterTextChanged(
    crossinline action: (text: Editable?) -> Unit
) = addTextChangedListener(afterTextChanged = action)

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