标签:android 框架 butterknife
Annotate fields with @Bind
and a view ID for Butter Knife to find and automatically cast the corresponding view in your layout.
class ExampleActivity extends Activity { @Bind(R.id.title) TextView title; @Bind(R.id.subtitle) TextView subtitle; @Bind(R.id.footer) TextView footer; @Override public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) { super.onCreate(savedInstanceState); setContentView(R.layout.simple_activity); ButterKnife.bind(this); // TODO Use fields... } }
Instead of slow reflection, code is generated to perform the view look-ups. Calling bind
delegates to this generated code that you can see and debug.
The generated code for the above example is roughly equivalent to the following:
public void bind(ExampleActivity activity) { activity.subtitle = (android.widget.TextView) activity.findViewById(2130968578); activity.footer = (android.widget.TextView) activity.findViewById(2130968579); activity.title = (android.widget.TextView) activity.findViewById(2130968577); }
Bind pre-defined resources with @BindBool
, @BindColor
, @BindDimen
, @BindDrawable
, @BindInt
,@BindString
, which binds an R.bool
ID (or your specified type) to its corresponding field.
class ExampleActivity extends Activity { @BindString(R.string.title) String title; @BindDrawable(R.drawable.graphic) Drawable graphic; @BindColor(R.color.red) int red; // int or ColorStateList field @BindDimen(R.dimen.spacer) Float spacer; // int (for pixel size) or float (for exact value) field // ... }
You can also perform binding on arbitrary objects by supplying your own view root.
public class FancyFragment extends Fragment { @Bind(R.id.button1) Button button1; @Bind(R.id.button2) Button button2; @Override public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container, Bundle savedInstanceState) { View view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.fancy_fragment, container, false); ButterKnife.bind(this, view); // TODO Use fields... return view; } }
Another use is simplifying the view holder pattern inside of a list adapter.
public class MyAdapter extends BaseAdapter { @Override public View getView(int position, View view, ViewGroup parent) { ViewHolder holder; if (view != null) { holder = (ViewHolder) view.getTag(); } else { view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.whatever, parent, false); holder = new ViewHolder(view); view.setTag(holder); } holder.name.setText("John Doe"); // etc... return view; } static class ViewHolder { @Bind(R.id.title) TextView name; @Bind(R.id.job_title) TextView jobTitle; public ViewHolder(View view) { ButterKnife.bind(this, view); } } }
You can see this implementation in action in the provided sample.
Calls to ButterKnife.bind
can be made anywhere you would otherwise put findViewById
calls.
Other provided binding APIs:
ButterKnife.bind(this, activity)
.ButterKnife.bind(this)
. If you use <merge>
tags in a layout and inflate in a custom view constructor you can call this immediately after. Alternatively, custom view types inflated from XML can use it in the onFinishInflate()
callback.You can group multiple views into a List
or array.
@Bind({ R.id.first_name, R.id.middle_name, R.id.last_name }) List<EditText> nameViews;
The apply
method allows you to act on all the views in a list at once.
ButterKnife.apply(nameViews, DISABLE); ButterKnife.apply(nameViews, ENABLED, false);
Action
and Setter
interfaces allow specifying simple behavior.
static final ButterKnife.Action<View> DISABLE = new ButterKnife.Action<View>() { @Override public void apply(View view, int index) { view.setEnabled(false); } }; static final ButterKnife.Setter<View, Boolean> ENABLED = new ButterKnife.Setter<View, Boolean>() { @Override public void set(View view, Boolean value, int index) { view.setEnabled(value); } };
An Android Property
can also be used with the apply
method.
ButterKnife.apply(nameViews, View.ALPHA, 0.0f);
Listeners can also automatically be configured onto methods.
@OnClick(R.id.submit) public void submit(View view) { // TODO submit data to server... }
All arguments to the listener method are optional.
@OnClick(R.id.submit) public void submit() { // TODO submit data to server... }
Define a specific type and it will automatically be cast.
@OnClick(R.id.submit) public void sayHi(Button button) { button.setText("Hello!"); }
Specify multiple IDs in a single binding for common event handling.
@OnClick({ R.id.door1, R.id.door2, R.id.door3 }) public void pickDoor(DoorView door) { if (door.hasPrizeBehind()) { Toast.makeText(this, "You win!", LENGTH_SHORT).show(); } else { Toast.makeText(this, "Try again", LENGTH_SHORT).show(); } }
Custom views can bind to their own listeners by not specifying an ID.
public class FancyButton extends Button { @OnClick public void onClick() { // TODO do something! } }
Fragments have a different view lifecycle than activities. When binding a fragment inonCreateView
, set the views to null
in onDestroyView
. Butter Knife has an unbind
method to do this automatically.
public class FancyFragment extends Fragment { @Bind(R.id.button1) Button button1; @Bind(R.id.button2) Button button2; @Override public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container, Bundle savedInstanceState) { View view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.fancy_fragment, container, false); ButterKnife.bind(this, view); // TODO Use fields... return view; } @Override public void onDestroyView() { super.onDestroyView(); ButterKnife.unbind(this); } }
By default, both @Bind
and listener bindings are required. An exception will be thrown if the target view cannot be found.
To suppress this behavior and create an optional binding, add a @Nullable
annotation to the field or method.
Note: Any annotation named @Nullable
can be used for this purpose. It is encouraged to use the@Nullable
annotation from Android‘s "support-annotations" library, see Android Tools Project.
@Nullable @Bind(R.id.might_not_be_there) TextView mightNotBeThere; @Nullable @OnClick(R.id.maybe_missing) void onMaybeMissingClicked() { // TODO ... }
Method annotations whose corresponding listener has multiple callbacks can be used to bind to any one of them. Each annotation has a default callback that it binds to. Specify an alternate using the callback
parameter.
@OnItemSelected(R.id.list_view) void onItemSelected(int position) { // TODO ... } @OnItemSelected(value = R.id.maybe_missing, callback = NOTHING_SELECTED) void onNothingSelected() { // TODO ... }
Also included are findById
methods which simplify code that still has to find views on a View
,Activity
, or Dialog
. It uses generics to infer the return type and automatically performs the cast.
View view = LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.thing, null); TextView firstName = ButterKnife.findById(view, R.id.first_name); TextView lastName = ButterKnife.findById(view, R.id.last_name); ImageView photo = ButterKnife.findById(view, R.id.photo);
Add a static import for ButterKnife.findById
and enjoy even more fun.
The source code to the library and sample application as well as this website is available on GitHub. The Javadoc is also available to browse.
If you are using Maven for compilation you can declare the library as a dependency.
<dependency> <groupId>com.jakewharton</groupId> <artifactId>butterknife</artifactId> <version>7.0.1</version> </dependency>
compile ‘com.jakewharton:butterknife:7.0.1‘
Be sure to suppress this lint warning in your build.gradle
.
lintOptions { disable ‘InvalidPackage‘ }
Some configurations may also require additional exclusions.
packagingOptions { exclude ‘META-INF/services/javax.annotation.processing.Processor‘ }
Some IDEs require additional configuration in order to enable annotation processing.
pom.xml
) then annotation processing should just work. If not, try manual configuration.Butter Knife generates and uses classes dynamically which means that static analysis tools like ProGuard may think they are unused. In order to prevent them from being removed, explicitly mark them to be kept. To prevent ProGuard renaming classes that use @Bind on a member field thekeepclasseswithmembernames
option is used.
-keep class butterknife.** { *; } -dontwarn butterknife.internal.** -keep class **$$ViewBinder { *; } -keepclasseswithmembernames class * { @butterknife.* <fields>; } -keepclasseswithmembernames class * { @butterknife.* <methods>; }
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标签:android 框架 butterknife
原文地址:http://blog.csdn.net/gao_chun/article/details/49741639