I'm interesting in incorporating the Android UI pattern called "Quick Action". Basically, it's a context menu that doesn't cover up the data that is being acted on. I'd like to implement this but I cannot find an API to help me out or some sample code.
Note this UI pattern is discussed in the Yo...
From what I've read, Nest is not actually part of Google, just owned by Google, so he'll keep working for Nest and Nest will be like a separate puppet thing controlled by Google.
Nice. Looks like you're using gradle, too. You liking it? I spent the weekend putting my Holoku source up on bitbucket and converting it to gradle. Gradle is so damn awesome -- I can build the demo or full version, debug or release, in seconds.
Yeah, I need to refactor it quite a bit -- use more fragments, add some animations, clean up the code. It's really bad. It was my first real work with Android though, so I suppose it's to be expected.
@rango and @Anjali you are both rejected. One of you admits to work on a spyware, one of you has only questions and one of you has his last question closed and both of you have very low reputation
Assign your listeners in for loop, when done then go for onClick() function to catch listeners by different IDs
for(int i=0; i<yourDesireSize; i++){
icon1.setOnClickListener(this);
}
Here comes your onClick() function
....
....
public void onClick(View v){
switch(v.getId()){
...
Discipline is hard to adopt, but when adopted everything become easy :)
user457812
Also, for whoever left a comment on the feedback responses asking for write access: that's now how requesting write access works and nobody can help you at all like that.
Actually, it is just sand, but when they do their sandsculptures they use a specific kind of sand that has some, as you state, unique bonding qualities
I use Fragment.instantiate() which accepts arguments as a third parameter. This arguments should be assigned using setArguments() method but no, inside the instantiate method they just assign the parameter to the membervariable. So while I override setArguments, it never gets called...
He's one of Australia's finest writers, but nobody knows him.
"While art is certainly subjective, it has also been said that art is a tryst, for in the joy of it, maker and beholder meet. Unfortunately, in this case, the tryst would be the emotional-connection equivalent of a quick handjob in a K-mart toilet from a middle-aged shelf-stacker named Rhonda in exchange for half a packet of Marlboro Menthol lights."
Hi guys. Sorry for that, but I just stumbled across this gem. This is wrong at so many levels... But at least he's testing: stackoverflow.com/questions/21115962/…
eclipse is pretty good about filtering out logs for your session anyhow actually. It's not a problem unless the device is spamming so much that the buffer fills up really fast and starts deleting lines that you are interested in.
which that python script doesn't seem like it would help
keyboardsurfer: I prefer to see what is going on on my device but Samsung just make this impossible. At least a Nexus device logs only a small amount compared to Samsung
and I am not sure how the pid will handle stuff like GCM, Google Play Service etc where you might want to see output from them. Are they running with the caller pid? I don't know...
plus my customized coloredlogcat extends the color of warnings and errors to the message so they are easier to see. Plus a timestamp when the message appears.
a small "issue" I couldn't fix yet: you should have the command line window at the size you want, the output does not resize correctly after being started
Yes, that is correct. I have just re-read the rules. Please excuse my mistake. I was trying to say: "Thank you very much for sharing this piece of logcat-awesomeness with me."