totaly guessing - but the chat api is probably quite useful for that new Business chat they launched - so you can have customer service reps use facebook chat as live chat options
I just opened the explorer and I can't scroll the left pane... even after clicking on the scrollbar, the damn pane is not scrollable. I have to click into the pane first to be able to scroll... UX nightmare!
I've got an HP Pavilion Touchsmart notebook that came with Windows 8. I've upgraded to 8.1, and now I want to dual-boot an Ubuntu distribution with Windows 10. When dual-booting with Windows 8.1, the Windows Boot Manager always took priority, even after installing GRUB. What do I need to do to ge...
A cat slept on the keyboard and all my desktop icons are now looking like in the picture : Three lines of text description to the right of the image. How can I fix it to see the normal behavior ( one line below the picture) ?
Edit: Ctrl + Mouse Wheel doesn't help
alas, if anybody wants to download it by interest, it just takes a photo,& lets you delete it from memory &/or switch it for another one. it's part of a longer sofware, i didn't even try to manage screen orientation changes.
Someone else made that part in our app. I know it's based on the iosched example. When I add a new item it goes to an entirely white screen with the buttons of the activity still clickable but not visible. It happens before the code I just added.
some weird bug or something. But maybe it's supposed to be like that and I just forgot to implement some part.
I basically just want to show a dialog after clicking the drawer item. Not start a new activity (that works but I don't want to start another activity)
Which list do you mean exactly Graeme? I have an ArrayList<Integer> for specifying the items in the drawer, and 2 int arrays each for icon and text resource id's. And a View array which holds the individual navigation drawer item views.
But i remember there being a "built in" list for navigation drawer, that the one that didn't work, can't remember what it's called off the top of my head.
Miva - Let me know if that helps, you shouldn't have to do anything different if your using a custom content in a NavigationDrawer. The only problem I had was onResume() the title disappeared :P
Mauker - Same as you do any other recycler view, just use a Card as the content?
almost always. Really the only time I use anything other than Relative is when I want the screen broken up by percentage which you have to use LinearLayout with weights for
@FoamyGuy ye that's what I thought. But how do you make it work with relative? I got it all looking nice on my galaxy s6, but when trying on friends nexus 4, stuff started to merge together
on the N4 are there UI things that are too big or small? Or is it just an issue with positioning? Without seeing what it is doing it's tough to offer any specific advice.
"started to merge together" makes it sound like you are using Drawables and that they are too big for the N4 resolution thus are starting to touch or overlap. If that is the case you could probably resolve it by providing smaller drawables into a smaller density bucket directory
What I basically did was adding the title, pushing it down from the top. Adding textview that is bound to the title and so forth. Pushing everything down using marginTop="xDP"
RelativeLayout can cause overlaps (as you've seen) especially if you don't enforce the positions relative to each other rather than relative to a single point. Since your entire layout is basically one long list of views with a background, simply use a LinearLayout
Honestly, I tend to avoid RelativeLayouts and use wrapped LinearLayouts. You technically shouldn't because it's not as efficient. But i always end up refactoring to LinearLayouts eventually anyway to have it look perfect on all devices
I don't actually hate C that much, it's a nice, small, simple language. C++ is large, overly complicated, ugly beast which executes faster than anything else
But the bigger issue with both is that they attract people who don't know how to develop a project just because they learned a few algorithms in school/college, and making a mess in C++ is easier than in anything else I know
Ir is said it is easier to shoot yourself in the foot with C but in C++ it is a little harder to do so except when you do, you probably won't recover from the wound
I totally believe c++ is useful. But it should be used in teeny tiny self contained blobs which do the bits of processing which require speed - and Java should be used to hold it and the rest of the program together ;)