12:12
@MartinMarconcini I wanted to scroll to bottom of recyclerview and i found your solution: stackoverflow.com/questions/11431832/…
On applying it i get to the bottom of my RecyclerView but the element inside item of recyclerview loses focus
Basically i have a RecyclerView with item divided into 3 columns one TextView and two EditText on insertion of new item to my recyclerview i want to scroll to this new item and set focus to the first EditText
I fixed the insertion of new item and scrolling to it but the problem is i am not able to set focus to my first EditText
@Ahtisham I have no idea how to do this because I have never had to do this kind of interaction; it's an interesting problem, but at the same time, the solution is going to be always tied to the rest of your architecture. To me the problem is divided in different pieces. Detecting that it's time to add a new item to the list; determining what type of item needs to be added; modifying the model to insert this (so far NONE of this involves the adapter). Once you have that...
now the focus should be slightly simpler, since what you need is to scroll to the last item in your list, and then... check which of the 3 "colums" is the one that should get focus (this has nothing to do, again, with the adapter or fragment or anything like that)
once you have found which position and which column will receive this, you can signal the adapter to scroll to that position, and rebind the viewholder. (
notifyItemChanged...
) but making suire your Thing
(whatever your Adapter List is made of), has information to indicate the actual VIEW HOLDER when it's binding, to "request" the focus.
So you see, the problem is not an Adapter problem. It's not a RecyclerView problem either, nor a Fragment or activity. You have the mechanisms for a view to request focus, you KNOW what your last item is and whether is should have focus, then provide the adapter and such, the information they need.
In fact, I'd argue with a ScrollView, you could add simple LinearLayouts with 3 edit texts and you'd still have the same problem (and some new ones, but ignore that). So, SOLVE the problem outside the context of your adapter/recycler view. DRIVE the model towards your data. You have, I hope a model that is a List<ThreeEditTexts>...
My point is, you PASS the adapter a list of the things you want the adapter to ADAPT to your Views (holders)
data class YourThing(val columnOne: Boolean?, val columnTwo: Boolean?, val columnThree: Boolean?, val focusedColumn: Int?)
the view holder can then chek: Do I need to show this text view in column one? it's true: yes. It's false, not, or it's null, so no.
The last one, will have a focused Colum, so that particular view hjolder will be able to say: oh, I need to put this edittext, and request focus for it. Done.
When you determine "I should add another row or column", you tell whoever is managing that list (a viewModel?): hey add me another... and it will return a new list of YourThing with a new row, or with the last row modified...
what you don't want is the adapter making a lot of decisions instead of the adapter "accepting" the data it's supplied with.
I think you're somewhat onto a good track, also keep in mind the RecyclerView is... a controversial class (and our "only choice") for the most part.
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