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You're reading from  Hands-On Android UI Development

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2017
Reading LevelExpert
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781788475051
Edition1st Edition
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Jason Morris
Jason Morris
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Jason Morris

Jason Morris has been developing software for as long as he can remember. He's written software for the desktop, the server, for feature phones and for smart phones. He's written in many languages, and deployed in a variety of countries. Jason loves a good programming challenge, and when he's not writing code, or spending time with his family, taking photo's or camping: he's probably thinking about programming. In 2010 / 2011 he wrote Android User Interface Development: A Beginners Guide, which helped many beginner Android developers take their first steps into the realm of User Interface design and development for mobile devices.
Read more about Jason Morris

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Multiple view types


RecyclerView is capable of handling almost any number of different types of widgets for display on the screen, and recycling them all independently. This is an amazingly powerful and useful technique, not just for being able to display different types of data on the screen, but also to adjust the layout of the RecyclerView in a way that is mostly transparent. However, you'll need to look at how exactly you want to break the layout up.

There are generally two main reasons you will want to use different view types in a RecyclerView:

  • To break up a long list of items with a divider
  • As you have different types of data you want to render together

Let's start with creating and adding dividers; you can just adjust the margin of each of the widgets when the data is bound to them, but that doesn't help the user understand why the divider is there. Often, you'll want a divider to carry details of what it actually represents, such as a date label. In these cases, you need widgets to...

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Hands-On Android UI Development
Published in: Nov 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781788475051

Author (1)

author image
Jason Morris

Jason Morris has been developing software for as long as he can remember. He's written software for the desktop, the server, for feature phones and for smart phones. He's written in many languages, and deployed in a variety of countries. Jason loves a good programming challenge, and when he's not writing code, or spending time with his family, taking photo's or camping: he's probably thinking about programming. In 2010 / 2011 he wrote Android User Interface Development: A Beginners Guide, which helped many beginner Android developers take their first steps into the realm of User Interface design and development for mobile devices.
Read more about Jason Morris