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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 event listeners


Unlike many other event systems, however, many Android components only allow a single event listener of certain types; this diverges from platforms such as Java desktop, or JavaScript in the browser, where any number of click listeners can be attached to a single element. In Android, click listeners are almost always set rather than added.

Note

This is actually a clever tradeoff--having multiple listeners for each event means that you need at least an array of them; the array needs to be sized and copied when it runs out of space, while it's actually very seldom that multiple listeners are needed. Multiple listeners also means that the widgets must traverse the list every time they want to dispatch events, so sticking to a single listener simplifies the code, and reduces the amount of required memory.

If you ever find yourself needing more than one listener for an event and widget that only provides a single listener slot, simply write a simple delegate class, like...

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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