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      1 page.title=Input Events
      2 parent.title=User Interface
      3 parent.link=index.html
      4 @jd:body
      5 
      6 <div id="qv-wrapper">
      7 <div id="qv">
      8   <h2>In this document</h2>
      9   <ol>
     10     <li><a href="#EventListeners">Event Listeners</a></li>
     11     <li><a href="#EventHandlers">Event Handlers</a></li>
     12     <li><a href="#TouchMode">Touch Mode</a></li>
     13     <li><a href="#HandlingFocus">Handling Focus</a></li>
     14   </ol>
     15 
     16 </div>
     17 </div>
     18 
     19 <p>On Android, there's more than one way to intercept the events from a user's interaction with your application.
     20 When considering events within your user interface, the approach is to capture the events from
     21 the specific View object that the user interacts with. The View class provides the means to do so.</p>
     22 
     23 <p>Within the various View classes that you'll use to compose your layout, you may notice several public callback 
     24 methods that look useful for UI events. These methods are called by the Android framework when the 
     25 respective action occurs on that object. For instance, when a View (such as a Button) is touched,
     26 the <code>onTouchEvent()</code> method is called on that object. However, in order to intercept this, you must extend
     27 the class and override the method. However, extending every View object
     28 in order to handle such an event would not be practical. This is why the View class also contains
     29 a collection of nested interfaces with callbacks that you can much more easily define. These interfaces,
     30 called <a href="#EventListeners">event listeners</a>, are your ticket to capturing the user interaction with your UI.</p>
     31 
     32 <p>While you will more commonly use the event listeners to listen for user interaction, there may
     33 come a time when you do want to extend a View class, in order to build a custom component. 
     34 Perhaps you want to extend the {@link android.widget.Button}
     35 class to make something more fancy. In this case, you'll be able to define the default event behaviors for your
     36 class using the class <a href="#EventHandlers">event handlers</a>.</p>
     37 
     38 
     39 <h2 id="EventListeners">Event Listeners</h2>
     40 
     41 <p>An event listener is an interface in the {@link android.view.View} class that contains a single 
     42 callback method. These methods will be called by the Android framework when the View to which the listener has
     43 been registered is triggered by user interaction with the item in the UI.</p>
     44 
     45 <p>Included in the event listener interfaces are the following callback methods:</p>
     46 
     47 <dl>
     48   <dt><code>onClick()</code></dt>
     49     <dd>From {@link android.view.View.OnClickListener}. 
     50     This is called when the user either touches the item 
     51     (when in touch mode), or focuses upon the item with the navigation-keys or trackball and
     52     presses the suitable "enter" key or presses down on the trackball.</dd>
     53   <dt><code>onLongClick()</code></dt>
     54     <dd>From {@link android.view.View.OnLongClickListener}. 
     55     This is called when the user either touches and holds the item (when in touch mode), or 
     56     focuses upon the item with the navigation-keys or trackball and
     57     presses and holds the suitable "enter" key or presses and holds down on the trackball (for one second).</dd>
     58   <dt><code>onFocusChange()</code></dt>
     59     <dd>From {@link android.view.View.OnFocusChangeListener}. 
     60     This is called when the user navigates onto or away from the item, using the navigation-keys or trackball.</dd>
     61   <dt><code>onKey()</code></dt>
     62     <dd>From {@link android.view.View.OnKeyListener}. 
     63     This is called when the user is focused on the item and presses or releases a hardware key on the device.</dd>
     64   <dt><code>onTouch()</code></dt>
     65     <dd>From {@link android.view.View.OnTouchListener}. 
     66     This is called when the user performs an action qualified as a touch event, including a press, a release,
     67     or any movement gesture on the screen (within the bounds of the item).</dd>
     68   <dt><code>onCreateContextMenu()</code></dt>
     69     <dd>From {@link android.view.View.OnCreateContextMenuListener}. 
     70     This is called when a Context Menu is being built (as the result of a sustained "long click"). See the discussion
     71     on context menus in the <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/menus.html#context-menu">Menus</a>
     72     developer guide.</dd>
     73 </dl>
     74 
     75 <p>These methods are the sole inhabitants of their respective interface. To define one of these methods
     76 and handle your events, implement the nested interface in your Activity or define it as an anonymous class.
     77 Then, pass an instance of your implementation
     78 to the respective <code>View.set...Listener()</code> method. (E.g., call 
     79 <code>{@link android.view.View#setOnClickListener(View.OnClickListener) setOnClickListener()}</code> 
     80 and pass it your implementation of the {@link android.view.View.OnClickListener OnClickListener}.)</p>
     81 
     82 <p>The example below shows how to register an on-click listener for a Button. </p>
     83 
     84 <pre>
     85 // Create an anonymous implementation of OnClickListener
     86 private OnClickListener mCorkyListener = new OnClickListener() {
     87     public void onClick(View v) {
     88       // do something when the button is clicked
     89     }
     90 };
     91 
     92 protected void onCreate(Bundle savedValues) {
     93     ...
     94     // Capture our button from layout
     95     Button button = (Button)findViewById(R.id.corky);
     96     // Register the onClick listener with the implementation above
     97     button.setOnClickListener(mCorkyListener);
     98     ...
     99 }
    100 </pre>
    101 
    102 <p>You may also find it more convenient to implement OnClickListener as a part of your Activity.
    103 This will avoid the extra class load and object allocation. For example:</p>
    104 <pre>
    105 public class ExampleActivity extends Activity implements OnClickListener {
    106     protected void onCreate(Bundle savedValues) {
    107         ...
    108         Button button = (Button)findViewById(R.id.corky);
    109         button.setOnClickListener(this);
    110     }
    111 
    112     // Implement the OnClickListener callback
    113     public void onClick(View v) {
    114       // do something when the button is clicked
    115     }
    116     ...
    117 }
    118 </pre>
    119 
    120 <p>Notice that the <code>onClick()</code> callback in the above example has
    121 no return value, but some other event listener methods must return a boolean. The reason
    122 depends on the event. For the few that do, here's why:</p>
    123 <ul>
    124   <li><code>{@link android.view.View.OnLongClickListener#onLongClick(View) onLongClick()}</code> - 
    125     This returns a boolean to indicate whether you have consumed the event and it should not be carried further. 
    126     That is, return <em>true</em> to indicate that you have handled the event and it should stop here; 
    127     return <em>false</em> if you have not handled it and/or the event should continue to any other
    128     on-click listeners.</li>
    129   <li><code>{@link android.view.View.OnKeyListener#onKey(View,int,KeyEvent) onKey()}</code> - 
    130     This returns a boolean to indicate whether you have consumed the event and it should not be carried further.
    131     That is, return <em>true</em> to indicate that you have handled the event and it should stop here; 
    132     return <em>false</em> if you have not handled it and/or the event should continue to any other
    133     on-key listeners.</li>
    134   <li><code>{@link android.view.View.OnTouchListener#onTouch(View,MotionEvent) onTouch()}</code> - 
    135     This returns a boolean to indicate whether your listener consumes this event. The important thing is that
    136     this event can have multiple actions that follow each other. So, if you return <em>false</em> when the
    137     down action event is received, you indicate that you have not consumed the event and are also
    138     not interested in subsequent actions from this event. Thus, you will not be called for any other actions
    139     within the event, such as a finger gesture, or the eventual up action event.</li>
    140 </ul>
    141 
    142 <p>Remember that hardware key events are always delivered to the View currently in focus. They are dispatched starting from the top
    143 of the View hierarchy, and then down, until they reach the appropriate destination. If your View (or a child of your View)
    144 currently has focus, then you can see the event travel through the <code>{@link android.view.View#dispatchKeyEvent(KeyEvent)
    145 dispatchKeyEvent()}</code> method. As an alternative to capturing key events through your View, you can also receive 
    146 all of the events inside your Activity with <code>{@link android.app.Activity#onKeyDown(int,KeyEvent) onKeyDown()}</code>
    147 and <code>{@link android.app.Activity#onKeyUp(int,KeyEvent) onKeyUp()}</code>.</p>
    148 
    149 <p>Also, when thinking about text input for your application, remember that many devices only have software input
    150 methods. Such methods are not required to be key-based; some may use voice input, handwriting, and so on. Even if
    151 an input method presents a keyboard-like interface, it will generally <strong>not</strong> trigger the
    152 <code>{@link android.app.Activity#onKeyDown(int,KeyEvent) onKeyDown()}</code> family of events. You should never
    153 build a UI that requires specific key presses to be controlled unless you want to limit your application to devices
    154 with a hardware keyboard. In particular, do not rely on these methods to validate input when the user presses the
    155 return key; instead, use actions like {@link android.view.inputmethod.EditorInfo#IME_ACTION_DONE} to signal the
    156 input method how your application expects to react, so it may change its UI in a meaningful way. Avoid assumptions
    157 about how a software input method should work and just trust it to supply already formatted text to your application.</p>
    158 
    159 <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> Android will call event handlers first and then the appropriate default
    160 handlers from the class definition second. As such, returning <em>true</em> from these event listeners will stop
    161 the propagation of the event to other event listeners and will also block the callback to the
    162 default event handler in the View. So be certain that you want to terminate the event when you return <em>true</em>.</p>
    163 
    164 
    165 <h2 id="EventHandlers">Event Handlers</h2>
    166 
    167 <p>If you're building a custom component from  View, then you'll be able to define several callback methods
    168 used as default event handlers.
    169 In the document about <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/custom-components.html">Custom
    170 Components</a>, you'll learn see some of the common callbacks used for event handling,
    171 including:</p>
    172 <ul>
    173   <li><code>{@link  android.view.View#onKeyDown}</code> - Called when a new key event occurs.</li>
    174   <li><code>{@link  android.view.View#onKeyUp}</code> - Called when a key up event occurs.</li>
    175   <li><code>{@link  android.view.View#onTrackballEvent}</code> - Called when a trackball motion event occurs.</li>
    176   <li><code>{@link  android.view.View#onTouchEvent}</code> - Called when a touch screen motion event occurs.</li>
    177   <li><code>{@link  android.view.View#onFocusChanged}</code> - Called when the view gains or loses focus.</li>
    178 </ul>
    179 <p>There are some other methods that you should be aware of, which are not part of the View class, 
    180 but can directly impact the way you're able to handle events. So, when managing more complex events inside 
    181 a layout, consider these other methods:</p>
    182 <ul>
    183   <li><code>{@link  android.app.Activity#dispatchTouchEvent(MotionEvent)
    184     Activity.dispatchTouchEvent(MotionEvent)}</code> - This allows your {@link 
    185     android.app.Activity} to intercept all touch events before they are dispatched to the window.</li>
    186   <li><code>{@link  android.view.ViewGroup#onInterceptTouchEvent(MotionEvent)
    187     ViewGroup.onInterceptTouchEvent(MotionEvent)}</code> - This allows a {@link
    188     android.view.ViewGroup} to watch events as they are dispatched to child Views.</li>
    189   <li><code>{@link  android.view.ViewParent#requestDisallowInterceptTouchEvent(boolean)
    190     ViewParent.requestDisallowInterceptTouchEvent(boolean)}</code> - Call this
    191     upon a parent View to indicate that it should not intercept touch events with <code>{@link 
    192     android.view.ViewGroup#onInterceptTouchEvent(MotionEvent)}</code>.</li>
    193 </ul>
    194 
    195 <h2 id="TouchMode">Touch Mode</h2>
    196 <p>
    197 When a user is navigating a user interface with directional keys or a trackball, it is
    198 necessary to give focus to actionable items (like buttons) so the user can see
    199 what will accept input.  If the device has touch capabilities, however, and the user
    200 begins interacting with the interface by touching it, then it is no longer necessary to
    201 highlight items, or give focus to a particular View.  Thus, there is a mode
    202 for interaction named "touch mode." 
    203 </p>
    204 <p>
    205 For a touch-capable device, once the user touches the screen, the device
    206 will enter touch mode.  From this point onward, only Views for which
    207 {@link android.view.View#isFocusableInTouchMode} is true will be focusable, such as text editing widgets.
    208 Other Views that are touchable, like buttons, will not take focus when touched; they will
    209 simply fire their on-click listeners when pressed.
    210 </p>
    211 <p>
    212 Any time a user hits a directional key or scrolls with a trackball, the device will
    213 exit touch mode, and find a view to take focus. Now, the user may resume interacting
    214 with the user interface without touching the screen.
    215 </p>
    216 <p>
    217 The touch mode state is maintained throughout the entire system (all windows and activities). 
    218 To query the current state, you can call
    219 {@link android.view.View#isInTouchMode} to see whether the device is currently in touch mode.
    220 </p>
    221 
    222 
    223 <h2 id="HandlingFocus">Handling Focus</h2>
    224 
    225 <p>The framework will handle routine focus movement in response to user input.
    226 This includes changing the focus as Views are removed or hidden, or as new
    227 Views become available. Views indicate their willingness to take focus
    228 through the <code>{@link android.view.View#isFocusable()}</code> method. To change whether a View can take
    229 focus, call <code>{@link android.view.View#setFocusable(boolean) setFocusable()}</code>.  When in touch mode,
    230 you may query whether a View allows focus with <code>{@link android.view.View#isFocusableInTouchMode()}</code>.
    231 You can change this with <code>{@link android.view.View#setFocusableInTouchMode(boolean) setFocusableInTouchMode()}</code>.
    232 </p>
    233 
    234 <p>Focus movement is based on an algorithm which finds the nearest neighbor in a
    235 given direction. In rare cases, the default algorithm may not match the
    236 intended behavior of the developer. In these situations, you can provide
    237 explicit overrides with the following XML attributes in the layout file:
    238 <var>nextFocusDown</var>, <var>nextFocusLeft</var>, <var>nextFocusRight</var>, and
    239 <var>nextFocusUp</var>. Add one of these attributes to the View <em>from</em> which
    240 the focus is leaving. Define the value of the attribute to be the id of the View
    241 <em>to</em> which focus should be given. For example:</p>
    242 <pre>
    243 &lt;LinearLayout
    244     android:orientation="vertical"
    245     ... >
    246   &lt;Button android:id="@+id/top"
    247           android:nextFocusUp="@+id/bottom"
    248           ... />
    249   &lt;Button android:id="@+id/bottom"
    250           android:nextFocusDown="@+id/top"
    251           ... />
    252 &lt;/LinearLayout>
    253 </pre>
    254 
    255 <p>Ordinarily, in this vertical layout, navigating up from the first Button would not go
    256 anywhere, nor would navigating down from the second Button. Now that the top Button has
    257 defined the bottom one as the <var>nextFocusUp</var> (and vice versa), the navigation focus will 
    258 cycle from top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top.</p>
    259 
    260 <p>If you'd like to declare a View as focusable in your UI (when it is traditionally not), 
    261 add the <code>android:focusable</code> XML attribute to the View, in your layout declaration.
    262 Set the value <var>true</var>. You can also declare a View
    263 as focusable while in Touch Mode with <code>android:focusableInTouchMode</code>.</p>
    264 <p>To request a particular View to take focus, call <code>{@link android.view.View#requestFocus()}</code>.</p>
    265 <p>To listen for focus events (be notified when a View receives or looses focus), use
    266 <code>{@link android.view.View.OnFocusChangeListener#onFocusChange(View,boolean) onFocusChange()}</code>,
    267 as discussed in the <a href="#EventListeners">Event Listeners</a> section, above.</p>
    268 
    269 
    270 
    271 <!--
    272 <h2 is="EventCycle">Event Cycle</h2>
    273    <p>The basic cycle of a View is as follows:</p>
    274    <ol>
    275     <li>An event comes in and is dispatched to the appropriate View. The View
    276     handles the event and notifies any listeners.</li>
    277     <li>If, in the course of processing the event, the View's bounds may need
    278     to be changed, the View will call {@link android.view.View#requestLayout()}.</li>
    279     <li>Similarly, if in the course of processing the event the View's appearance
    280     may need to be changed, the View will call {@link android.view.View#invalidate()}.</li>
    281     <li>If either {@link android.view.View#requestLayout()} or {@link android.view.View#invalidate()} were called,
    282     the framework will take care of measuring, laying out, and drawing the tree
    283     as appropriate.</li>
    284    </ol>
    285    
    286    <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> The entire View tree is single threaded. You must always be on
    287    the UI thread when calling any method on any View.
    288    If you are doing work on other threads and want to update the state of a View
    289    from that thread, you should use a {@link android.os.Handler}.
    290    </p>
    291 -->
    292