1 page.title=Dialogs 2 page.tags=alertdialog,dialogfragment 3 4 @jd:body 5 6 7 8 <div id="qv-wrapper"> 9 <div id="qv"> 10 <h2>In this document</h2> 11 <ol> 12 <li><a href="#DialogFragment">Creating a Dialog Fragment</a></li> 13 <li><a href="#AlertDialog">Building an Alert Dialog</a> 14 <ol> 15 <li><a href="#AddingButtons">Adding buttons</a></li> 16 <li><a href="#AddingAList">Adding a list</a></li> 17 <li><a href="#CustomLayout">Creating a Custom Layout</a></li> 18 </ol> 19 </li> 20 <li><a href="#PassingEvents">Passing Events Back to the Dialog's Host</a></li> 21 <li><a href="#ShowingADialog">Showing a Dialog</a></li> 22 <li><a href="#FullscreenDialog">Showing a Dialog Fullscreen or as an Embedded Fragment</a> 23 <ol> 24 <li><a href="#ActivityAsDialog">Showing an activity as a dialog on large screens</a></li> 25 </ol> 26 </li> 27 <li><a href="#DismissingADialog">Dismissing a Dialog</a></li> 28 </ol> 29 30 <h2>Key classes</h2> 31 <ol> 32 <li>{@link android.app.DialogFragment}</li> 33 <li>{@link android.app.AlertDialog}</li> 34 </ol> 35 36 <h2>See also</h2> 37 <ol> 38 <li><a href="{@docRoot}design/building-blocks/dialogs.html">Dialogs design guide</a></li> 39 <li><a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/controls/pickers.html">Pickers</a> (Date/Time dialogs)</li> 40 </ol> 41 </div> 42 </div> 43 44 <p>A dialog is a small window that prompts the user to 45 make a decision or enter additional information. A dialog does not fill the screen and is 46 normally used for modal events that require users to take an action before they can proceed.</p> 47 48 <div class="note design"> 49 <p><strong>Dialog Design</strong></p> 50 <p>For information about how to design your dialogs, including recommendations 51 for language, read the <a 52 href="{@docRoot}design/building-blocks/dialogs.html">Dialogs</a> design guide.</p> 53 </div> 54 55 <img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/dialogs.png" /> 56 57 <p>The {@link android.app.Dialog} class is the base class for dialogs, but you 58 should avoid instantiating {@link android.app.Dialog} directly. 59 Instead, use one of the following subclasses:</p> 60 <dl> 61 <dt>{@link android.app.AlertDialog}</dt> 62 <dd>A dialog that can show a title, up to three buttons, a list of 63 selectable items, or a custom layout.</dd> 64 <dt>{@link android.app.DatePickerDialog} or {@link android.app.TimePickerDialog}</dt> 65 <dd>A dialog with a pre-defined UI that allows the user to select a date or time.</dd> 66 </dl> 67 68 <div class="sidebox"> 69 <h2>Avoid ProgressDialog</h2> 70 <p>Android includes another dialog class called 71 {@link android.app.ProgressDialog} that shows a dialog with a progress bar. However, if you 72 need to indicate loading or indeterminate progress, you should instead follow the design 73 guidelines for <a href="{@docRoot}design/building-blocks/progress.html">Progress & 74 Activity</a> and use a {@link android.widget.ProgressBar} in your layout.</p> 75 </div> 76 77 <p>These classes define the style and structure for your dialog, but you should 78 use a {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} as a container for your dialog. 79 The {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} class provides all the controls you 80 need to create your dialog and manage its appearance, instead of calling methods 81 on the {@link android.app.Dialog} object.</p> 82 83 <p>Using {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} to manage the dialog 84 ensures that it correctly handles lifecycle events 85 such as when the user presses the <em>Back</em> button or rotates the screen. The {@link 86 android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} class also allows you to reuse the dialog's UI as an 87 embeddable component in a larger UI, just like a traditional {@link 88 android.support.v4.app.Fragment} (such as when you want the dialog UI to appear differently 89 on large and small screens).</p> 90 91 <p>The following sections in this guide describe how to use a {@link 92 android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} in combination with an {@link android.app.AlertDialog} 93 object. If you'd like to create a date or time picker, you should instead read the 94 <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/controls/pickers.html">Pickers</a> guide.</p> 95 96 <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> 97 Because the {@link android.app.DialogFragment} class was originally added with 98 Android 3.0 (API level 11), this document describes how to use the {@link 99 android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} class that's provided with the <a 100 href="{@docRoot}tools/support-library/index.html">Support Library</a>. By adding this library 101 to your app, you can use {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} and a variety of other 102 APIs on devices running Android 1.6 or higher. If the minimum version your app supports 103 is API level 11 or higher, then you can use the framework version of {@link 104 android.app.DialogFragment}, but be aware that the links in this document are for the support 105 library APIs. When using the support library, 106 be sure that you import <code>android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment</code> 107 class and <em>not</em> <code>android.app.DialogFragment</code>.</p> 108 109 110 <h2 id="DialogFragment">Creating a Dialog Fragment</h2> 111 112 <p>You can accomplish a wide variety of dialog designs—including 113 custom layouts and those described in the <a 114 href="{@docRoot}design/building-blocks/dialogs.html">Dialogs</a> 115 design guide—by extending 116 {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} and creating a {@link android.app.AlertDialog} 117 in the {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#onCreateDialog 118 onCreateDialog()} callback method.</p> 119 120 <p>For example, here's a basic {@link android.app.AlertDialog} that's managed within 121 a {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment}:</p> 122 123 <pre> 124 public class FireMissilesDialogFragment extends DialogFragment { 125 @Override 126 public Dialog onCreateDialog(Bundle savedInstanceState) { 127 // Use the Builder class for convenient dialog construction 128 AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getActivity()); 129 builder.setMessage(R.string.dialog_fire_missiles) 130 .setPositiveButton(R.string.fire, new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 131 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) { 132 // FIRE ZE MISSILES! 133 } 134 }) 135 .setNegativeButton(R.string.cancel, new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 136 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) { 137 // User cancelled the dialog 138 } 139 }); 140 // Create the AlertDialog object and return it 141 return builder.create(); 142 } 143 } 144 </pre> 145 146 <div class="figure" style="width:290px;margin:0 0 0 20px"> 147 <img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/dialog_buttons.png" alt="" /> 148 <p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 1.</strong> 149 A dialog with a message and two action buttons.</p> 150 </div> 151 152 <p>Now, when you create an instance of this class and call {@link 153 android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#show show()} on that object, the dialog appears as 154 shown in figure 1.</p> 155 156 <p>The next section describes more about using the {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder} 157 APIs to create the dialog.</p> 158 159 <p>Depending on how complex your dialog is, you can implement a variety of other callback 160 methods in the {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment}, including all the basic 161 <a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/fragments.html#Lifecycle">fragment lifecycle methods</a>. 162 163 164 165 166 167 <h2 id="AlertDialog">Building an Alert Dialog</h2> 168 169 170 <p>The {@link android.app.AlertDialog} class allows you to build a variety of dialog designs and 171 is often the only dialog class you'll need. 172 As shown in figure 2, there are three regions of an alert dialog:</p> 173 174 <div class="figure" style="width:311px;margin-top:0"> 175 <img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/dialogs_regions.png" alt="" style="margin-bottom:0"/> 176 <p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 2.</strong> The layout of a dialog.</p> 177 </div> 178 179 <ol> 180 <li><b>Title</b> 181 <p>This is optional and should be used only when the content area 182 is occupied by a detailed message, a list, or custom layout. If you need to state 183 a simple message or question (such as the dialog in figure 1), you don't need a title.</li> 184 <li><b>Content area</b> 185 <p>This can display a message, a list, or other custom layout.</p></li> 186 <li><b>Action buttons</b> 187 <p>There should be no more than three action buttons in a dialog.</p></li> 188 </ol> 189 190 <p>The {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder} 191 class provides APIs that allow you to create an {@link android.app.AlertDialog} 192 with these kinds of content, including a custom layout.</p> 193 194 <p>To build an {@link android.app.AlertDialog}:</p> 195 196 <pre> 197 <b>// 1. Instantiate an {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder} with its constructor</b> 198 AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getActivity()); 199 200 <b>// 2. Chain together various setter methods to set the dialog characteristics</b> 201 builder.setMessage(R.string.dialog_message) 202 .setTitle(R.string.dialog_title); 203 204 <b>// 3. Get the {@link android.app.AlertDialog} from {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder#create()}</b> 205 AlertDialog dialog = builder.create(); 206 </pre> 207 208 <p>The following topics show how to define various dialog attributes using the 209 {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder} class.</p> 210 211 212 213 214 <h3 id="AddingButtons">Adding buttons</h3> 215 216 <p>To add action buttons like those in figure 2, 217 call the {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder#setPositiveButton setPositiveButton()} and 218 {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder#setNegativeButton setNegativeButton()} methods:</p> 219 220 <pre style="clear:right"> 221 AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getActivity()); 222 // Add the buttons 223 builder.setPositiveButton(R.string.ok, new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 224 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) { 225 // User clicked OK button 226 } 227 }); 228 builder.setNegativeButton(R.string.cancel, new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 229 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) { 230 // User cancelled the dialog 231 } 232 }); 233 // Set other dialog properties 234 ... 235 236 // Create the AlertDialog 237 AlertDialog dialog = builder.create(); 238 </pre> 239 240 <p>The <code>set...Button()</code> methods require a title for the button (supplied 241 by a <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/resources/string-resource.html">string resource</a>) and a 242 {@link android.content.DialogInterface.OnClickListener} that defines the action to take 243 when the user presses the button.</p> 244 245 <p>There are three different action buttons you can add:</p> 246 <dl> 247 <dt>Positive</dt> 248 <dd>You should use this to accept and continue with the action (the "OK" action).</dd> 249 <dt>Negative</dt> 250 <dd>You should use this to cancel the action.</dd> 251 <dt>Neutral</dt> 252 <dd>You should use this when the user may not want to proceed with the action, 253 but doesn't necessarily want to cancel. It appears between the positive and negative 254 buttons. For example, the action might be "Remind me later."</dd> 255 </dl> 256 257 <p>You can add only one of each button type to an {@link 258 android.app.AlertDialog}. That is, you cannot have more than one "positive" button.</p> 259 260 261 262 <div class="figure" style="width:290px;margin:0 0 0 40px"> 263 <img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/dialog_list.png" alt="" /> 264 <p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 3.</strong> 265 A dialog with a title and list.</p> 266 </div> 267 268 <h3 id="AddingAList">Adding a list</h3> 269 270 <p>There are three kinds of lists available with the {@link android.app.AlertDialog} APIs:</p> 271 <ul> 272 <li>A traditional single-choice list</li> 273 <li>A persistent single-choice list (radio buttons)</li> 274 <li>A persistent multiple-choice list (checkboxes)</li> 275 </ul> 276 277 <p>To create a single-choice list like the one in figure 3, 278 use the {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder#setItems setItems()} method:</p> 279 280 <pre style="clear:right"> 281 @Override 282 public Dialog onCreateDialog(Bundle savedInstanceState) { 283 AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getActivity()); 284 builder.setTitle(R.string.pick_color) 285 .setItems(R.array.colors_array, new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 286 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int which) { 287 // The 'which' argument contains the index position 288 // of the selected item 289 } 290 }); 291 return builder.create(); 292 } 293 </pre> 294 295 <p>Because the list appears in the dialog's content area, 296 the dialog cannot show both a message and a list and you should set a title for the 297 dialog with {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder#setTitle setTitle()}. 298 To specify the items for the list, call {@link 299 android.app.AlertDialog.Builder#setItems setItems()}, passing an array. 300 Alternatively, you can specify a list using {@link 301 android.app.AlertDialog.Builder#setAdapter setAdapter()}. This allows you to back the list 302 with dynamic data (such as from a database) using a {@link android.widget.ListAdapter}.</p> 303 304 <p>If you choose to back your list with a {@link android.widget.ListAdapter}, 305 always use a {@link android.support.v4.content.Loader} so that the content loads 306 asynchronously. This is described further in 307 <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/declaring-layout.html#AdapterViews">Building Layouts 308 with an Adapter</a> and the <a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/loaders.html">Loaders</a> 309 guide.</p> 310 311 <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> By default, touching a list item dismisses the dialog, 312 unless you're using one of the following persistent choice lists.</p> 313 314 <div class="figure" style="width:290px;margin:-30px 0 0 40px"> 315 <img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/dialog_checkboxes.png" /> 316 <p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 4.</strong> 317 A list of multiple-choice items.</p> 318 </div> 319 320 321 <h4 id="Checkboxes">Adding a persistent multiple-choice or single-choice list</h4> 322 323 <p>To add a list of multiple-choice items (checkboxes) or 324 single-choice items (radio buttons), use the 325 {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder#setMultiChoiceItems(Cursor,String,String, 326 DialogInterface.OnMultiChoiceClickListener) setMultiChoiceItems()} or 327 {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder#setSingleChoiceItems(int,int,DialogInterface.OnClickListener) 328 setSingleChoiceItems()} methods, respectively.</p> 329 330 <p>For example, here's how you can create a multiple-choice list like the 331 one shown in figure 4 that saves the selected 332 items in an {@link java.util.ArrayList}:</p> 333 334 <pre style="clear:right"> 335 @Override 336 public Dialog onCreateDialog(Bundle savedInstanceState) { 337 mSelectedItems = new ArrayList(); // Where we track the selected items 338 AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getActivity()); 339 // Set the dialog title 340 builder.setTitle(R.string.pick_toppings) 341 // Specify the list array, the items to be selected by default (null for none), 342 // and the listener through which to receive callbacks when items are selected 343 .setMultiChoiceItems(R.array.toppings, null, 344 new DialogInterface.OnMultiChoiceClickListener() { 345 @Override 346 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int which, 347 boolean isChecked) { 348 if (isChecked) { 349 // If the user checked the item, add it to the selected items 350 mSelectedItems.add(which); 351 } else if (mSelectedItems.contains(which)) { 352 // Else, if the item is already in the array, remove it 353 mSelectedItems.remove(Integer.valueOf(which)); 354 } 355 } 356 }) 357 // Set the action buttons 358 .setPositiveButton(R.string.ok, new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 359 @Override 360 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) { 361 // User clicked OK, so save the mSelectedItems results somewhere 362 // or return them to the component that opened the dialog 363 ... 364 } 365 }) 366 .setNegativeButton(R.string.cancel, new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 367 @Override 368 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) { 369 ... 370 } 371 }); 372 373 return builder.create(); 374 } 375 </pre> 376 377 <p>Although both a traditional list and a list with radio buttons 378 provide a "single choice" action, you should use {@link 379 android.app.AlertDialog.Builder#setSingleChoiceItems(int,int,DialogInterface.OnClickListener) 380 setSingleChoiceItems()} if you want to persist the user's choice. 381 That is, if opening the dialog again later should indicate what the user's current choice is, 382 then you create a list with radio buttons.</p> 383 384 385 386 387 388 <h3 id="CustomLayout">Creating a Custom Layout</h3> 389 390 <div class="figure" style="width:290px;margin:-30px 0 0 40px"> 391 <img src="{@docRoot}images/ui/dialog_custom.png" alt="" /> 392 <p class="img-caption"><strong>Figure 5.</strong> A custom dialog layout.</p> 393 </div> 394 395 <p>If you want a custom layout in a dialog, create a layout and add it to an 396 {@link android.app.AlertDialog} by calling {@link 397 android.app.AlertDialog.Builder#setView setView()} on your {@link 398 android.app.AlertDialog.Builder} object.</p> 399 400 <p>By default, the custom layout fills the dialog window, but you can still 401 use {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder} methods to add buttons and a title.</p> 402 403 <p>For example, here's the layout file for the dialog in Figure 5:</p> 404 405 <p style="clear:right" class="code-caption">res/layout/dialog_signin.xml</p> 406 <pre> 407 <LinearLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" 408 android:orientation="vertical" 409 android:layout_width="wrap_content" 410 android:layout_height="wrap_content"> 411 <ImageView 412 android:src="@drawable/header_logo" 413 android:layout_width="match_parent" 414 android:layout_height="64dp" 415 android:scaleType="center" 416 android:background="#FFFFBB33" 417 android:contentDescription="@string/app_name" /> 418 <EditText 419 android:id="@+id/username" 420 android:inputType="textEmailAddress" 421 android:layout_width="match_parent" 422 android:layout_height="wrap_content" 423 android:layout_marginTop="16dp" 424 android:layout_marginLeft="4dp" 425 android:layout_marginRight="4dp" 426 android:layout_marginBottom="4dp" 427 android:hint="@string/username" /> 428 <EditText 429 android:id="@+id/password" 430 android:inputType="textPassword" 431 android:layout_width="match_parent" 432 android:layout_height="wrap_content" 433 android:layout_marginTop="4dp" 434 android:layout_marginLeft="4dp" 435 android:layout_marginRight="4dp" 436 android:layout_marginBottom="16dp" 437 android:fontFamily="sans-serif" 438 android:hint="@string/password"/> 439 </LinearLayout> 440 </pre> 441 442 <p class="note"><strong>Tip:</strong> By default, when you set an {@link android.widget.EditText} 443 element to use the {@code "textPassword"} input type, the font family is set to monospace, so 444 you should change its font family to {@code "sans-serif"} so that both text fields use 445 a matching font style.</p> 446 447 <p>To inflate the layout in your {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment}, 448 get a {@link android.view.LayoutInflater} with 449 {@link android.app.Activity#getLayoutInflater()} and call 450 {@link android.view.LayoutInflater#inflate inflate()}, where the first parameter 451 is the layout resource ID and the second parameter is a parent view for the layout. 452 You can then call {@link android.app.AlertDialog#setView setView()} 453 to place the layout in the dialog.</p> 454 455 <pre> 456 @Override 457 public Dialog onCreateDialog(Bundle savedInstanceState) { 458 AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getActivity()); 459 // Get the layout inflater 460 LayoutInflater inflater = getActivity().getLayoutInflater(); 461 462 // Inflate and set the layout for the dialog 463 // Pass null as the parent view because its going in the dialog layout 464 builder.setView(inflater.inflate(R.layout.dialog_signin, null)) 465 // Add action buttons 466 .setPositiveButton(R.string.signin, new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 467 @Override 468 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) { 469 // sign in the user ... 470 } 471 }) 472 .setNegativeButton(R.string.cancel, new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 473 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) { 474 LoginDialogFragment.this.getDialog().cancel(); 475 } 476 }); 477 return builder.create(); 478 } 479 </pre> 480 481 <div class="note"> 482 <p><strong>Tip:</strong> If you want a custom dialog, 483 you can instead display an {@link android.app.Activity} as a dialog 484 instead of using the {@link android.app.Dialog} APIs. Simply create an activity and set its theme to 485 {@link android.R.style#Theme_Holo_Dialog Theme.Holo.Dialog} 486 in the <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/activity-element.html">{@code 487 <activity>}</a> manifest element:</p> 488 489 <pre> 490 <activity android:theme="@android:style/Theme.Holo.Dialog" > 491 </pre> 492 <p>That's it. The activity now displays in a dialog window instead of fullscreen.</p> 493 </div> 494 495 496 497 <h2 id="PassingEvents">Passing Events Back to the Dialog's Host</h2> 498 499 <p>When the user touches one of the dialog's action buttons or selects an item from its list, 500 your {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} might perform the necessary 501 action itself, but often you'll want to deliver the event to the activity or fragment that 502 opened the dialog. To do this, define an interface with a method for each type of click event. 503 Then implement that interface in the host component that will 504 receive the action events from the dialog.</p> 505 506 <p>For example, here's a {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} that defines an 507 interface through which it delivers the events back to the host activity:</p> 508 509 <pre> 510 public class NoticeDialogFragment extends DialogFragment { 511 512 /* The activity that creates an instance of this dialog fragment must 513 * implement this interface in order to receive event callbacks. 514 * Each method passes the DialogFragment in case the host needs to query it. */ 515 public interface NoticeDialogListener { 516 public void onDialogPositiveClick(DialogFragment dialog); 517 public void onDialogNegativeClick(DialogFragment dialog); 518 } 519 520 // Use this instance of the interface to deliver action events 521 NoticeDialogListener mListener; 522 523 // Override the Fragment.onAttach() method to instantiate the NoticeDialogListener 524 @Override 525 public void onAttach(Activity activity) { 526 super.onAttach(activity); 527 // Verify that the host activity implements the callback interface 528 try { 529 // Instantiate the NoticeDialogListener so we can send events to the host 530 mListener = (NoticeDialogListener) activity; 531 } catch (ClassCastException e) { 532 // The activity doesn't implement the interface, throw exception 533 throw new ClassCastException(activity.toString() 534 + " must implement NoticeDialogListener"); 535 } 536 } 537 ... 538 } 539 </pre> 540 541 <p>The activity hosting the dialog creates an instance of the dialog 542 with the dialog fragment's constructor and receives the dialog's 543 events through an implementation of the {@code NoticeDialogListener} interface:</p> 544 545 <pre> 546 public class MainActivity extends FragmentActivity 547 implements NoticeDialogFragment.NoticeDialogListener{ 548 ... 549 550 public void showNoticeDialog() { 551 // Create an instance of the dialog fragment and show it 552 DialogFragment dialog = new NoticeDialogFragment(); 553 dialog.show(getSupportFragmentManager(), "NoticeDialogFragment"); 554 } 555 556 // The dialog fragment receives a reference to this Activity through the 557 // Fragment.onAttach() callback, which it uses to call the following methods 558 // defined by the NoticeDialogFragment.NoticeDialogListener interface 559 @Override 560 public void onDialogPositiveClick(DialogFragment dialog) { 561 // User touched the dialog's positive button 562 ... 563 } 564 565 @Override 566 public void onDialogNegativeClick(DialogFragment dialog) { 567 // User touched the dialog's negative button 568 ... 569 } 570 } 571 </pre> 572 573 <p>Because the host activity implements the {@code NoticeDialogListener}—which is 574 enforced by the {@link android.support.v4.app.Fragment#onAttach onAttach()} 575 callback method shown above—the dialog fragment can use the 576 interface callback methods to deliver click events to the activity:</p> 577 578 <pre> 579 public class NoticeDialogFragment extends DialogFragment { 580 ... 581 582 @Override 583 public Dialog onCreateDialog(Bundle savedInstanceState) { 584 // Build the dialog and set up the button click handlers 585 AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getActivity()); 586 builder.setMessage(R.string.dialog_fire_missiles) 587 .setPositiveButton(R.string.fire, new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 588 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) { 589 // Send the positive button event back to the host activity 590 mListener.onDialogPositiveClick(NoticeDialogFragment.this); 591 } 592 }) 593 .setNegativeButton(R.string.cancel, new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 594 public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) { 595 // Send the negative button event back to the host activity 596 mListener.onDialogNegativeClick(NoticeDialogFragment.this); 597 } 598 }); 599 return builder.create(); 600 } 601 } 602 </pre> 603 604 605 606 <h2 id="ShowingADialog">Showing a Dialog</h2> 607 608 <p>When you want to show your dialog, create an instance of your {@link 609 android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} and call {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#show 610 show()}, passing the {@link android.support.v4.app.FragmentManager} and a tag name 611 for the dialog fragment.</p> 612 613 <p>You can get the {@link android.support.v4.app.FragmentManager} by calling 614 {@link android.support.v4.app.FragmentActivity#getSupportFragmentManager()} from 615 the {@link android.support.v4.app.FragmentActivity} or {@link 616 android.support.v4.app.Fragment#getFragmentManager()} from a {@link 617 android.support.v4.app.Fragment}. For example:</p> 618 619 <pre> 620 public void confirmFireMissiles() { 621 DialogFragment newFragment = new FireMissilesDialogFragment(); 622 newFragment.show(getSupportFragmentManager(), "missiles"); 623 } 624 </pre> 625 626 <p>The second argument, {@code "missiles"}, is a unique tag name that the system uses to save 627 and restore the fragment state when necessary. The tag also allows you to get a handle to 628 the fragment by calling {@link android.support.v4.app.FragmentManager#findFragmentByTag 629 findFragmentByTag()}.</p> 630 631 632 633 634 <h2 id="FullscreenDialog">Showing a Dialog Fullscreen or as an Embedded Fragment</h2> 635 636 <p>You might have a UI design in which you want a piece of the UI to appear as a dialog in some 637 situations, but as a full screen or embedded fragment in others (perhaps depending on whether 638 the device is a large screen or small screen). The {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} 639 class offers you this flexibility because it can still behave as an embeddable {@link 640 android.support.v4.app.Fragment}.</p> 641 642 <p>However, you cannot use {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder AlertDialog.Builder} 643 or other {@link android.app.Dialog} objects to build the dialog in this case. If 644 you want the {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} to be 645 embeddable, you must define the dialog's UI in a layout, then load the layout in the 646 {@link android.support.v4.app.Fragment#onCreateView 647 onCreateView()} callback.</p> 648 649 <p>Here's an example {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} that can appear as either a 650 dialog or an embeddable fragment (using a layout named <code>purchase_items.xml</code>):</p> 651 652 <pre> 653 public class CustomDialogFragment extends DialogFragment { 654 /** The system calls this to get the DialogFragment's layout, regardless 655 of whether it's being displayed as a dialog or an embedded fragment. */ 656 @Override 657 public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container, 658 Bundle savedInstanceState) { 659 // Inflate the layout to use as dialog or embedded fragment 660 return inflater.inflate(R.layout.purchase_items, container, false); 661 } 662 663 /** The system calls this only when creating the layout in a dialog. */ 664 @Override 665 public Dialog onCreateDialog(Bundle savedInstanceState) { 666 // The only reason you might override this method when using onCreateView() is 667 // to modify any dialog characteristics. For example, the dialog includes a 668 // title by default, but your custom layout might not need it. So here you can 669 // remove the dialog title, but you must call the superclass to get the Dialog. 670 Dialog dialog = super.onCreateDialog(savedInstanceState); 671 dialog.requestWindowFeature(Window.FEATURE_NO_TITLE); 672 return dialog; 673 } 674 } 675 </pre> 676 677 <p>And here's some code that decides whether to show the fragment as a dialog 678 or a fullscreen UI, based on the screen size:</p> 679 680 <pre> 681 public void showDialog() { 682 FragmentManager fragmentManager = getSupportFragmentManager(); 683 CustomDialogFragment newFragment = new CustomDialogFragment(); 684 685 if (mIsLargeLayout) { 686 // The device is using a large layout, so show the fragment as a dialog 687 newFragment.show(fragmentManager, "dialog"); 688 } else { 689 // The device is smaller, so show the fragment fullscreen 690 FragmentTransaction transaction = fragmentManager.beginTransaction(); 691 // For a little polish, specify a transition animation 692 transaction.setTransition(FragmentTransaction.TRANSIT_FRAGMENT_OPEN); 693 // To make it fullscreen, use the 'content' root view as the container 694 // for the fragment, which is always the root view for the activity 695 transaction.add(android.R.id.content, newFragment) 696 .addToBackStack(null).commit(); 697 } 698 } 699 </pre> 700 701 <p>For more information about performing fragment transactions, see the 702 <a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/fragments.html">Fragments</a> guide.</p> 703 704 <p>In this example, the <code>mIsLargeLayout</code> boolean specifies whether the current device 705 should use the app's large layout design (and thus show this fragment as a dialog, rather 706 than fullscreen). The best way to set this kind of boolean is to declare a 707 <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/resources/more-resources.html#Bool">bool resource value</a> 708 with an <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/resources/providing-resources.html#AlternativeResources" 709 >alternative resource</a> value for different screen sizes. For example, here are two 710 versions of the bool resource for different screen sizes:</p> 711 712 <p class="code-caption">res/values/bools.xml</p> 713 <pre> 714 <!-- Default boolean values --> 715 <resources> 716 <bool name="large_layout">false</bool> 717 </resources> 718 </pre> 719 720 <p class="code-caption">res/values-large/bools.xml</p> 721 <pre> 722 <!-- Large screen boolean values --> 723 <resources> 724 <bool name="large_layout">true</bool> 725 </resources> 726 </pre> 727 728 <p>Then you can initialize the {@code mIsLargeLayout} value during the activity's 729 {@link android.app.Activity#onCreate onCreate()} method:</p> 730 731 <pre> 732 boolean mIsLargeLayout; 733 734 @Override 735 public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) { 736 super.onCreate(savedInstanceState); 737 setContentView(R.layout.activity_main); 738 739 mIsLargeLayout = getResources().getBoolean(R.bool.large_layout); 740 } 741 </pre> 742 743 744 745 <h3 id="ActivityAsDialog">Showing an activity as a dialog on large screens</h3> 746 747 <p>Instead of showing a dialog as a fullscreen UI when on small screens, you can accomplish 748 the same result by showing an {@link android.app.Activity} as a dialog when on 749 large screens. Which approach you choose depends on your app design, but 750 showing an activity as a dialog is often useful when your app is already designed for small 751 screens and you'd like to improve the experience on tablets by showing a short-lived activity 752 as a dialog.</p> 753 754 <p>To show an activity as a dialog only when on large screens, 755 apply the {@link android.R.style#Theme_Holo_DialogWhenLarge Theme.Holo.DialogWhenLarge} 756 theme to the <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/manifest/activity-element.html">{@code 757 <activity>}</a> manifest element:</p> 758 759 <pre> 760 <activity android:theme="@android:style/Theme.Holo.DialogWhenLarge" > 761 </pre> 762 763 <p>For more information about styling your activities with themes, see the <a 764 href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/ui/themes.html">Styles and Themes</a> guide.</p> 765 766 767 768 <h2 id="DismissingADialog">Dismissing a Dialog</h2> 769 770 <p>When the user touches any of the action buttons created with an 771 {@link android.app.AlertDialog.Builder}, the system dismisses the dialog for you.</p> 772 773 <p>The system also dismisses the dialog when the user touches an item in a dialog list, except 774 when the list uses radio buttons or checkboxes. Otherwise, you can manually dismiss your dialog 775 by calling {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#dismiss()} on your {@link 776 android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment}.</p> 777 778 <p>In case you need to perform certain 779 actions when the dialog goes away, you can implement the {@link 780 android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#onDismiss onDismiss()} method in your {@link 781 android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment}.</p> 782 783 <p>You can also <em>cancel</em> a dialog. This is a special event that indicates the user 784 explicitly left the dialog without completing the task. This occurs if the user presses the 785 <em>Back</em> button, touches the screen outside the dialog area, 786 or if you explicitly call {@link android.app.Dialog#cancel()} on the {@link 787 android.app.Dialog} (such as in response to a "Cancel" button in the dialog).</p> 788 789 <p>As shown in the example above, you can respond to the cancel event by implementing 790 {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#onCancel onCancel()} in your {@link 791 android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment} class.</p> 792 793 <p class="note"><strong>Note:</strong> The system calls 794 {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#onDismiss onDismiss()} upon each event that 795 invokes the {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#onCancel onCancel()} callback. However, 796 if you call {@link android.app.Dialog#dismiss Dialog.dismiss()} or {@link 797 android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#dismiss DialogFragment.dismiss()}, 798 the system calls {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#onDismiss onDismiss()} <em>but 799 not</em> {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#onCancel onCancel()}. So you should generally 800 call {@link android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment#dismiss dismiss()} when the user presses the 801 <em>positive</em> button in your dialog in order to remove the dialog from view.</p> 802 803 804