Android - How to dynamically change menu item text outside of onOptionsItemsSelected or onCreateOptionsMenu

走远了吗. 提交于 2019-11-26 14:11:10
Charles Harley

I would suggest keeping a reference within the activity to the Menu object you receive in onCreateOptionsMenu and then using that to retrieve the MenuItem that requires the change as and when you need it. For example, you could do something along the lines of the following:

public class YourActivity extends Activity {

  private Menu menu;
  private String inBedMenuTitle = "Set to 'In bed'";
  private String outOfBedMenuTitle = "Set to 'Out of bed'";
  private boolean inBed = false;

  @Override
  public boolean onCreateOptionsMenu(Menu menu) {
    super.onCreateOptionsMenu(menu);

    // Create your menu...

    this.menu = menu;
    return true;
  }

  private void updateMenuTitles() {
    MenuItem bedMenuItem = menu.findItem(R.id.bedSwitch);
    if (inBed) {
      bedMenuItem.setTitle(outOfBedMenuTitle);
    } else {
      bedMenuItem.setTitle(inBedMenuTitle);
    }
  }

}

Alternatively, you can override onPrepareOptionsMenu to update the menu items each time the menu is displayed.

Todd DeLand

As JxDarkAngel suggested, calling this from anywhere in your Activity,

invalidateOptionsMenu();

and then overriding:

@Override
public boolean onPrepareOptionsMenu(Menu menu) {
  int savedRoute = mPrefs.getInt(getString(R.string.saved_route), 0);
  if (savedRoute > 0) {
    menu.findItem(R.id.action_route).setTitle("Route " + savedRoute);
  }
  return super.onPrepareOptionsMenu(menu);
}

is a much better choice. I used the answer from https://stackoverflow.com/a/17496503/568197

Pranav Raut

you can do this create a global "Menu" object then assign it in onCreateOptionMenu

public class ExampleActivity extends AppCompatActivity
    Menu menu;

then assign here

@Override
public boolean onCreateOptionsMenu(Menu menu) {
    getMenuInflater().inflate(R.menu.menu, menu);
    this.menu = menu;
    return true;
}

Then later use assigned Menu object to get required items

menu.findItem(R.id.bedSwitch).setTitle("Your Text");

Create a setOptionsTitle() method and set a field in your class. Such as:

String bedStatus = "Set to 'Out of Bed'";

...

public void setOptionsTitle(String status)
{
    bedStatus = status;

}

Now when the menu gets populated, change the title to whatever your status is:

@Override
    public boolean onCreateOptionsMenu(Menu menu) {
        super.onCreateOptionsMenu(menu);

        menu.add(bedStatus);


        // Return true so that the menu gets displayed.
        return true;
    }
JxDarkAngel

You better use the override onPrepareOptionsMenu

menu.Clear ();
   if (TabActual == TabSelec.Anuncio)
   {
       menu.Add(10, 11, 0, "Crear anuncio");
       menu.Add(10, 12, 1, "Modificar anuncio");
       menu.Add(10, 13, 2, "Eliminar anuncio");
       menu.Add(10, 14, 3, "Actualizar");
   }
   if (TabActual == TabSelec.Fotos)
   {
       menu.Add(20, 21, 0, "Subir foto");
       menu.Add(20, 22, 1, "Actualizar");
   }
   if (TabActual == TabSelec.Comentarios)
   {
       menu.Add(30, 31, 0, "Actualizar");
   }

Here an example

Oumar

I use this code to costum my bottom navigation item

BottomNavigationView navigation = this.findViewById(R.id.my_bottom_navigation);
Menu menu = navigation.getMenu();
menu.findItem(R.id.nav_wall_see).setTitle("Hello");

Declare your menu field.

private Menu menu;

Following is onCreateOptionsMenu() method

public boolean onCreateOptionsMenu(Menu menu) {
this.menu = menu;
    try {
        getMenuInflater().inflate(R.menu.menu_main,menu);
    } catch (Exception e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
        Log.i(TAG, "onCreateOptionsMenu: error: "+e.getMessage());
    }
    return super.onCreateOptionsMenu(menu);
}

Following will be your name setter activity. Either through a button click or through conditional code

public void setMenuName(){
menu.findItem(R.id.menuItemId).setTitle(/*Set your desired menu title here*/);
}

This worked for me.

It seems to me that you want to change the contents of menu inside a local method, and this method is called at any time, whenever an event is occurred, or in the activity UI thread.

Why don't you take the instance of Menu in the global variable in onPrepareOptionsMenu when this is overridden and use in this method of yours. Be sure that this method is called whenever an event is occurred (like button click), or in the activity UI thread, handler or async-task post-execute.

You should know in advance the index of this menu item you want to change. After clearing the menu, you need to inflate the menu XML and update your item's name or icon.

For people that need the title set statically. This can be done in the AndroidManifest.xml

<activity
    android:name=".ActivityName"
    android:label="Title Text" >
</activity>

I needed to change the menu icon for the fragment. I altered Charles’s answer to this question a bit for the fragment:

    private Menu top_menu;

    //...
    @Nullable
    @Override
    public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container, Bundle savedInstanceState) {

       setHasOptionsMenu(true);
       //...
       rootview = inflater.inflate(R.layout.first_content,null);
    }

    @Override
    public void onCreateOptionsMenu(Menu menu, MenuInflater inflater) {
        inflater.inflate(R.menu.fragment_menu, menu);
        this.top_menu = menu;
    }


    // my procedure
    private void updateIconMenu() {
         if(top_menu!= null) {
             MenuItem nav_undo = top_menu.findItem(R.id.action_undo);
             nav_undo.setIcon( R.drawable.back);
         }
    }
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