How to get a context in a recycler view adapter

房东的猫 提交于 2019-11-28 15:50:47
pelotasplus

You have a few options here:

  1. Pass Context as an argument to FeedAdapter and keep it as class field
  2. Use dependency injection to inject Context when you need it. I strongly suggest reading about it. There is a great tool for that -- Dagger by Square
  3. Get it from any View object. In your case this might work for you:

    holder.pub_image.getContext()

    As pub_image is a ImageView.

You can add global variable:

private Context context;

then assign the context from here:

@Override
public FeedAdapter.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent,int viewType) {
    // create a new view
    View v=LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.feedholder, parent, false);
    // set the view's size, margins, paddings and layout parameters
    ViewHolder vh = new ViewHolder(v);
    // set the Context here 
    context = parent.getContext();
    return vh;
}

Happy Codding :)

You can use pub_image context (holder.pub_image.getContext()) :

@Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder ViewHolder, int position) {

    holder.txtHeader.setText(mDataset.get(position).getPost_text());

    Picasso.with(holder.pub_image.getContext()).load("http://i.imgur.com/DvpvklR.png").into(holder.pub_image);


}

Short answer:

Context context;

@Override
public void onAttachedToRecyclerView(RecyclerView recyclerView) {
    super.onAttachedToRecyclerView(recyclerView);
    context = recyclerView.getContext();
}

Explanation why other answers are not great:

  1. Passing Context to the adapter is completely unnecessary, since RecyclerView you can access it from inside the class
  2. Obtaining Context at ViewHolder level means that you do it every time you bind or create a ViewHolder. You duplicate operations.
  3. I don't think you need to worry about any memory leak. If your adapter lingers outside your Activity lifespan (which would be weird) then you already have a leak.

First globally declare

Context mContext;

pass context with the constructor, by modifying it.

public FeedAdapter(List<Post> myDataset, Context context) {
    mDataset = myDataset;
    this.mContext = context;
}

then use the mContext whereever you need it

You can use like this view.getContext()

Example

holder.tv_room_name.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
        @Override
        public void onClick(View v) {

            Toast.makeText(v.getContext(), "", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();


        }
    });

Create a constructor of FeedAdapter :

Context context; //global
public FeedAdapter(Context context)
{
   this.context = context;  
}

and in Activity

FeedAdapter obj = new FeedAdapter(this);

First add a global variable

Context mContext;

Then change your constructor to this

public FeedAdapter(Context context, List<Post> myDataset) {
    mContext = context;
    mDataset = myDataset;
}

The pass your context when creating the adapter.

FeedAdapter myAdapter = new FeedAdapter(this,myDataset);
张家宝

you can use this:

itemView.getContext()

You can define:

Context ctx; 

And on onCreate initialise ctx to:

ctx=parent.getContext(); 

Note: Parent is a ViewGroup.

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