A simple library to display dialogs and dialog fragments on Android 4.0 (API 14) and above.
Since v2.0.0, it uses AndroidX so, first migrate your project to AndroidX.
Since v4.1.0, it is dependent on Java 8 due to the dependency on Dynamic Utils.
Since v4.4.1, it is targeting Java 17 to provide maximum compatibility.
Since v4.5.0, the minimum SDK is Android 4.4 (API 19) to comply with the latest policies.
It can be installed by adding the following dependency to your build.gradle
file:
dependencies {
// For AndroidX enabled projects.
implementation 'com.pranavpandey.android:dynamic-dialogs:4.5.0'
// For legacy projects.
implementation 'com.pranavpandey.android:dynamic-dialogs:1.3.0'
}
It is a library to display dialog and dialog fragments with ease. It has some improvements
over appcompat-v7
(or AndroidX) dialogs and shares the same behavior and methods which can be
used with any other framework or library.
For a complete reference, please read the documentation.
First add alertDialogStyle
in the base application theme to make dynamic-dialogs
working.
<!-- Base application theme. -->
<style name="AppTheme" parent="...">
<!-- Customize your theme here. -->
...
<!-- Add dynamic dialogs style in the base app theme. -->
<item name="alertDialogStyle">@style/DynamicDialog</item>
</style>
It is almost identical to the AppCompatDialog
but provides scroll indicators at top and bottom
for the custom dialogs also. So, if you are using any scrollable view in your custom dialog like
NestedScrollView
or RecyclerView
, it can be set as root view
and the scroll indicators will be
added automatically if the view can be scrolled.
new DynamicDialog.Builder(context)
// Set dialog title.
.setTitle(...)
...
// Set a custom view.
.setView(int layoutResId)
// OR
setView(View view)
// Set view root to automatically add scroll dividers.
.setViewRoot(int viewRootId)
// OR
.setViewRoot(View viewRoot)
// Show the dialog.
.show();
Base dialog fragment to provide all the functionality of DynamicDialog
inside a fragment. It can
be extended to customise it further by overriding the supported methods.
public CustomDialogFragment extends DynamicDialogFragment {
...
/**
* Override this method to customise the dynamic dialog builder before creating the dialog.
*
* @param dialogBuilder The current builder to be customised.
* @param savedInstanceState The saved state of the fragment to restore it later.
*
* @return The customised dynamic dialog builder.
*/
@Override
protected @NonNull DynamicDialog.Builder onCustomiseBuilder(
@NonNull DynamicDialog.Builder dialogBuilder, @Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
// TODO: Customise the dialog here.
...
return dialogBuilder;
}
/**
* Override this method to customise the dynamic dialog before attaching it with
* this fragment.
*
* @param alertDialog The current dialog to be customised.
* @param savedInstanceState The saved state of the fragment to restore it later.
*
* @return The customised dynamic dialog.
*/
protected @NonNull DynamicDialog onCustomiseDialog(@NonNull DynamicDialog alertDialog,
@Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
// TODO: Customise the dialog builder here.
...
return alertDialog;
}
...
}
Show the DynamicDialogFragment
by using showDialog(fragmentActivity)
method.
For better understanding, please check
AboutDialogFragment
in thesample
project.
It will automatically maintain its state on configuration changes (like device rotation, etc.)
by calling setRetainInstance(true)
in onCreate()
method. If you don't want to use this feature
(generally, if you are displaying it in onResume()
method) then, call setAutoDismiss(true)
to
dismiss it in onPause()
method.
DynamicDialogFragment.newInstance().
...
// Dismiss dialog fragment on configuration changes.
.setAutoDismiss(true)
// Show the dialog fragment.
.showDialog(fragmentActivity);
To show quick DynamicDialogFragment
, you can use its setBuilder(DynamicDialog.Builder)
method
and pass DynamicDialog.Builder
with all the customisations. It will automatically wrap it in a
DialogFragment
and use showDialog(fragmentActivity)
method to display it.
DynamicDialogFragment.newInstance().setBuilder(
new DynamicDialog.Builder(context)
// Set dialog title.
.setTitle(...)
// Set dialog message.
.setMessage(...)
// Set negative button with a click listener.
.setNegativeButton(..., clickListener))
// Show the dialog fragment.
.showDialog(fragmentActivity);
As DialogFragment
has required some extra work to get the event callbacks, it already has all the
listeners of DynamicDialog.Builder
built-in so that there is no extra effort is required.
DynamicDialogFragment.newInstance()
...
// Callback when this dialog fragment is displayed.
.setOnShowListener(onShowListener)
// Callback when this dialog fragment has been dismissed.
.setOnDismissListener(onDismissListener)
// Callback when this dialog fragment has been canceled.
.setOnCancelListener(onCancelListener)
// Callback when a key is pressed in this dialog fragment.
.setOnKeyListener(onKeyListener)
// Show the dialog fragment.
.showDialog(fragmentActivity);
For better understanding, please check
CustomDialogFragment
in thesample
project.
It depends on the dynamic-utils to perform various internal operations. So, its functions can also be used to perform other useful operations.
Pranav Pandey
Copyright 2017-2024 Pranav Pandey
Copyright 2015 The Android Open Source Project
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.