/MultiType

Easier and more flexible to create multiple types for Android RecyclerView.

Primary LanguageKotlinApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

MultiType

Easier and more flexible to create multiple types for Android RecyclerView.

Build Status License maven-central jetbrains-plugin

Previously, when we need to develop a complex RecyclerView / ListView, it is difficult and troublesome work. We should override the getItemViewType() of RecyclerView.Adapter , add some types, and create some ViewHolders relating to those types. Once we need to add a new item type, we have to go to the original adapter file and modify some old codes carefully, and these adapter classes will get more complicated.

Nowadays, I created a new intuitive and flexible way to easily create complex RecyclerViews, with the MultiType library, we could insert a new item type without changing any old adapter codes and make them more readable.

Getting started

In your build.gradle:

MultiType has been rebuilt based on AndroidX. If you are still using the android support library, please use me.drakeet.multitype:multitype:3.4.4 and me.drakeet.multitype:multitype-kotlin:3.4.4.

In addition, since 4.0.0 we have migrated to fully build with Kotlin. If you don't want to use Kotlin, you can use the last stable version me.drakeet.multitype:multitype:3.5.0 and see 3.x.

dependencies {
  implementation 'com.drakeet.multitype:multitype:4.3.0'
}

Usage

Step 1. Create a Kotlin class or data class, for example:

data class Foo(
  val value: String
)

Step 2. Create a class extends ItemViewDelegate<T, VH : ViewHolder>, for example:

class FooViewDelegate: ItemViewDelegate<Foo, FooViewDelegate.ViewHolder>() {

  override fun onCreateViewHolder(context: Context, parent: ViewGroup): ViewHolder {
    // If you want a LayoutInflater parameter instead of a Context,
    // you can use ItemViewBinder as the parent of this class.
    return ViewHolder(FooView(context))
  }

  override fun onBindViewHolder(holder: ViewHolder, item: Foo) {
    holder.fooView.text = item.value

    Log.d("ItemViewDelegate API", "position: ${holder.bindingAdapterPosition}")
    Log.d("ItemViewDelegate API", "items: $adapterItems")
    Log.d("ItemViewDelegate API", "adapter: $adapter")
    Log.d("More", "Context: ${holder.itemView.context}")
  }

  class ViewHolder(itemView : View): RecyclerView.ViewHolder(itemView) {
    val fooView: TextView = itemView.findViewById(R.id.foo)
  }
}
Or if you are using a custom View instead of XML layout, you can use ViewDelegate:

The ViewDelegate is a simple ItemViewDelegate that does not require to declare and provide a RecyclerView.ViewHolder.

class FooViewDelegate : ViewDelegate<Foo, FooView>() {

  override fun onCreateView(context: Context): FooView {
    return FooView(context).apply { layoutParams = LayoutParams(MATCH_PARENT, WRAP_CONTENT) }
  }

  override fun onBindView(view: FooView, item: Foo) {
    view.imageView.setImageResource(item.imageResId)
    view.textView.text = item.text

    view.textView.text = """
      |${item.text}
      |viewHolder: ${view.holder}
      |layoutPosition: ${view.layoutPosition}
      |absoluteAdapterPosition: ${view.absoluteAdapterPosition}
      |bindingAdapterPosition: ${view.bindingAdapterPosition}
    """.trimMargin()
  }
}

(See RichViewDelegate & RichView examples for more details)

Step 3. register your types and setup your RecyclerView, for example:

class SampleActivity : AppCompatActivity() {

  private val adapter = MultiTypeAdapter()
  private val items = ArrayList<Any>()

  override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState)
    setContentView(R.layout.activity_list)
    val recyclerView = findViewById<RecyclerView>(R.id.list)

    adapter.register(TextItemViewDelegate())
    adapter.register(ImageItemViewDelegate())
    adapter.register(RichItemViewDelegate())
    recyclerView.adapter = adapter

    val textItem = TextItem("world")
    val imageItem = ImageItem(R.mipmap.ic_launcher)
    val richItem = RichItem("小艾大人赛高", R.drawable.img_11)

    for (i in 0..19) {
      items.add(textItem)
      items.add(imageItem)
      items.add(richItem)
    }
    adapter.items = items
    adapter.notifyDataSetChanged()
  }
}

That's all, you're good to go!

Advanced usage

One to many:

adapter.register(Data::class).to(
  DataType1ViewDelegate(),
  DataType2ViewDelegate()
).withKotlinClassLinker { _, data ->
  when (data.type) {
    Data.TYPE_2 -> DataType2ViewDelegate::class
    else -> DataType1ViewDelegate::class
  }
}

See OneDataToManyActivity, OneToManyFlow and OneToManyEndpoint for more details.

More methods that you can override from ItemViewDelegate:

open fun onBindViewHolder(holder: VH, item: T, payloads: List<Any>)
open fun getItemId(item: T): Long
open fun onViewRecycled(holder: VH)
open fun onFailedToRecycleView(holder: VH): Boolean
open fun onViewAttachedToWindow(holder: VH)
open fun onViewDetachedFromWindow(holder: VH)

Android Studio Plugin

An intellij idea plugin for Android to generate MultiType Item and ItemViewDelegate easily.

Screenshots

Pages created with MultiType:

License

Copyright (c) 2016-present. Drakeet Xu

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.