I have trouble understanding this code. I get that findViewById
will get the button widget and then it'll cast it. Then, it's going to use the button to call the setOnClickListener
method. However, I don't know what is that argument being passed into the setOnClickListener
and I have never seen code like that before. How is it that it creates a new object but is able to create a method of its own within another method's argument? Would be great if someone could explain that. Also, what type of object is the setOnClickListener
method taking in?
btn = (Button)findViewById(R.id.firstButton);
btn.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener()
{
@Override
public void onClick(View v)
{
tv.setText(months[rand.nextInt(12)]);
tv.setTextColor(Color.rgb(rand.nextInt(255)+1, rand.nextInt(255)+1, rand.nextInt(255)+1));
}
});
It works like this. View.OnClickListenere is defined -
public interface OnClickListener {
void onClick(View v);
}
As far as we know you cannot instantiate an object OnClickListener
, as it doesn't have a method implemented. So there are two ways you can go by - you can implement this interface which will override onClick
method like this:
public class MyListener implements View.OnClickListener {
@Override
public void onClick (View v) {
// your code here;
}
}
But it's tedious to do it each time as you want to set a click listener. So in order to avoid this you can provide the implementation for the method on spot, just like in an example you gave.
setOnClickListener
takes View.OnClickListener
as its parameter.