singleLine
is/was used in xml layout files for TextView
and EditText
something like the following:
<TextView
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:singleLine="true" />
Some people on SO say singleLine
is deprecated, while other people still suggest using it. Sometimes it even seems necessary to use when maxLines="1"
doesn't work. (see here, here, and here)
The docs should be the place to go to answer this question, right? Here, they say:
This constant was deprecated in API level 3.
This attribute is deprecated. Use
maxLines
instead to change the layout of a static text, and use thetextMultiLine
flag in the inputType attribute instead for editable text views (if both singleLine and inputType are supplied, the inputType flags will override the value of singleLine).
However, in the TextView docs, there is no indication that it is deprecated, either for android:singleLine
or for setSingleLine
or for setTransformationMethod
. The same TextView docs, by comparison, do state that other things like STATUS_BAR_HIDDEN
and fitSystemWindows
are deprecated. So is the singleLine
deprecation an omission, was it "undeprecated", or what?
This question has been previously asked before but was not the main focus of the question (and was not answered).
I think the answer to your question is already in one of the SO posts you linked to. Unfortunately, the deprecation of singleLines
is not a black-or-white matter.
It is deprecated, but it is not going anywhere anytime soon.
It was deprecated because its performance is poor, relative to its successor, maxLines
. It uses SingleLineTransformationMethod
to replace newlines and carriage returns in the String you place in the TextView
, unlike maxLines
, which "just" adjusts the height of the TextView
based on the number of lines and does no String replacing.
This method of replacing characters also meant that singleLine
could break in unexpected ways (e.g. if you use custom fonts). It was these performance and reliability issues that led to its deprecation.
However, it is not going anywhere because, as the SO post you linked to states, it is still in use by many old Android applications, and it is still useful sometimes (e.g. when you want to show the entire text on one line and ignore carriage-returns and newlines).
Do note that deprecation does not necessarily mean that an API is going away. It just means that its use is discouraged, but may be permitted.