Fragment must be a public static class to be properly recreated from instance state

Falling Into Infinity picture Falling Into Infinity · Sep 2, 2016 · Viewed 23.5k times · Source

After updating to the latest support repository,

compile 'com.android.support:appcompat-v7:24.2.0'
compile 'com.android.support:design:24.2.0'
compile 'com.android.support:percent:24.2.0'
compile 'com.android.support:recyclerview-v7:24.2.0'

I'm getting the weird exception.

java.lang.IllegalStateException: Fragment null must be a public static class to be  properly recreated from instance state.
at android.support.v4.app.BackStackRecord.doAddOp(BackStackRecord.java:435)
at android.support.v4.app.BackStackRecord.add(BackStackRecord.java:414)
at android.support.v4.app.DialogFragment.show(DialogFragment.java:154)
at com.androidapp.base.BaseActivity.showDialogFragment(BaseActivity.java:78)
at com.androidapp.MainActivity.showNewDialog(MainActivity.java:304)
at com.androidapp.MainActivity$6.onClick(MainActivity.java:228)

In my BaseActivity class, I've created a re-usable fragment which can be used in activity class that extends the BaseActivty

public void showDialogFragment(DialogFragment newFragment) {
        FragmentTransaction ft = getSupportFragmentManager().beginTransaction();
        Fragment prev = getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentByTag("dialog");
        if (prev != null) {
            ft.remove(prev);
        }
        ft.addToBackStack("dialog");
        newFragment.show(ft, "dialog");
    }

Back to the MainActivty I've used the fragment like this,

public class MainActivity extends BaseActivity {

    @SuppressLint("ValidFragment")
        public void showNewDialog(int type, String title, String message) {
            final DialogNew dialog = new DialogNew() {
                @Override
                public void success(boolean isLandscape) {
                    .......
                }

                @Override
                public void cancel() {

                }
            };
            dialog.setArgs(title, message);
            super.showDialogFragment(dialog);
        }
}

The DialogNew class is below,

public abstract class DialogNew extends DialogFragment {

    private View rootView;

    private String title;
    private String message;

    public void setArgs(String title, String message) {
        Bundle args = new Bundle();
        args.putString("title", title);
        args.putString("message", message);
        setArguments(args);
    }

    @Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
        setStyle(STYLE_NO_TITLE, 0);
    }

    @Override
    public View onCreateView(LayoutInflater inflater, ViewGroup container, Bundle savedInstanceState) {

        rootView = inflater.inflate(R.layout.fragment_new_dialog, container, false);

        init();
        setListeners();

        return rootView;
    }

    public abstract void success(boolean isLandscape);

    public abstract void cancel();
}

PS: The same code works with older support repository.

Answer

CommonsWare picture CommonsWare · Sep 2, 2016

The error is not especially weird. If you were not getting this error before, that was weird.

Android destroys and recreates fragments as part of a configuration change (e.g., screen rotation) and as part of rebuilding a task if needed (e.g., user switches to another app, your app's process is terminated while it is in the background, then the user tries to return to your app, all within 30 minutes or so). Android has no means of recreating an anonymous subclass of DialogNew.

So, make a regular public Java class (or a public static nested class) that extends DialogNew and has your business logic, replacing the anonymous subclass of DialogNew that you are using presently.