简体   繁体   中英

RecyclerView onClick

Has anyone using RecyclerView found a way to set an onClickListener to items in the RecyclerView ? I thought of setting a listener to each of the layouts for each item but that seems a little too much hassle I'm sure there is a way for the RecyclerView to listen for the onClick event but I can't quite figure it out.

Here is a better and less tightly coupled way to implement an OnClickListener<\/code> for a RecyclerView<\/code> .

RecyclerView recyclerView = findViewById(R.id.recycler);
recyclerView.addOnItemTouchListener(
    new RecyclerItemClickListener(context, recyclerView ,new RecyclerItemClickListener.OnItemClickListener() {
      @Override public void onItemClick(View view, int position) {
        // do whatever
      }

      @Override public void onLongItemClick(View view, int position) {
        // do whatever
      }
    })
);

As the API's have radically changed, It wouldn't surprise me if you were to create an OnClickListener<\/code> for each item. It isn't that much of a hassle though. In your implementation of RecyclerView.Adapter<MyViewHolder><\/code> , you should have:

private final OnClickListener mOnClickListener = new MyOnClickListener();

@Override
public MyViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(final ViewGroup parent, final int viewType) {
    View view = LayoutInflater.from(mContext).inflate(R.layout.myview, parent, false);
    view.setOnClickListener(mOnClickListener);
    return new MyViewHolder(view);
}

I do it in this way, without undue classes, detectors etc. Simple code inside our adapter. Especially better solution for longClick than presented before.

public class PasswordAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<PasswordAdapter.ViewHolder> {
    private static ClickListener clickListener;

    public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener, View.OnLongClickListener {
        TextView name;

        public ViewHolder(View itemView) {
            super(itemView);
            itemView.setOnClickListener(this);
            itemView.setOnLongClickListener(this);
            name = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.card_name);
        }

        @Override
        public void onClick(View v) {
            clickListener.onItemClick(getAdapterPosition(), v);
        }

        @Override
        public boolean onLongClick(View v) {
            clickListener.onItemLongClick(getAdapterPosition(), v);
            return false;
        }
    }

    public void setOnItemClickListener(ClickListener clickListener) {
        PasswordAdapter.clickListener = clickListener;
    }

    public interface ClickListener {
        void onItemClick(int position, View v);
        void onItemLongClick(int position, View v);
    }
}

Check out a similar question<\/a> @CommonsWare's<\/strong> comment links to this<\/a> , which implements the OnClickListener<\/code> interface in the viewHolder<\/code> .

    TextView textView;//declare global with in adapter class

public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener {

      private ViewHolder(View itemView) {
            super(itemView);
            itemView.setOnClickListener(this);
            textView = (TextView)view.findViewById(android.R.id.text1);

      }

      @Override
      public void onClick(View view) {
            Toast.makeText(view.getContext(), "position = " + getLayoutPosition(), Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();

         //go through each item if you have few items within recycler view
        if(getLayoutPosition()==0){
           //Do whatever you want here

        }else if(getLayoutPosition()==1){ 
           //Do whatever you want here         

        }else if(getLayoutPosition()==2){

        }else if(getLayoutPosition()==3){

        }else if(getLayoutPosition()==4){

        }else if(getLayoutPosition()==5){

        }

        //or you can use For loop if you have long list of items. Use its length or size of the list as 
        for(int i = 0; i<exampleList.size(); i++){

        }


      }
  }

Based on Jacob Tabak's answer (+1 for him), I was able to add onLongClick listener:

import android.content.Context;
import android.support.v7.widget.RecyclerView;
import android.view.GestureDetector;
import android.view.MotionEvent;
import android.view.View;

public class RecyclerItemClickListener implements RecyclerView.OnItemTouchListener {
    public interface OnItemClickListener {
        void onItemClick(View view, int position);

        void onItemLongClick(View view, int position);
    }

    private OnItemClickListener mListener;

    private GestureDetector mGestureDetector;

    public RecyclerItemClickListener(Context context, final RecyclerView recyclerView, OnItemClickListener listener) {
        mListener = listener;

        mGestureDetector = new GestureDetector(context, new GestureDetector.SimpleOnGestureListener() {
            @Override
            public boolean onSingleTapUp(MotionEvent e) {
                return true;
            }

            @Override
            public void onLongPress(MotionEvent e) {
                View childView = recyclerView.findChildViewUnder(e.getX(), e.getY());

                if (childView != null && mListener != null) {
                    mListener.onItemLongClick(childView, recyclerView.getChildAdapterPosition(childView));
                }
            }
        });
    }

    @Override
    public boolean onInterceptTouchEvent(RecyclerView view, MotionEvent e) {
        View childView = view.findChildViewUnder(e.getX(), e.getY());

        if (childView != null && mListener != null && mGestureDetector.onTouchEvent(e)) {
            mListener.onItemClick(childView, view.getChildAdapterPosition(childView));
        }

        return false;
    }

    @Override
    public void onTouchEvent(RecyclerView view, MotionEvent motionEvent) {
    }

    @Override
    public void onRequestDisallowInterceptTouchEvent(boolean disallowIntercept) {
    }
}

This is what worked for me. Attach the OnClickListener<\/code> to the onBindView<\/code> . I don't really know if this will impact the performance, but it seems to work fine with little code.

public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
    holder.view.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
            @Override
            public void onClick(View view) {
                Toast.makeText(context, "Recycle Click" + position, Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
            }
    });
}

This was so hard for me to have on item click listener in the activity and also to have click listener for single view of the item that will not trigger on item click listener. After playing around with Jacob Tabak's answer I respect his answer for on item click if no other touch actions inside item are presented.

I present an instance of it in the constructor(or it can be with setter) and attach it to the view holder container click listener.

 public class MyRecyclerAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<MyViewHolder> {

private ArrayList<String> mData;
private OnItemClickListener mOnItemClickListener;

public interface OnItemClickListener {
    public void onItemClick(View view, int position);
}

public MyRecyclerAdapter(ArrayList<String> itemsData,
        OnItemClickListener onItemClickListener) {
    mOnItemClickListener = onItemClickListener;
    this.mData = itemsData;
}

@Override
public MyViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent,
        int viewType) {

    View layoutView = LayoutInflater.from(mContext).inflate(
            R.layout.list_item, parent, false);

    final MyViewHolder viewHolder = new MyViewHolder(layoutView);

    viewHolder.container.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {

        @Override
        public void onClick(View v) {
            mOnItemClickListener.onItemClick(v, viewHolder.getAdapterPosition());
        }
    });

    viewHоlder.button.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {

        @Override
        public void onClick(View v) {
            //do button click work here with
            // mData.get( viewHolder.getAdapterPosition() );
        }
    });

    return viewHolder;
}

@Override
public int getItemCount() {
    return mData.size();
}}

This is what I ended up needing, in case someone finds it useful:

public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {

    public ViewHolder(View item) {

        super(item);
        item.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {
            @Override
            public void onClick(View v) {
                Log.d("RecyclerView", "onClick:" + getAdapterPosition());
            }
        });

    }
}

I have nice solution for RecyclerView<\/code> 's onItemClickListener<\/code> for the items and subitems

public interface OnRecyclerViewItemClickListener
{
    /**
     * Called when any item with in recyclerview or any item with in item
     * clicked
     * 
     * @param position
     *            The position of the item
     * @param id
     *            The id of the view which is clicked with in the item or
     *            -1 if the item itself clicked
     */
    public void onRecyclerViewItemClicked(int position, int id);
}

Here is what I did. This solution supports both onClick and onLongClick on both RecyclerView Items and Views insides RecyclerView Items (internal views).

public RecyclerViewAdapter.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
    View itemView = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.layout_item, null);
    ViewHolder viewHolder = new ViewHolder(itemView);

    itemView.setOnClickListener( this);
    itemView.setOnLongClickListener(this);
    viewHolder.imageIV.setOnClickListener(this);
    viewHolder.imageIV.setOnLongClickListener(this);

    viewHolder.imageIV.setTag(viewHolder);
    itemView.setTag(viewHolder);

    return viewHolder;
}

There is far easier way to do this. Just apply on click in onBindViewHolder<\/code> on root view.

<LinearLayout
    xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    xmlns:card_view="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res-auto"
    android:id="@+id/linearlayout"
    android:layout_width="match_parent"
    android:layout_height="match_parent"
    android:orientation="vertical">

        <TextView
            android:id="@+id/textview"
            android:layout_width="match_parent"
            android:layout_height="wrap_content"
            android:layout_marginBottom="1dp"
            android:textSize="15sp" />
</LinearLayout>

You can pass a clickListener<\/code> to Adapter<\/code> .

private View.OnClickListener mItemClick = new View.OnClickListener() {

    @Override
    public void onClick(View v) {
        Intent intent = null;
        int position = list.getChildPosition(v);
        switch (position) {
            case 0:
                intent = new Intent(MainActivity.this, LeakCanaryActivity.class);
                break;
            case 1:
                intent = new Intent(MainActivity.this, ButterKnifeFragmentActivity.class);
                break;
        }
        if (intent != null) {
            MainActivity.this.startActivity(intent);
        }
    }
};

Way too simple and effective.

public static class SimpleStringRecyclerViewAdapter
            extends RecyclerView.Adapter<SimpleStringRecyclerViewAdapter.ViewHolder> {

        // Your initializations goes here...
        private List<String> mValues;

        public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {

            //create a variable mView
            public final View mView;

            /*All your row widgets goes here
            public final ImageView mImageView;
            public final TextView mTextView;*/

            public ViewHolder(View view) {
                super(view);
                //Initialize it here
                mView = view;

                /* your row widgets initializations goes here
                mImageView = (ImageView) view.findViewById(R.id.avatar);
                mTextView = (TextView) view.findViewById(android.R.id.text1);*/
            }
        }

        public String getValueAt(int position) {
            return mValues.get(position);
        }

        public SimpleStringRecyclerViewAdapter(Context context, List<String> items) {

            mBackground = mTypedValue.resourceId;
            mValues = items;
        }

        @Override
        public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
            View view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext())
                    .inflate(R.layout.list_item, parent, false);
            view.setBackgroundResource(mBackground);
            return new ViewHolder(view);
        }

        @Override
        public void onBindViewHolder(final ViewHolder holder, int position) {
            holder.mBoundString = mValues.get(position);
            holder.mTextView.setText(mValues.get(position));

            //Here it is simply write onItemClick listener here
            holder.mView.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
                @Override
                public void onClick(View v) {
                    Context context = v.getContext();
                    Intent intent = new Intent(context, ExampleActivity.class);

                    context.startActivity(intent);
                }
            });
        }

        @Override
        public int getItemCount() {
            return mValues.size();
        }
    }

You can implement OnClickListener to your ViewHolder class

public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener {
        public Item item
        @InjectView(R.id.tv_title)
        public TextView tvTitle;
        @InjectView(R.id.rl_row)
        public RelativeLayout rlRow;

        public ViewHolder(View v) {
            super(v);
            ButterKnife.inject(this, v);
            v.setOnClickListener(this);
        }

        @Override
        public void onClick(View view) {
            Log.e("item title",item.getTitle());
        }
    }

If you want to catch click event On Individual items then just implement OnClickListener<\/code> in ViewHolder<\/code> class and then set click listeners on individual views or whole itemView<\/code> .

public  class ContactViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements OnClickListener
    {
        TextView txt_title,txt_name,txt_email;

        public ContactViewHolder(View itemView) 
        {
            super(itemView);
            txt_title = (TextView)itemView.findViewById(R.id.txt_title);
            txt_name  = (TextView)itemView.findViewById(R.id.txt_name);
            txt_email = (TextView)itemView.findViewById(R.id.txt_email);

            txt_name.setOnClickListener(this);
            txt_email.setOnClickListener(this);
            itemView.setOnClickListener(this);
        }

        @Override
        public void onClick(View v) {
            // TODO Auto-generated method stub

            if(v == itemView)
            {
                Toast.makeText(RecyclerDemoActivity.this, "Visiting Card Clicked is ==>"+txt_name.getText(), Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
            }

            if(v == txt_name)
            {
                Toast.makeText(RecyclerDemoActivity.this, "Name ==>"+txt_name.getText(), Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
            }

            if(v == txt_email)
            {
                Toast.makeText(RecyclerDemoActivity.this, "Email ==>"+txt_email.getText(), Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
            }
        }

    }
} 

I have developed a light weighted library for android, you can visit https://github.com/ChathuraHettiarachchi/RecycleClick

and follow for following sample

RecycleClick.addTo(YOUR_RECYCLEVIEW).setOnItemClickListener(new RecycleClick.OnItemClickListener() {
            @Override
            public void onItemClicked(RecyclerView recyclerView, int position, View v) {
                // YOUR CODE
            }
        });

All the answers posted so far are great solutions, however if you do not want to deal with too many implementation details, and just want it to work similarly to how ListView does, I would recommend using TwoWay-View, as seen here:

The only issue I found with it at the moment is with long press + scrolling, it seems to have incorrect behaviour.

For me, this is the best way:

class YourRecyclerAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<ContactViewHolder> implements View.OnClickListener { 
  ...
  @Override
  public void onClick(View view) {
        int itemPosition = vRecycle.getChildPosition(view);
        //And use itemPosition to get the item from your collection. This way you dont restrain the ViewHolder with a OnClick callback
    }
  ...
}

The RecyclerView<\/code> does not have a OnClickListener<\/code> and will have to implement it ourselves.

Thus the responsibility of managing the click on an item is outside the ViewHolder<\/code> and Adapter<\/code> . Will the activity or fragment which will decide what to do

public class ItemsAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<ItemsAdapter.ViewHolder> {

  ...

  private static OnItemClickListener onItemClickListener;

  ...

  public static interface OnItemClickListener {
      public void onItemClick(View view, int position);
  }

  ...
}

Here is what I did Read more & download the gist here

Adding the same here

CustomItemClickListener.java

public interface CustomItemClickListener {
 public void onItemClick(View v, int position);
}

ItemsListAdapter.java

public class ItemsListAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<ItemsListAdapter.ViewHolder> {
ArrayList<ItemListSingleItem> data;

Context mContext;
CustomItemClickListener listener;

@Override
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
    View mView = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.items_list_single_item, parent, false);
    final ViewHolder mViewHolder = new ViewHolder(mView);
    mView.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
        @Override
        public void onClick(View v) {
            listener.onItemClick(v, mViewHolder.getAdapterPosition());
        }
    });
    return mViewHolder;
}

@Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
    holder.itemTitle.setText(Html.fromHtml(data.get(position).getTitle()));
    if (!TextUtils.isEmpty(data.get(position).getThumbnailURL())) {
      // I Love picasso library :) http://square.github.io/picasso/
        Picasso.with(mContext).load(data.get(position).getThumbnailURL()).error(R.drawable.ic_no_image).
                placeholder(R.drawable.ic_no_image).
                transform(new RoundedCornersTransformation(5, 0)).
                into(holder.thumbnailImage);
    } else {
        holder.thumbnailImage.setImageResource(R.drawable.ic_no_image);
    }
}


@Override
public int getItemCount() {
    return data.size();
}

public ItemsListAdapter(Context mContext, ArrayList<ItemsListSingleItem> data, CustomItemClickListener listener) {
    this.data = data;
    this.mContext = mContext;
    this.listener = listener;
}

public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
    public TextView itemTitle;
    public ImageView thumbnailImage;

    ViewHolder(View v) {
        super(v);
        itemTitle = (TextView) v
                .findViewById(R.id.post_title);
        thumbnailImage = (ImageView) v.findViewById(R.id.post_thumb_image);
    }
 }
}

Unfortunately RecyclerView<\/code> is missing a couple of features that ListView<\/code> had built-in. For example the ability to add an OnItemClickListener<\/code> that triggers when an item is clicked. RecyclerView<\/code> allows you to set an OnClickListener<\/code> in your adapter, but passing on that click listener from your calling code, to the adapter and to the ViewHolder<\/code> , is complicated for catching a simple item click.

public class ItemClickSupport {
private final RecyclerView mRecyclerView;
private OnItemClickListener mOnItemClickListener;
private OnItemLongClickListener mOnItemLongClickListener;
private View.OnClickListener mOnClickListener = new View.OnClickListener() {
    @Override
    public void onClick(View v) {
        if (mOnItemClickListener != null) {
            RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder = mRecyclerView.getChildViewHolder(v);
            mOnItemClickListener.onItemClicked(mRecyclerView, holder.getAdapterPosition(), v);
        }
    }
};
private View.OnLongClickListener mOnLongClickListener = new View.OnLongClickListener() {
    @Override
    public boolean onLongClick(View v) {
        if (mOnItemLongClickListener != null) {
            RecyclerView.ViewHolder holder = mRecyclerView.getChildViewHolder(v);
            return mOnItemLongClickListener.onItemLongClicked(mRecyclerView, holder.getAdapterPosition(), v);
        }
        return false;
    }
};
private RecyclerView.OnChildAttachStateChangeListener mAttachListener
        = new RecyclerView.OnChildAttachStateChangeListener() {
    @Override
    public void onChildViewAttachedToWindow(View view) {
        if (mOnItemClickListener != null) {
            view.setOnClickListener(mOnClickListener);
        }
        if (mOnItemLongClickListener != null) {
            view.setOnLongClickListener(mOnLongClickListener);
        }
    }

    @Override
    public void onChildViewDetachedFromWindow(View view) {

    }
};

private ItemClickSupport(RecyclerView recyclerView) {
    mRecyclerView = recyclerView;
    mRecyclerView.setTag(R.id.item_click_support, this);
    mRecyclerView.addOnChildAttachStateChangeListener(mAttachListener);
}

public static ItemClickSupport addTo(RecyclerView view) {
    ItemClickSupport support = (ItemClickSupport) view.getTag(R.id.item_click_support);
    if (support == null) {
        support = new ItemClickSupport(view);
    }
    return support;
}

public static ItemClickSupport removeFrom(RecyclerView view) {
    ItemClickSupport support = (ItemClickSupport) view.getTag(R.id.item_click_support);
    if (support != null) {
        support.detach(view);
    }
    return support;
}

public ItemClickSupport setOnItemClickListener(OnItemClickListener listener) {
    mOnItemClickListener = listener;
    return this;
}

public ItemClickSupport setOnItemLongClickListener(OnItemLongClickListener listener) {
    mOnItemLongClickListener = listener;
    return this;
}

private void detach(RecyclerView view) {
    view.removeOnChildAttachStateChangeListener(mAttachListener);
    view.setTag(R.id.item_click_support, null);
}

public interface OnItemClickListener {

    void onItemClicked(RecyclerView recyclerView, int position, View v);
}

public interface OnItemLongClickListener {

    boolean onItemLongClicked(RecyclerView recyclerView, int position, View v);
}
}

you can easily define setOnClickListener<\/strong> in your ViewHolder class as follow :

public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
    TextView product_name;

    ViewHolder(View itemView) {
        super(itemView);
        product_name = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.product_name);
        itemView.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
            @Override
            public void onClick(View view) {
                int itemPosition = getLayoutPosition();
                Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), itemPosition + ":" + String.valueOf(product_name.getText()), Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
            }
        });
    }
}

Kotlin implementation of nhaarman's answer :

mRecyclerView.addOnItemTouchListener(object  : RecyclerItemClickListener(this, mRecyclerView,object :RecyclerItemClickListener.OnItemClickListener{
            override fun onItemClick(view: View, position: Int) {

            }

            override fun onLongItemClick(view: View?, position: Int) {

            }
}){})

RecyclerItemClickListener.java :

import android.content.Context
import android.support.v7.widget.RecyclerView
import android.view.GestureDetector
import android.view.MotionEvent
import android.view.View


open class RecyclerItemClickListener(context: Context, recyclerView: RecyclerView, private val mListener: OnItemClickListener?) : RecyclerView.OnItemTouchListener {

    private var mGestureDetector: GestureDetector

    interface OnItemClickListener {
        fun onItemClick(view: View, position: Int)

        fun onLongItemClick(view: View?, position: Int)
    }

    init {
        mGestureDetector = GestureDetector(context, object : GestureDetector.SimpleOnGestureListener() {
            override fun onSingleTapUp(e: MotionEvent): Boolean {
                return true
            }

            override fun onLongPress(e: MotionEvent) {
                val child = recyclerView.findChildViewUnder(e.x, e.y)
                if (child != null && mListener != null) {
                    mListener.onLongItemClick(child, recyclerView.getChildAdapterPosition(child))
                }
            }
        })
    }

    override fun onInterceptTouchEvent(view: RecyclerView, e: MotionEvent): Boolean {
        val childView = view.findChildViewUnder(e.x, e.y)
        if (childView != null && mListener != null && mGestureDetector.onTouchEvent(e)) {
            mListener.onItemClick(childView, view.getChildAdapterPosition(childView))
            return true
        }
        return false
    }

    override fun onTouchEvent(view: RecyclerView, motionEvent: MotionEvent) {}

    override fun onRequestDisallowInterceptTouchEvent(disallowIntercept: Boolean) {}
}

From most of the answers above, they seem to be setting their onclicklisteners to individual items. However, the solution am about to offer is very simple but yet not intuitive to many. Many are forgetting that the other components are always in a parent component which is used to display items in the List or Recycler views. This solution is just about setting a single onclick listener to this parent view and the turn is played. The solution also includes a way to pass the position of the item being clicked on from the list or recycler view. Here, our main rootview is a CardView from the android support library. Here is sample code

public class ListAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<ListAdapter.ViewHolder> {

public static final String LOG_TAG = ListAdapter.class.getSimpleName();
private Cursor mDataset;
private Context mContext;
private ViewHolder mViewHolder;

// Provide a suitable constructor (depends on the kind of dataset)
public ListAdapter(Context context, Cursor Dataset) {
    mDataset = Dataset;
    mContext = context;
}

// Create new views (invoked by the layout manager)
@Override
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {

    // create a new view
    View v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext())
            .inflate(R.layout.list_business_view, parent, false);

    mViewHolder = new ViewHolder(v);
    return mViewHolder;
}

public void setData(Cursor newdata) {
    this.mDataset = newdata;
}

// Replace the contents of a view (invoked by the layout manager)
@Override
public void onBindViewHolder(ViewHolder holder, int position) {
//Bind data to other items here. To save time, i have ommited that.
           //here is where we attach a click listerner for an item in the recycler list rather than for each element of a given item.
            holder.card.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
                @Override
                public void onClick(View v) {
                    Toast.makeText(mContext, " Just cliked item at position " + itemPosition, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();

            }
        });

    }
}

// Return the size of your dataset (invoked by the layout manager)
@Override
public int getItemCount() {
    if (null != mDataset) {
        return mDataset.getCount();
    }
    return 0;

}


// Provide a reference to the views for each data item
// Complex data items may need more than one view per item, and
// you provide access to all the views for a data item in a view holder
public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder{
    // each data item is just a string in this case
    public final TextView mBusinesssName; // View for the business name
    public final TextView mBusinessCategory; //View for the category name
    public final ImageView businessImage; // View for the business category image Image
    public final TextView mBusinessDistance; // View for the distance
    public final CardView card;

    public ViewHolder(View view) {
        super(view);
        mBusinesssName = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.list_item_name_textview);
        mBusinessCategory = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.list_item_category_textview);
        mBusinessDistance = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.list_item_dist_textview);
        businessImage = (ImageView) view.findViewById(R.id.list_item_icon);
        card = (CardView) view.findViewById(R.id.card_view);

    }
}
}

Here is simple and clear way is add inside your ReacyclerView<\/code> ViewHolder<\/code>

public static class MyViewholder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {

    public MyViewholder(View itemView) {
        super(itemView);

        itemView.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {
            @Override
            public void onClick(View v) {
                Log.d("Tag", "onClick:" + getAdapterPosition());
            }
        });

    }
}

Don't reinvent the wheel! The code for this specific use case is included in the Master/Detail Flow starter project that comes with Android Studio.

From Android Studio select:

  1. File > New > New Project... .
  2. In the Phone and Tablet tab select Master/Detail Flow as shown below.

在此处输入图像描述

  1. Create the project as either Kotlin or Java.
  2. Profit.

I am not going to include here the code from google's ootb the demo project, but I'll outline the main design approaches in the sample provided by google:

  • the item OnClickListener is created ONLY ONCE , and is assigned to a field in your RecyclerView.Adapter implementation.
  • in the onBindViewHolder() you should set the same, pre-created onClickListener object on your ViewHolder instance with holder.itemView.setOnClickListener(mOnClickListener) ( AVOID creating a new instance on every method call! ); if you need to capture clicks on some specific elements inside the ViewHolder then extend ViewHolder and expose the elements you need as fields so that you can attach whatever listeners you need in onBindViewHolder() — and once again, do NOT re-create the listeners on every method call — initialise them as instance fields and attach them as needed.
  • you can use .setTag() in order to pass state to your viewHolder, eg holder.itemView.setTag(mValues.get(position)); as used in the demo.

According to Yigit Boyar<\/a> , the best way to register a click on a RecyclerView is to define the click in the creation of the viewholder instead of just creating a new onClickListener for each item that the onBindViewHolder<\/code> binds

<\/h2>
override fun onCreateViewHolder(parent: ViewGroup, viewType: Int): BaseViewHolder<*> { val itemBinding = LayoutInflater.from(context).inflate(R.layout.my_layout, parent, false) val vh = MainViewHolder(itemBinding) vh.itemView.setOnClickListener { val pos = vh.adapterPosition if(pos != NO_POSITION){ itemClickLister.onCocktailClick(myList[pos],pos) } } return vh }<\/code><\/pre>"

here is complete code for my custom adapter this code will inflate the rows with list items defined in the xml file named "list_item" it will also perform click event on all list items rows with respective positions.

<\/blockquote>

I'm aware there are a lot of answers, but I thought I might just provide my implementation of it as well. (Full details can be found on another question I answered<\/a> ).

This is because you will set an OnClickListener<\/code> to the itemView<\/code> parameter of the ViewHolder<\/code> 's constructor. Let me show you what I mean:

public class ExampleClickViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener {

    TextView text1, text2;

    ExampleClickViewHolder(View itemView) {
        super(itemView);

        // we do this because we want to check when an item has been clicked:
        itemView.setOnClickListener(this);

        // now, like before, we assign our View variables
        title = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.text1);
        subtitle = (TextView) itemView.findViewById(R.id.text2);
    }

    @Override
    public void onClick(View v) {
        // The user may not set a click listener for list items, in which case our listener
        // will be null, so we need to check for this
        if (mOnEntryClickListener != null) {
            mOnEntryClickListener.onEntryClick(v, getLayoutPosition());
        }
    }
}
public class MyViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
        public TextView title, year, genre;

        public MyViewHolder(View view) {
            super(view);
            title = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.title);
            genre = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.genre);
            year = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.year);
            view.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
                @Override
                public void onClick(View v) {
                    Toast.makeText(context, ""+getAdapterPosition(), Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
                }
            });
        }
    }

We can do this using Java weak references. Semantically, the view holder is the one that should respond to the click event or delegate it to the correct responder.

  1. <\/li>
  2. <\/li>
  3. <\/li>
  4. <\/li><\/ol>

    Steps:

For me the clean way to do that is this one.

Adapter constructor

private class EnvironmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<EnvironmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapter.ViewHolder>
{
     private final EnvironmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapterListener mEnvironmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapterListener;
     private List<Environment> mEnvironmentsData;

     public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder implements View.OnClickListener
     {
         public ViewHolder(View v)
         {
             super(v);
             v.setOnClickListener(this);

         }

         @Override
         public void onClick(View v)
         {
              Environment environment = mEnvironmentsData.get(getAdapterPosition());
              if (mEnvironmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapterListener != null && environment != null) {
                      mEnvironmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapterListener.onListItemSelected(environment);      
              }
        }

        public EnvironmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapter(List<SmallCellEnvironment> environments, EnvironmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapterListener environmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapterListener)
        {
            mEnvironmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapterListener = environmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapterListener;
            mEnvironmentsData = environments;
        }
}

The Linked Interface

private interface EnvironmentTypeRecyclerViewAdapterListener
{
    void onListItemSelected(Environment environment);
}

This is what I do to reuse OnClickListener

  public class TestAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<TestAdapter.MyviewHolder>
                                         implements View.OnClickListener

in ViewHoder Take itemlayout's parent

  public class MyviewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {

       LinearLayout linearLayout_item;

        public MyviewHolder(View itemView) {
            super(itemView);
            linearLayout_item=itemView.findViewById(R.id.linearLayout_item);
        }
    }

in onBindViewHolder set tag as position

   @Override
    public void onBindViewHolder(MyviewHolder holder, int position) {

       holder.linearLayout_item.setTag(position);
       holder.linearLayout_item.setOnClickListener(this);
    }

and in Onclick

 @Override
public void onClick(View v) {

    int position = (int) v.getTag();
    switch (v.getId()) {
        case R.id.linearLayout_item:

            // do some thing with position 

            break;
    }
}

In kotlin with constructor implementation

Initialize your Recyclerview constructor like below

class ListAdapter(
c: Context,
private var list: List<Project>,
private val itemClick: (Project) -> Unit
) : RecyclerView.Adapter<ListAdapter.ViewHolder>() 

return with itemClick in your onCreateViewHolder

override fun onCreateViewHolder(parent: ViewGroup, viewType: Int):ProjectViewHolder {
    val view = inflater.inflate(R.layout.list_item, parent, false)
    return ViewHolder(view, itemClick)
}

Your onBindViewHolder

override fun onBindViewHolder(holder: ViewHolder, position: Int) {
    holder.bindProject(list[position])
}

Then with viewHolder class create bindProject function.

class ViewHolder(
    view: View,
    private val itemClick: (Project) -> Unit
) : RecyclerView.ViewHolder(view) {

    private val clientTextCount = 7

    val titleTextView: TextView = view.projectTitleTextView

    fun bindProject(project: Project) {
        with(project) {
            titleTextView.text = name
            itemView.setOnClickListener { itemClick(this) }
        }
    }
}

Finally in your activity initialize adapter with lazy

private val adapter: ListAdapter by lazy {
    ListAdapter(this, projectList, {
        // Here you can implement your onClick function.
    })
}

For adding new list to recyclerview initialize below method in your adapter

fun setProjects(projects: List<Project>) {
        projectList = projects
        notifyDataSetChanged()
    }

and call setProjects method anywhere in your activity.

adapter.setProjects(projects)

That's it.

带有点击监听器的recyclerview

Add an interface in your adapter class.

public interface SelectedUser{

    void selectedUser(UserModel userModel);

}

implement your interface in the mainactivity and overide selectedUser method.

@Override
public void selectedUser(UserModel userModel) {

    startActivity(new Intent(MainActivity.this, SelectedUserActivity.class).putExtra("data",userModel));

}

Full tutorial check out here plus source code. Recyclerview with clicklistener and searchview

Step 1 ) Write the click interface

Create an interface named RecyclerViewClickListener.java and add below code. Here we declare two methods onClick and onLongClick to identify item click and long click respectively.

package com.androidtutorialshub.recyclerviewtutorial.Helper;

import android.view.View;

public interface RecyclerViewClickListener {
    void onClick(View view, int position);

    void onLongClick(View view, int position);
}

Step 2 ) Write the Item Touch Class

Create a class named RecyclerViewTouchListener.java and add below code. Here we write the logic to detect click and long press on recycler view item.

package com.androidtutorialshub.recyclerviewtutorial.Helper;

import android.content.Context;
import android.support.v7.widget.RecyclerView;
import android.view.GestureDetector;
import android.view.MotionEvent;
import android.view.View;


public class RecyclerViewTouchListener implements RecyclerView.OnItemTouchListener{

    private GestureDetector gestureDetector;
    private RecyclerViewClickListener clickListener;

    public RecyclerViewTouchListener(Context context, final RecyclerView recyclerView, final RecyclerViewClickListener clickListener) {
        this.clickListener = clickListener;
        gestureDetector = new GestureDetector(context, new GestureDetector.SimpleOnGestureListener() {
            @Override
            public boolean onSingleTapUp(MotionEvent e) {
                return true;
            }

            @Override
            public void onLongPress(MotionEvent e) {
                View child = recyclerView.findChildViewUnder(e.getX(), e.getY());
                if (child != null && clickListener != null) {
                    clickListener.onLongClick(child, recyclerView.getChildPosition(child));
                }
            }
        });
    }

    @Override
    public boolean onInterceptTouchEvent(RecyclerView rv, MotionEvent e) {

        View child = rv.findChildViewUnder(e.getX(), e.getY());
        if (child != null && clickListener != null && gestureDetector.onTouchEvent(e)) {
            clickListener.onClick(child, rv.getChildPosition(child));
        }
        return false;
    }

    @Override
    public void onTouchEvent(RecyclerView rv, MotionEvent e) {
    }

    @Override
    public void onRequestDisallowInterceptTouchEvent(boolean disallowIntercept) {

    }
}

Step 3 ) Defining click listener

Open MainActivity.java and update the below changes. Here onClick() method will detect click on item and onLongClick will detect long click on item.

recyclerView.addOnItemTouchListener(new RecyclerViewTouchListener(getApplicationContext(), recyclerView, new RecyclerViewClickListener() {
            @Override
            public void onClick(View view, int position) {
                Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), bookList.get(position).getTitle() + " is clicked!", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
            }

            @Override
            public void onLongClick(View view, int position) {
                Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), bookList.get(position).getTitle() + " is long pressed!", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();

            }
        }));

For more info or Download source code:- http://www.androidtutorialshub.com/android-recyclerview-click-listener-tutorial/

Try this, simple enough. It works for me. BTW, I found that setOnClickListener doesn't take effect for RecyclerView .

recycler.setOnTouchListener(new OnTouchListener() {
    @Override
    public boolean onTouch(View v, MotionEvent event) {
        if (event.getAction() == MotionEvent.ACTION_UP) {
            // anything todo
        }

        return true;
    }
});

For kotlin handle click on recyclerview anser based on Jacobs anser

kotlin RecyclerViewClick #RecyclerViewClick # Kotlin

1) CREATE CLASS RecyclerItemClickListener

class RecyclerItemClickListener(context: Context, recyclerView: RecyclerView, listner: OnItemClickListener) : RecyclerView.OnItemTouchListener {
    var mGestureDetector: GestureDetector
    var mListner: OnItemClickListener
    interface OnItemClickListener {
        fun onItemClick(view: View, position: Int)
        fun onLongItemClick(view: View, position: Int)
    }
    init {
        this.mListner = listner
        mGestureDetector = GestureDetector(context, object : GestureDetector.SimpleOnGestureListener() {
            override fun onSingleTapUp(e: MotionEvent?): Boolean {
                return true
            }
            override fun onLongPress(e: MotionEvent?) {
                val child: View? = recyclerView.findChildViewUnder(e!!.getX(), e.getY())
                if (child != null && mListner != null) {
                    mListner.onLongItemClick(child, recyclerView.getChildAdapterPosition(child))
                }

            }

        })
    }
    override fun onTouchEvent(rv: RecyclerView, e: MotionEvent) {
    }

    override fun onInterceptTouchEvent(view: RecyclerView, e: MotionEvent): Boolean {
        val childView: View? = view.findChildViewUnder(e!!.getX(), e.getY())
        if (childView != null && mListner != null && mGestureDetector.onTouchEvent(e)) {
            mListner.onItemClick(childView, view.getChildAdapterPosition(childView))
            return true
        }
        return false
    }

    override fun onRequestDisallowInterceptTouchEvent(disallowIntercept: Boolean) {
    }

}

2) get Click on Any Recyclerview (activity/fragment)

 recyclerView.addOnItemTouchListener(
            RecyclerItemClickListener(
                this, recyclerView, object : RecyclerItemClickListener.OnItemClickListener {
                    override fun onItemClick(view: View, position: Int) {

                    }

                    override fun onLongItemClick(view: View, position: Int) {
                    }
                })
        )

Mark the class as abstract and implement an OnClick method

public abstract class MainGridAdapter extends
    RecyclerView.Adapter<MainGridAdapter.ViewHolder> {
private List<MainListItem> mDataset;

// Provide a reference to the views for each data item
// Complex data items may need more than one view per item, and
// you provide access to all the views for a data item in a view holder
public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
    // each data item is just a string in this case
    public TextView txtHeader;
    public TextView txtFooter;

    public ViewHolder(View v) {
        super(v);
        txtHeader = (TextView) v.findViewById(R.id.firstLine);
        txtFooter = (TextView) v.findViewById(R.id.secondLine);
    }
}

public void add(int position, MainListItem item) {
    mDataset.add(position, item);
    notifyItemInserted(position);
}

public void remove(MainListItem item) {
    int position = mDataset.indexOf(item);
    mDataset.remove(position);
    notifyItemRemoved(position);
}

// Provide a suitable constructor (depends on the kind of dataset)
public MainGridAdapter(List<MainListItem> myDataset) {
    mDataset = myDataset;
}

// Create new views (invoked by the layout manager)
@Override
public MainGridAdapter.ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent,
        int viewType) {
    // create a new view
    View v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(
            R.layout.list_item_grid_line, parent, false);
    // set the view's size, margins, paddings and layout parameters
    ViewHolder vh = new ViewHolder(v);
    return vh;
}

// Replace the contents of a view (invoked by the layout manager)
@Override
public void onBindViewHolder(final ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
    // - get element from your dataset at this position
    // - replace the contents of the view with that element     
    OnClickListener clickListener = new OnClickListener() {
        @Override
        public void onClick(View v) {
            onItemClicked(position);
        }
    };
    holder.itemView.setOnClickListener(clickListener);
    holder.txtHeader.setOnClickListener(clickListener);
    holder.txtFooter.setOnClickListener(clickListener);
    final MainListItem item = mDataset.get(position);
    holder.txtHeader.setText(item.getTitle());
    if (TextUtils.isEmpty(item.getDescription())) {
        holder.txtFooter.setVisibility(View.GONE);
    } else {
        holder.txtFooter.setVisibility(View.VISIBLE);
        holder.txtFooter.setText(item.getDescription());
    }
}

// Return the size of your dataset (invoked by the layout manager)
@Override
public int getItemCount() {
    return mDataset.size();
}

public abstract void onItemClicked(int position);

}

Implement click handler in binding event to only have one event implementation

Implementation of this:

mAdapter = new MainGridAdapter(listItems) {         
    @Override
    public void onItemClicked(int position) {
        showToast("Item Clicked: " + position, ToastPlus.STYLE_INFO);
    }
};

Same can be done for long click

Here is my Code Snippet

v.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {
        @Override
        public void onClick(View v) 
        {
            int newposition = MainActivity.mRecyclerView.getChildAdapterPosition(v);
            Intent cardViewIntent = new Intent(c, in.itechvalley.cardviewexample.MainActivityCards.class);
            cardViewIntent.putExtra("Position", newposition);
            c.startActivity(cardViewIntent);
        }
    });

v is View from onCreateViewHolder

c is Context

Here is a strategy that gives a result similar to the ListView implementation in that you can define the listener in the Activity or Fragment level instead of the Adapter or ViewHolder level. It also defines some abstract classes that take care of a lot of the boilerplate work of adapters and holders.

Abstract Classes

First, define an abstract Holder that extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder and defines a generic data type, T , used to bind data to the views. The bindViews method will be implemented by a subclass to map data to the views.

public abstract class Holder<T> extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
    T data;

    public Holder(View itemView) {
        super(itemView);
    }

    public void bindData(T data){
        this.data = data;
        bindViews(data);
    }

    abstract protected void bindViews(T data);
}

Also, create an abstract Adapter that extends RecyclerView.Adapter<Holder<T>> . This defines 2 of the 3 interface methods, and a subclass will need to implement the last, onViewHolderCreated method.

public abstract class Adapter<T> extends RecyclerView.Adapter<Holder<T>> {
    List<T> list = new ArrayList<>();

    @Override
    public void onBindViewHolder(Holder<T> holder, int position) {
        holder.bindData(list.get(position));
    }

    @Override
    public int getItemCount() {
        return list.size();
    }

    public T getItem(int adapterPosition){
        return list.get(adapterPosition);
    }
}

Concrete Classes

Now create a new concrete class that extends Holder . This method only has to define the Views and handle the binding. Here I'm using the ButterKnife library , but feel free to use itemView.findViewById(...) methods instead.

public class PersonHolder extends Holder<Person>{
    @Bind(R.id.firstname) TextView firstname;
    @Bind(R.id.lastname) TextView lastname;

    public PersonHolder(View view){
        super(view);
        ButterKnife.bind(this, view);
    }

    @Override
    protected void bindViews(Person person) {
        firstname.setText(person.firstname);
        lastname.setText(person.lastname);
    }
}

Finally, in your Activity or Fragment class that holds the RecyclerView you would have this code:

// Create adapter, this happens in parent Activity or Fragment of RecyclerView
adapter = new Adapter<Person>(){
    @Override
    public PersonHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
        View v = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext())
                    .inflate(R.layout.layout_person_view, parent, false);

        PersonHolder holder = new PersonHolder(v);
        v.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener(){
            @Override
            public void onClick(View v) {
                int itemPos = holder.getAdapterPosition();
                Person person = getItem(itemPos);

                // do something with person
                EventBus.getDefault().postSticky(new PersonClickedEvent(itemPos, person));
            }
        });

        return holder;
    }
};

Very simple, add this class:

public class OnItemClickListener implements View.OnClickListener {
    private int position;
    private OnItemClickCallback onItemClickCallback;

    public OnItemClickListener(int position, OnItemClickCallback onItemClickCallback) {
        this.position = position;
        this.onItemClickCallback = onItemClickCallback;
    }

    @Override
    public void onClick(View view) {
        onItemClickCallback.onItemClicked(view, position);
    }

    public interface OnItemClickCallback {
        void onItemClicked(View view, int position);
    }
}

Get an instance of 'OnItemClickCallback' interface and put it in your activity or fragment:

private OnItemClickListener.OnItemClickCallback onItemClickCallback = new OnItemClickListener.OnItemClickCallback() {
    @Override
    public void onItemClicked(View view, int position) {
    }
};

Then, pass that callback to your recyclerView:

recyclerView.setAdapter(new SimpleStringRecyclerViewAdapter(Arrays.asList("1", "2", "3"), onItemClickCallback));

Finally, this would be your adapter:

public class SimpleStringRecyclerViewAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<SimpleStringRecyclerViewAdapter.ViewHolder> {
    private List<String> mValues;
    private OnItemClickListener.OnItemClickCallback onItemClickCallback;

    public SimpleStringRecyclerViewAdapter(List<String> items, OnItemClickListener.OnItemClickCallback onItemClickCallback) {
        mValues = items;
        this.onItemClickCallback = onItemClickCallback;
    }

    public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
        public final TextView mTextView;

        public ViewHolder(View view) {
            super(view);
            mTextView = (TextView) view.findViewById(R.id.txt_title);
        }
    }

    @Override
    public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(ViewGroup parent, int viewType) {
        View view = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext()).inflate(R.layout.list_item, parent, false);
        return new ViewHolder(view);
    }

    @Override
    public void onBindViewHolder(final ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
        holder.mTextView.setText(mValues.get(position));
        holder.mTextView.setOnClickListener(new OnItemClickListener(position, onItemClickCallback));
    }

    @Override
    public int getItemCount() {
        return mValues.size();
    }
}

Usually you have more than one element in your CardView , so that you need an layout view to wrap and organize them.
You can add an OnClickListener to that layout view.
1. Add an id to your layout. In this case a LinearLayout

<android.support.v7.widget.CardView
 .....>

    <LinearLayout
        android:orientation="vertical"
        android:layout_width="match_parent"
        android:layout_height="match_parent"
        android:id="@+id/card_view_linearLayout">

        <TextView
            android:layout_width="wrap_content"
            android:layout_height="wrap_content"
            android:text="name"
            android:id="@+id/card_view_name" />

        ...

    </LinearLayout>

</android.support.v7.widget.CardView>

$ 2. Get the layout view in your inner ViewHolder class.

public static class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder{
    private TextView nameView;
    ...
    private LinearLayout linearLayout;
    public ViewHolder(View itemView) {
        super(itemView);
        nameView = (TextView)itemView.findViewById(R.id.card_view_name);
        ...
        linearLayout = (LinearLayout)itemView.findViewById(R.id.card_view_linearLayout);
    }
}

$ 3. Add the listener to your layout in onBindViewHolder and use a callback to send data to the Activity or Fragment (not tested).

@Override
public void onBindViewHolder(TrackAdapter.ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
    String str = mStringList.get(position);

    holder.nameView.setText(str);
    ...
    holder.linearLayout.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
        @Override
        public void onClick(View v) {
            callback.itemCallback(mStringList.get(position));
        }
    });
}

how to use callbacks is another story

Same answer in Kotlin

inner class MyViewHolder(v: View, myOnClickListener: MyOnClickListener) : RecyclerView.ViewHolder(v) {
    init {
        v.setOnClickListener { v -> myOnClickListener.onClick(v, adapterPosition) }
    }
}

override fun onCreateViewHolder(viewGroup: ViewGroup, viewType: Int): MyViewHolder {
    val view = LayoutInflater.from(viewGroup.context).inflate(R.layout.myview, viewGroup, false)
    return MyViewHolder(view, mOnClickListener)
}

inner class MyOnClickListener {
    fun onClick(view: View, position: Int) {
        val item = mList[position]
        Toast.makeText(view.context, item, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show()
    }
}

I have looked thorugh all of the anwers and was not quite satasifed. I found much easier and faster solution. Wanted to share for future readers.

  1. Choose any View inside your single recycler item.
  2. Get parent of this View (Make sure you cast to appropirate ViewGroup )
  3. Set your onClickListener to this parent.

Sample code (It is written inside your onBindViewHolder method of your adapter ):

@Override
public void onBindViewHolder(@NonNull final ViewHolder holder, final int position) {

    ConstraintLayout parent = (ConstraintLayout) holder.title.getParent();
    parent.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
        @Override
        public void onClick(View v) {
            Toast.makeText(context, "Clicked recycler view item at position " + position, Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
        }
    });
}

Let's see how we can also implement this with Jetpack / AndroidX

You need to create an observable in the viewmodel class like this

private MutableLiveData<Integer> adapterItem = new MutableLiveData<>();

public MutableLiveData<Integer> getAdapterItem() {
    return adapterItem;
}

public void setAdapterItem(int adapterItem) {
    this.getAdapterItem().setValue(adapterItem);
}

Then in the adapter class make sure you pass the viewmodel reference as parameter in the constructor then implement the clicklistener on the viewholder

    public MyViewHolder(@NonNull View itemView) {
        super(itemView);
        if(itemView != null){
            itemView.setOnClickListener(v -> {
                int adapterPosition = getAdapterPosition();
                viewModel.setAdapterItem(adapterPosition);
            });

        };
    }

Then from the activity class just observe the changes

    viewModel.getAdapterItem().observe(this, position -> {
        Log.w(TAG, "clicked: " + ridesArray.get(position));
    });

here my way

in activity class:

    public class MyActivity extends AppCompatActivity implements EmployeeAdapter.ClickListener {
    ...
    @Override
    public void onClick(int position) { ... }
    ...
    }

in adapter class:

    public class MyAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<MyAdapter.MyViewHolder> {
    ...
    @Override
    public void onBindViewHolder(){
         holder.textView1.setOnClickListener(v -> clickListener.onClick(position));
    }
    ...
    public interface ClickListener {
        void onClick(int position);
    }
    ...
    }

Recyclerview adapter with kotlin

You can achive item click listener by two ways in adapter.

1st way is using interface

In your activity class:

class YourActivity : AppCompatActivity(), TestAdapter.ClickListener {
...
override fun itemClicked() {

}
...
}

In your adapter class:

class MyAdapter : RecyclerView.Adapter<MyAdapter.MyViewHolder> {
...
override fun onBindViewHolder(holder: ViewHolder, position: Int) {
     holder.textView1.setOnClickListener { 
        clickListener.itemClicked(position) 
     }
}
...
interface ClickListener {
     fun itemClicked(position : Int)
}
...
}

2nd way is using callBack invoke

In your adapter class:

class MyAdapter(val callBack: (pos:Int) -> Unit) : RecyclerView.Adapter<MyAdapter.MyViewHolder> {
...
override fun onBindViewHolder(holder: ViewHolder, position: Int) {
     holder.textView1.setOnClickListener { 
        callBack(position)
     }
}
}

In your activity class:

class YourActivity : AppCompatActivity() {
...
val testAdapter = TestAdapter(
            callBack = { index ->
               
            })
binding.recyclerView.layoutManager = LinearLayoutManager(this)
binding.recyclerView.adapter = testAdapter
...
}

This works.

public class ServiceListAdapter extends RecyclerView.Adapter<ServiceListAdapter.ViewHolder> {

private final Context mContext;
private List<ServiceListModel> categoryList;
private View.OnClickListener onClickListener;

public ServiceListAdapter(Context mContext, List<ServiceListModel> categoryList, View.OnClickListener onClickListener) {
    this.categoryList = categoryList;
    this.mContext = mContext;
    this.onClickListener = onClickListener;
}

@Override
public ViewHolder onCreateViewHolder(final ViewGroup parent, final int viewType) {
    final LayoutInflater inflater = LayoutInflater.from(parent.getContext());
    final RowServiceListBinding binding = DataBindingUtil.inflate(inflater, R.layout.row_service_list, parent, false);
    return new ViewHolder(binding.getRoot(), binding);
}

@Override
public void onBindViewHolder(final ViewHolder holder, final int position) {
    holder.binding.rlService.setOnClickListener(onClickListener);
    holder.binding.rlService.setTag(position);
}

@Override
public int getItemCount() {
    return categoryList.size();
}

public class ViewHolder extends RecyclerView.ViewHolder {
    private final RowServiceListBinding binding;

    public ViewHolder(final View view, final RowServiceListBinding binding) {
        super(view);
        this.binding = binding;
    }

    @UiThread
    public void bind(final ServiceListModel mAddressModel) {
        //this.binding.setAddress(mAddressModel);
    }
}
}

Use in activity/fragment

ServiceListAdapter adapter = new ServiceListAdapter(context, serviceList, new View.OnClickListener() {
        @Override
        public void onClick(View v) {
            switch (v.getId()) {
                case R.id.rlService:
                    int pos = (int) v.getTag();
                    serviceList.remove(position);
                    break;
            }
        }
    });

The technical post webpages of this site follow the CC BY-SA 4.0 protocol. If you need to reprint, please indicate the site URL or the original address.Any question please contact:yoyou2525@163.com.

 
粤ICP备18138465号  © 2020-2024 STACKOOM.COM