Android - getTargetFragment and setTargetFragment - What are they used for
Use case = 2 fragments hosted by the same activity.
Where startActivityForResult()
establishes a relationship between 2 activities, setTargetFragment()
defines the caller/called relationship between 2 fragments.
setTargetFragment(target) lets the "called" fragment know where to send the result. onActivityResult()
is called manually in this case.
public class Caller extends Fragment
Fragment called = Called.newInstance()
called.setTargetFragment(this)
public class Called extends DialogFragment
intent = amazingData
getTargetFragment().onActivityResult(getTargetRequestCode(), resultCode, intent)
From what I was able to take away from reading the docs was that these methods are another way of accessing data from another Fragment. Here is a sample project that I wrote that demonstrates a single use case for using these methods. I'm sure there are more use cases though...
i finally found out how to use setTarget
in a fragment and wanted to share. its quite useful when you want to communicate from fragment to fragment.
here is an example: let's say you wanted to show a dialog and when it closes you want to do some action.
so in your fragment1
that will use the dialog you could do this:
myDialogFragment.setTargetFragment(fragment1, myDialogFragment.REQ_CODE);
and in your fragment that called the dialog you would need to override onActivityResult
like this:
@Override
public void onActivityResult(int requestCode, int resultCode, Intent data) {
if(requestCode == CoDDialogFragment.REQ_CODE)
exit(); //or whatever you want to do here
}
and in the myDialogFragment
you could do this:
TellTargetYouGotResults(REQ_CODE);
//...
private void TellTargetYouGotResults(int code) {
Fragment targetFragment = getTargetFragment(); // fragment1 in our case
if (targetFragment != null) {
targetFragment.onActivityResult(getTargetRequestCode(), code, null);
}
}
where REQ_CODE can be any int of course . Very useful for fragment to fragment communication. but i still prefer event bus as sometimes after sending data to a target its view might have already been destroyed (incase its a fragment) and then if you try to update the view in onActivityResult
you'll get a crash. so i'd say its useful to just pass data along but not update the UI unless you've done a 'add' fragment transaction and not a replace (which destroys the view but keeps state).