How to get listener of a view

create classes that implements OnClickListener

public static class MyClickListener1 implements OnClickListener{
    Activity mActivity;
    MyClickListener1(Acivity activity){
      mActivity=activity;
    }
    @Override
    public void onClick(View v) {
            //do something
    }
}

public static class MyClickListener2 implements OnClickListener{
    @Override
    public void onClick(View v) {
            //do something
    }
}

and in your code you can easily use them:

btn.setOnClickListener(new MyClickListener1(this));
btn.setOnClickListener(new MyClickListener2());

or you can create instances and reuse them:

OnClickListener listener1 = new MyClickListener1(this);
OnClickListener listener2 = new MyClickListener2();
btn.setOnClickListener(listener1);
btn.setOnClickListener(listener2);

you can also define a constructor to pass whatever you need in these classes. I usually pass the activity like in MyClickListener1

EDIT: If you want to have the listener like object in the button, you can use the tag.

btn.setTag(listener1);
btn.setOnClickListener(listener1);

and then to get it use

OnClickListener old_listener = (OnClickListenr)btn.getTag();

Thanks to mihail's hint (thanks for that :)) )with the hidden API, I've found a solution to get a listener back after assignment:

The android.view.View class has a nested class static class ListenerInfo that stores all listeners on a View (API 14+). In older versions the listeners are private fields in the android.view.View.

The field can be accessed with reflection. In my case (API 14+),

// get the nested class `android.view.View$ListenerInfo`
Field listenerInfoField = null;
listenerInfoField = Class.forName("android.view.View").getDeclaredField("mListenerInfo");
if (listenerInfoField != null) {
    listenerInfoField.setAccessible(true);
}
Object myLiObject = null;
myLiObject = listenerInfoField.get(myViewObj);

// get the field mOnClickListener, that holds the listener and cast it to a listener
Field listenerField = null;
listenerField = Class.forName("android.view.View$ListenerInfo").getDeclaredField("mOnClickListener")
if (listenerField != null && myLiObject != null) {
    View.OnClickListener myListener = (View.OnClickListener) listenerField.get(myLiObject);
}

After that code (I missed a lot of try-catch-blocks), the myListener object holds the instance of the onClickListener, that has been anonymously declared to the view before. It also works with any other listener, just replace the "mOnClickListener parameter" with the one you need in the reflection and cast it correctly.

Note that code changes in upcoming versions can make that not working anymore.

Found the final tutorial here: http://andwise.net/?p=161