LayoutManager for RecyclerView Grid with different cell width

Finally did it, it will help everyone who is trying to achieve any kind of patterns

I was looking for the same result but with one header and lazy loading footer. I tried @Kristyna answers of Nick Butcher Library too. But it has many issues like fast scrolling view disappear problem with the extra space or fixed cell height issue.

I found another library of Arasthel SpannedGridLayoutManager and tried to implement it. But it also has many issues like fixed height and footers extra space issue

Finally, after 5hr of digging Arasthel's SpannedGridLayoutManager, I fixed the issues and found my result.

My final edited forked library download from here SpannedGridLayoutManager.

enter image description here enter image description here

In my case

  val adapter = GridItemAdapter()//This is your adapter
  val spannedGridLayoutManager = SpannedGridLayoutManager(orientation = VERTICAL, spans = 3)
  spannedGridLayoutManager.itemOrderIsStable = true
  recyclerview.layoutManager = spannedGridLayoutManager

For the first image result

  spannedGridLayoutManager.spanSizeLookup = SpannedGridLayoutManager.SpanSizeLookup { position ->
        when {
            position == 0 -> {
                /**
                 * 150f is now static 
                 * should calculate programmatically in runtime
                 * for to manage header hight for different resolution devices
                 */
                SpanSize(3, 1, 150f)
            }
            position % 7 == 1 ->
                SpanSize(2, 2)
            else ->
                SpanSize(1, 1)
        }
    }
  recyclerview.adapter = adapter

And the second image result

 spannedGridLayoutManager.spanSizeLookup = SpannedGridLayoutManager.SpanSizeLookup { position ->
        when (position % 8) {
            0, 5 ->
                SpanSize(2, 2)
            3, 7 ->
                SpanSize(3, 2)
            else ->
                SpanSize(1, 1)
        }
    }
    recyclerview.adapter = adapter

This spanSizeLookup logic may vary according to the requirement, for me I had set it randomly for testing purposes.


You can use StaggeredGridLayoutManager.LayoutParams to change width and height of cells, What you expect to design follows a simple pattern, If you assign every cell an index (in the order that StaggeredGridLayoutManager arranges them by default) you will have this:

index % 4 == 3           --->  full span cell
index % 8 == 0, 5        --->  half span cell
index % 8 == 1, 2, 4, 6  ---> quarter span cell

first declare some constants in adapter to define span types:

private static final int TYPE_FULL = 0;
private static final int TYPE_HALF = 1;
private static final int TYPE_QUARTER = 2;

Then override getItemViewType method in your adapter like this:

@Override
public int getItemViewType(int position) {
    final int modeEight = position % 8;
    switch (modeEight) {
        case 0:
        case 5:
            return TYPE_HALF;
        case 1:
        case 2:
        case 4:
        case 6:
            return TYPE_QUARTER;
    }
    return TYPE_FULL;
}

All you need to do is change layoutparams considering viewType of the holder:

@Override
public MyHolder onCreateViewHolder(final ViewGroup parent, final int viewType) {
    final View itemView =
            LayoutInflater.from(mContext).inflate(R.layout.items, parent, false);
    itemView.getViewTreeObserver().addOnPreDrawListener(new ViewTreeObserver.OnPreDrawListener() {
        @Override
        public boolean onPreDraw() {
            final int type = viewType;
            final ViewGroup.LayoutParams lp = itemView.getLayoutParams();
            if (lp instanceof StaggeredGridLayoutManager.LayoutParams) {
                StaggeredGridLayoutManager.LayoutParams sglp =
                        (StaggeredGridLayoutManager.LayoutParams) lp;
                switch (type) {
                    case TYPE_FULL:
                        sglp.setFullSpan(true);
                        break;
                    case TYPE_HALF:
                        sglp.setFullSpan(false);
                        sglp.width = itemView.getWidth() / 2;
                        break;
                    case TYPE_QUARTER:
                        sglp.setFullSpan(false);
                        sglp.width = itemView.getWidth() / 2;
                        sglp.height = itemView.getHeight() / 2;
                        break;
                }
                itemView.setLayoutParams(sglp);
                final StaggeredGridLayoutManager lm =
                        (StaggeredGridLayoutManager) ((RecyclerView) parent).getLayoutManager();
                lm.invalidateSpanAssignments();
            }
            itemView.getViewTreeObserver().removeOnPreDrawListener(this);
            return true;
        }
    });

    MyHolder holder = new MyHolder(itemView);
    return holder;
}

My adapter always returns 50 for items count(just a test) and I used a simple layout file for items, It contains a LinearLayout and a TextView to show the position of holder, Remember you should pass 2 for spanCount (int the StaggeredGridLayoutManager constructor) because of your design.

@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
    setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
    RecyclerView rv = (RecyclerView) findViewById(R.id.rv);
    StaggeredGridLayoutManager lm =
            new StaggeredGridLayoutManager(2, StaggeredGridLayoutManager.VERTICAL);
    rv.setLayoutManager(lm);
    rv.setAdapter(new MyAdapter(this));

}

enter image description here

PS: For lazy people like me maybe it's a simpler way rather than extending my custom LayoutManager, But I'm sure there are better ways to achieve this.

Update: Updated part of your question is more simpler, You can use GridLayoutManager:

    GridLayoutManager glm = new GridLayoutManager(this, 3);
    glm.setSpanSizeLookup(new GridLayoutManager.SpanSizeLookup() {
        @Override
        public int getSpanSize(int position) {
            if (position % 3 == 2) {
                return 3;
            }
            switch (position % 4) {
                case 1:
                case 3:
                    return 1;
                case 0:
                case 2:
                    return 2;
                default:
                    //never gonna happen
                    return  -1 ;
            }
        }
    });
    rv.setLayoutManager(glm);

In this way you set 3 for default span size, Then considering the position of your span, Each item occupies 1, 2 or 3 spans, Something like this:

enter image description here

Item0.width == 2 X Item1.width
Item2.width == 3 X Item1.width
Item0.width == 2/3 X Item1.width

For everyone else, looking for a solution without simplifying your layout, you can have a look to my answer here, or you can read more.

Big thanks to Nick Butcher! His layout manager called SpannableGridLayoutManager is capable of doing this.

  1. Download SpannableGridLayoutManager from here

    For some reason I had to change this line:

    while (availableSpace > 0 && lastVisiblePosition < lastItemPosition) {
    

    to

    while (lastVisiblePosition < lastItemPosition) {
    

    to got the manager working.

  2. Set SpannableGridLayoutManger to your RecyclerView

In your case:

SpannedGridLayoutManager manager = new SpannedGridLayoutManager(
            new SpannedGridLayoutManager.GridSpanLookup() {
                @Override
                public SpannedGridLayoutManager.SpanInfo getSpanInfo(int position) {
                    switch (position % 8) {
                        case 0:
                        case 5:
                            return new SpannedGridLayoutManager.SpanInfo(2, 2);

                        case 3:
                        case 7:
                            return new SpannedGridLayoutManager.SpanInfo(3, 2);

                        default:
                            return new SpannedGridLayoutManager.SpanInfo(1, 1);
                    }
                }
            },
            3, // number of columns
            1f // default size of item
    );

Which will give you exactly what is in the first picture of the question.

enter image description here