Difference Between OnClickListener vs OnClick:
- OnClickListener is the interface you need to implement and can be set
to a view in java code.
- OnClickListener is what waits for someone
to actually click, onclick determines what happens when someone
clicks.
- Lately android added a xml attribute to views called android:onclick,
that can be used to handle clicks directly in the view's activity
without need to implement any interface.
- You could easily swap one listener implementation with another if you need to.
- An OnClickListener enable you to separate the action/behavior of the click event from the View that triggers the event. While for simple cases this is not such a big deal, for complex event handling, this could mean better readability and maintainability of the code
- Since OnClickListener is an interface, the class that implements it has flexibilities in determining the instance variables and methods that it needs in order to handle the event. Again, this is not a big deal in simple cases, but for complex cases, we don't want to necessary mix up the variables/methods that related to event handling with the code of the View that triggers the event.
- The onClick with function binding in XML Layout is a binding between onClick and the function that it will call. The function have to have one argument (the View) in order for onClick to function.
Both function the same way, just that one gets set through java code and the other through xml code.
setOnClickListener Code Implementation:
Button btn = (Button) findViewById(R.id.mybutton);
btn.setOnClickListener(new View.OnClickListener() {
@Override
public void onClick(View v) {
myFancyMethod(v);
}
});
// some more code
public void myFancyMethod(View v) {
// does something very interesting
}
XML Implementation:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!-- layout elements -->
<Button android:id="@+id/mybutton"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:text="Click me!"
android:onClick="myFancyMethod" />
<!-- even more layout elements -->
Performance:
Both are the same in performance. Xml is pre-parsed into binary code while compiling. so there is no over-head in Xml.
Limitation:
android:onClick is for API level 4 onwards, so if you're targeting < 1.6, then you can't use it.
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