android.content.res.Resources$NotFoundException when programmatically setting android.R.attr.listChoiceIndicatorMultiple

StackOverflow https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4783002

Question

I'm trying to programmatically set the "android:checkMark" attribute on CheckedTextView items I have in a ListView. When running my application I get the following exception:

android.content.res.Resources$NotFoundException: Resource ID #0x101021a

The resource with ID #0x101021a corresponds to android.R.attr.listChoiceIndicatorMultiple, which is exactly the value I am passing to my CheckedTextView:

mCheckedTextView.setCheckMarkDrawable(android.R.attr.listChoiceIndicatorMultiple)

Isn't this the way to do it from Java? I tried (and succeeded) to trigger the desired behaviour from XML layout:

<CheckedTextView
    android:layout_width="match_parent"
    android:layout_height="wrap_content"
    android:checkMark="?android:attr/listChoiceIndicatorMultiple"
    android:id="@android:id/text1" />

The thing is that I don't know at compile time if it should be

android:checkMark="?android:attr/listChoiceIndicatorMultiple"

or

android:checkMark="?android:attr/listChoiceIndicatorSingle"

Hence, I need to set these values at runtime.

Was it helpful?

Solution

I would guess that programmatically setting an attribute reference rather than a Drawable reference is the problem.

In this case, android.R.attr.listChoiceIndicatorMultiple corresponds to android.R.drawable.btn_check, so you could try setting that instead.


Or, if you can obtain the attributes, you could call getDrawable() on the TypedArray to dynamically fetch the Drawable value.

Edit:
Since the value of listChoiceIndicatorMultiple depends on the current theme, you need to ask the current theme to resolve the reference:

int[] attrs = { android.R.attr.listChoiceIndicatorMultiple };
TypedArray ta = getContext().getTheme().obtainStyledAttributes(attrs);
Drawable indicator = ta.getDrawable(0);
view.setCheckMarkDrawable(indicator);
ta.recycle();

Be sure to cache the drawables, rather than performing this manoeuvre for every item in your ListView.

That's just a very basic example, but it works with the default theme. I'm not exactly sure what needs to be done to resolve attrs fully if you have a custom theme.

OTHER TIPS

If using the appcompat library simple alternatives would be:

setCheckMarkDrawable(android.support.v7.appcompat.R.drawable.abc_btn_check_material);

or:

setCheckMarkDrawable(android.support.v7.appcompat.R.drawable.abc_btn_radio_material);  
Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top