/* * Copyright (C) 2006 The Android Open Source Project * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package android.view; import android.graphics.Rect; import android.view.accessibility.AccessibilityEvent; /** * Defines the responsibilities for a class that will be a parent of a View. * This is the API that a view sees when it wants to interact with its parent. * */ public interface ViewParent { /** * Called when something has changed which has invalidated the layout of a * child of this view parent. This will schedule a layout pass of the view * tree. */ public void requestLayout(); /** * Indicates whether layout was requested on this view parent. * * @return true if layout was requested, false otherwise */ public boolean isLayoutRequested(); /** * Called when a child wants the view hierarchy to gather and report * transparent regions to the window compositor. Views that "punch" holes in * the view hierarchy, such as SurfaceView can use this API to improve * performance of the system. When no such a view is present in the * hierarchy, this optimization in unnecessary and might slightly reduce the * view hierarchy performance. * * @param child the view requesting the transparent region computation * */ public void requestTransparentRegion(View child); /** * All or part of a child is dirty and needs to be redrawn. * * @param child The child which is dirty * @param r The area within the child that is invalid */ public void invalidateChild(View child, Rect r); /** * All or part of a child is dirty and needs to be redrawn. * *
The location array is an array of two int values which respectively * define the left and the top position of the dirty child.
* *This method must return the parent of this ViewParent if the specified * rectangle must be invalidated in the parent. If the specified rectangle * does not require invalidation in the parent or if the parent does not * exist, this method must return null.
* *When this method returns a non-null value, the location array must * have been updated with the left and top coordinates of this ViewParent.
* * @param location An array of 2 ints containing the left and top * coordinates of the child to invalidate * @param r The area within the child that is invalid * * @return the parent of this ViewParent or null */ public ViewParent invalidateChildInParent(int[] location, Rect r); /** * Returns the parent if it exists, or null. * * @return a ViewParent or null if this ViewParent does not have a parent */ public ViewParent getParent(); /** * Called when a child of this parent wants focus * * @param child The child of this ViewParent that wants focus. This view * will contain the focused view. It is not necessarily the view that * actually has focus. * @param focused The view that is a descendant of child that actually has * focus */ public void requestChildFocus(View child, View focused); /** * Tell view hierarchy that the global view attributes need to be * re-evaluated. * * @param child View whose attributes have changed. */ public void recomputeViewAttributes(View child); /** * Called when a child of this parent is giving up focus * * @param child The view that is giving up focus */ public void clearChildFocus(View child); /** * Compute the visible part of a rectangular region defined in terms of a child view's * coordinates. * *Returns the clipped visible part of the rectangle r
, defined in the
* child
's local coordinate system. r
is modified by this method to
* contain the result, expressed in the global (root) coordinate system.
The resulting rectangle is always axis aligned. If a rotation is applied to a node in the * View hierarchy, the result is the axis-aligned bounding box of the visible rectangle.
* * @param child A child View, whose rectangular visible region we want to compute * @param r The input rectangle, defined in the child coordinate system. Will be overwritten to * contain the resulting visible rectangle, expressed in global (root) coordinates * @param offset The input coordinates of a point, defined in the child coordinate system. * As with ther
parameter, this will be overwritten to contain the global (root)
* coordinates of that point.
* A null
value is valid (in case you are not interested in this result)
* @return true if the resulting rectangle is not empty, false otherwise
*/
public boolean getChildVisibleRect(View child, Rect r, android.graphics.Point offset);
/**
* Find the nearest view in the specified direction that wants to take focus
*
* @param v The view that currently has focus
* @param direction One of FOCUS_UP, FOCUS_DOWN, FOCUS_LEFT, and FOCUS_RIGHT
*/
public View focusSearch(View v, int direction);
/**
* Change the z order of the child so it's on top of all other children
*
* @param child
*/
public void bringChildToFront(View child);
/**
* Tells the parent that a new focusable view has become available. This is
* to handle transitions from the case where there are no focusable views to
* the case where the first focusable view appears.
*
* @param v The view that has become newly focusable
*/
public void focusableViewAvailable(View v);
/**
* Bring up a context menu for the specified view or its ancestors.
*
* In most cases, a subclass does not need to override this. However, if * the subclass is added directly to the window manager (for example, * {@link ViewManager#addView(View, android.view.ViewGroup.LayoutParams)}) * then it should override this and show the context menu.
* * @param originalView The source view where the context menu was first invoked * @return true if a context menu was displayed */ public boolean showContextMenuForChild(View originalView); /** * Have the parent populate the specified context menu if it has anything to * add (and then recurse on its parent). * * @param menu The menu to populate */ public void createContextMenu(ContextMenu menu); /** * Start an action mode for the specified view. * *In most cases, a subclass does not need to override this. However, if the * subclass is added directly to the window manager (for example, * {@link ViewManager#addView(View, android.view.ViewGroup.LayoutParams)}) * then it should override this and start the action mode.
* * @param originalView The source view where the action mode was first invoked * @param callback The callback that will handle lifecycle events for the action mode * @return The new action mode if it was started, null otherwise */ public ActionMode startActionModeForChild(View originalView, ActionMode.Callback callback); /** * This method is called on the parent when a child's drawable state * has changed. * * @param child The child whose drawable state has changed. */ public void childDrawableStateChanged(View child); /** * Called when a child does not want this parent and its ancestors to * intercept touch events with * {@link ViewGroup#onInterceptTouchEvent(MotionEvent)}. * *This parent should pass this call onto its parents. This parent must obey * this request for the duration of the touch (that is, only clear the flag * after this parent has received an up or a cancel.
* * @param disallowIntercept True if the child does not want the parent to * intercept touch events. */ public void requestDisallowInterceptTouchEvent(boolean disallowIntercept); /** * Called when a child of this group wants a particular rectangle to be * positioned onto the screen. {@link ViewGroup}s overriding this can trust * that: *{@link ViewGroup}s overriding this should uphold the contract:
** Note: An accessibility event is fired by an individual view which populates the * event with a record for its state and requests from its parent to perform * the sending. The parent can optionally add a record for itself before * dispatching the request to its parent. A parent can also choose not to * respect the request for sending the event. The accessibility event is sent * by the topmost view in the view tree.
* * @param child The child which requests sending the event. * @param event The event to be sent. * @return True if the event was sent. */ public boolean requestSendAccessibilityEvent(View child, AccessibilityEvent event); /** * Called when a child view now has or no longer is tracking transient state. * * @param child Child view whose state has changed * @param hasTransientState true if this child has transient state * * @hide */ public void childHasTransientStateChanged(View child, boolean hasTransientState); /** * Ask that a new dispatch of {@link View#fitSystemWindows(Rect) * View.fitSystemWindows(Rect)} be performed. */ public void requestFitSystemWindows(); /** * Gets the parent of a given View for accessibility. Since some Views are not * exposed to the accessibility layer the parent for accessibility is not * necessarily the direct parent of the View, rather it is a predecessor. * * @return The parent ornull
if no such is found.
*/
public ViewParent getParentForAccessibility();
/**
* A child notifies its parent that its state for accessibility has changed.
* That is some of the child properties reported to accessibility services has
* changed, hence the interested services have to be notified for the new state.
*
* @hide
*/
public void childAccessibilityStateChanged(View child);
}