Book Image

Android Programming for Beginners - Second Edition

By : John Horton
Book Image

Android Programming for Beginners - Second Edition

By: John Horton

Overview of this book

Are you trying to start a career in programming, but haven't found the right way in? Do you have a great idea for an app, but don't know how to make it a reality? Or maybe you're just frustrated that in order to learn Android, you must know Java. If so, then this book is for you. This new and expanded second edition of Android Programming for Beginners will be your companion to create Android Pie applications from scratch. We will introduce you to all the fundamental concepts of programming in an Android context, from the basics of Java to working with the Android API. All examples use the up-to-date API classes, and are created from within Android Studio, the official Android development environment that helps supercharge your application development process. After this crash course, we'll dive deeper into Android programming and you'll learn how to create applications with a professional-standard UI through fragments and store your user's data with SQLite. In addition, you'll see how to make your apps multilingual, draw to the screen with a finger, and work with graphics, sound, and animations too. By the end of this book, you'll be ready to start building your own custom applications in Android and Java.
Table of Contents (35 chapters)
Android Programming for Beginners - Second Edition
Contributors
Preface
Other Books You May Enjoy
Index

Building a Fragment Pager/slider app


We can put whole fragments as pages in a PagerAdapter. This is quite powerful because, as we know, a Fragment can have a large amount of functionality, even a fully-fledged UI.

To keep the code short and straightforward, we will add a single TextView to each Fragment layout, just to demonstrate that the pager is working. When we see how easy it is to get a reference to the TextView, however, it should be obvious how we could easily add any layout we have learned so far and then let the user interact with it.

Note

In the next project, we will see yet another way to display multiple Fragment instances, NavigationView, and we will actually implement multiple coded Fragment instances.

The first thing we will do is build the content for the slider. In this case, of course, the content is Fragments. We will build one simple class called SimpleFragment, and one simple layout called fragment_layout.

You might think this implies that each slide will be identical in...