Initializing a Fragment
I am new to Android and having an issue in initializing Fragment
I am looking at two lines of code and cannot figure out the actual difference between these two approaches and which one to opt. Kindly suggest
1) SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
2) SignUpFragment fragment = SignUpFragment.newInstance();
android-fragments
add a comment |
I am new to Android and having an issue in initializing Fragment
I am looking at two lines of code and cannot figure out the actual difference between these two approaches and which one to opt. Kindly suggest
1) SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
2) SignUpFragment fragment = SignUpFragment.newInstance();
android-fragments
add a comment |
I am new to Android and having an issue in initializing Fragment
I am looking at two lines of code and cannot figure out the actual difference between these two approaches and which one to opt. Kindly suggest
1) SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
2) SignUpFragment fragment = SignUpFragment.newInstance();
android-fragments
I am new to Android and having an issue in initializing Fragment
I am looking at two lines of code and cannot figure out the actual difference between these two approaches and which one to opt. Kindly suggest
1) SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
2) SignUpFragment fragment = SignUpFragment.newInstance();
android-fragments
android-fragments
edited Nov 13 '18 at 11:31
Samuel Robert
3,34552034
3,34552034
asked Nov 13 '18 at 11:05
Abhilash GuptaAbhilash Gupta
34
34
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
I personally use the first one as it will make a new object of signupFragment ,while the second option will make a new instance of that class.The difference between both is defined in the below link.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3323330/difference-between-object-and-instance
add a comment |
If you have no arguments to pass to fragment you can use first one.
SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
But if you have arguments you can use factory methods such as second one to hide creating bundle and putting the arguments' boilerplate codes.
ProfileFragment fragment = ProfileFragment.newInstance(userId);
public class ProfileFragment extends Fragment
public static ProfileFragment newInstance(int userId)
Bundle args = new Bundle();
args.putInt("userId", userId);
ProfileFragment fragment = new ProfileFragment();
fragment.setArguements(args);
return fragment;
add a comment |
1) SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
You should only use in case you do NOT need to create SignUpFragment instance more frequently.
2) SignUpFragment fragment = SignUpFragment.newInstance();
This is more recommended approach. In which, you would going to follow Singleton pattern for creating Instance of your class and more generic methods can be created in future if needed.
SignUpFragment.newInstance() is not a singleton pattern. It creates new object event time
– Samuel Robert
Nov 13 '18 at 11:39
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I personally use the first one as it will make a new object of signupFragment ,while the second option will make a new instance of that class.The difference between both is defined in the below link.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3323330/difference-between-object-and-instance
add a comment |
I personally use the first one as it will make a new object of signupFragment ,while the second option will make a new instance of that class.The difference between both is defined in the below link.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3323330/difference-between-object-and-instance
add a comment |
I personally use the first one as it will make a new object of signupFragment ,while the second option will make a new instance of that class.The difference between both is defined in the below link.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3323330/difference-between-object-and-instance
I personally use the first one as it will make a new object of signupFragment ,while the second option will make a new instance of that class.The difference between both is defined in the below link.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3323330/difference-between-object-and-instance
answered Nov 13 '18 at 11:25
Saad MaqboolSaad Maqbool
1869
1869
add a comment |
add a comment |
If you have no arguments to pass to fragment you can use first one.
SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
But if you have arguments you can use factory methods such as second one to hide creating bundle and putting the arguments' boilerplate codes.
ProfileFragment fragment = ProfileFragment.newInstance(userId);
public class ProfileFragment extends Fragment
public static ProfileFragment newInstance(int userId)
Bundle args = new Bundle();
args.putInt("userId", userId);
ProfileFragment fragment = new ProfileFragment();
fragment.setArguements(args);
return fragment;
add a comment |
If you have no arguments to pass to fragment you can use first one.
SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
But if you have arguments you can use factory methods such as second one to hide creating bundle and putting the arguments' boilerplate codes.
ProfileFragment fragment = ProfileFragment.newInstance(userId);
public class ProfileFragment extends Fragment
public static ProfileFragment newInstance(int userId)
Bundle args = new Bundle();
args.putInt("userId", userId);
ProfileFragment fragment = new ProfileFragment();
fragment.setArguements(args);
return fragment;
add a comment |
If you have no arguments to pass to fragment you can use first one.
SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
But if you have arguments you can use factory methods such as second one to hide creating bundle and putting the arguments' boilerplate codes.
ProfileFragment fragment = ProfileFragment.newInstance(userId);
public class ProfileFragment extends Fragment
public static ProfileFragment newInstance(int userId)
Bundle args = new Bundle();
args.putInt("userId", userId);
ProfileFragment fragment = new ProfileFragment();
fragment.setArguements(args);
return fragment;
If you have no arguments to pass to fragment you can use first one.
SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
But if you have arguments you can use factory methods such as second one to hide creating bundle and putting the arguments' boilerplate codes.
ProfileFragment fragment = ProfileFragment.newInstance(userId);
public class ProfileFragment extends Fragment
public static ProfileFragment newInstance(int userId)
Bundle args = new Bundle();
args.putInt("userId", userId);
ProfileFragment fragment = new ProfileFragment();
fragment.setArguements(args);
return fragment;
edited Nov 13 '18 at 11:30
answered Nov 13 '18 at 11:25
Samuel RobertSamuel Robert
3,34552034
3,34552034
add a comment |
add a comment |
1) SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
You should only use in case you do NOT need to create SignUpFragment instance more frequently.
2) SignUpFragment fragment = SignUpFragment.newInstance();
This is more recommended approach. In which, you would going to follow Singleton pattern for creating Instance of your class and more generic methods can be created in future if needed.
SignUpFragment.newInstance() is not a singleton pattern. It creates new object event time
– Samuel Robert
Nov 13 '18 at 11:39
add a comment |
1) SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
You should only use in case you do NOT need to create SignUpFragment instance more frequently.
2) SignUpFragment fragment = SignUpFragment.newInstance();
This is more recommended approach. In which, you would going to follow Singleton pattern for creating Instance of your class and more generic methods can be created in future if needed.
SignUpFragment.newInstance() is not a singleton pattern. It creates new object event time
– Samuel Robert
Nov 13 '18 at 11:39
add a comment |
1) SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
You should only use in case you do NOT need to create SignUpFragment instance more frequently.
2) SignUpFragment fragment = SignUpFragment.newInstance();
This is more recommended approach. In which, you would going to follow Singleton pattern for creating Instance of your class and more generic methods can be created in future if needed.
1) SignUpFragment fragment = new SignUpFragment();
You should only use in case you do NOT need to create SignUpFragment instance more frequently.
2) SignUpFragment fragment = SignUpFragment.newInstance();
This is more recommended approach. In which, you would going to follow Singleton pattern for creating Instance of your class and more generic methods can be created in future if needed.
answered Nov 13 '18 at 11:35
Bhavesh PatadiyaBhavesh Patadiya
22.2k136899
22.2k136899
SignUpFragment.newInstance() is not a singleton pattern. It creates new object event time
– Samuel Robert
Nov 13 '18 at 11:39
add a comment |
SignUpFragment.newInstance() is not a singleton pattern. It creates new object event time
– Samuel Robert
Nov 13 '18 at 11:39
SignUpFragment.newInstance() is not a singleton pattern. It creates new object event time
– Samuel Robert
Nov 13 '18 at 11:39
SignUpFragment.newInstance() is not a singleton pattern. It creates new object event time
– Samuel Robert
Nov 13 '18 at 11:39
add a comment |
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