Have a look at the Android developers page:
http://developer.android.com/training/basics/fragments/communicating.html#DefineInterface
Basically, you define an interface in your Fragment A, and let your Activity implement that Interface. Now you can call the interface method in your Fragment, and your Activity will receive the event. Now in your activity, you can call your second Fragment to update the textview with the received value
Your Activity implements your interface (See FragmentA below)
public class YourActivity implements FragmentA.TextClicked{
@Override
public void sendText(String text){
// Get Fragment B
FraB frag = (FragB)
getSupportFragmentManager().findFragmentById(R.id.fragment_b);
frag.updateText(text);
}
}
Fragment A defines an Interface, and calls the method when needed
public class FragA extends Fragment{
TextClicked mCallback;
public interface TextClicked{
public void sendText(String text);
}
@Override
public void onAttach(Activity activity) {
super.onAttach(activity);
// This makes sure that the container activity has implemented
// the callback interface. If not, it throws an exception
try {
mCallback = (TextClicked) activity;
} catch (ClassCastException e) {
throw new ClassCastException(activity.toString()
+ " must implement TextClicked");
}
}
public void someMethod(){
mCallback.sendText("YOUR TEXT");
}
@Override
public void onDetach() {
mCallback = null; // => avoid leaking, thanks @Deepscorn
super.onDetach();
}
}
Fragment B has a public method to do something with the text
public class FragB extends Fragment{
public void updateText(String text){
// Here you have it
}
}
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…