I would like a ScrollView to start all the way at the bottom. Any methods?
you should run the code inside the scroll.post like this:
scroll.post(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
scroll.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN);
}
});
scroll.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN)
also should work.
Put this in a scroll.Post(Runnable run)
Kotlin Code
scrollView.post {
scrollView.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN)
}
scroll.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN)
will lead to the change of focus. That will bring some strange behavior when there are more than one focusable views, e.g two EditText. There is another way for this question.
View lastChild = scrollLayout.getChildAt(scrollLayout.getChildCount() - 1);
int bottom = lastChild.getBottom() + scrollLayout.getPaddingBottom();
int sy = scrollLayout.getScrollY();
int sh = scrollLayout.getHeight();
int delta = bottom - (sy + sh);
scrollLayout.smoothScrollBy(0, delta);
This works well.
Kotlin Extension
fun ScrollView.scrollToBottom() {
val lastChild = getChildAt(childCount - 1)
val bottom = lastChild.bottom + paddingBottom
val delta = bottom - (scrollY+ height)
smoothScrollBy(0, delta)
}
Sometimes scrollView.post doesn't work
scrollView.post(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
scrollView.fullScroll(ScrollView.FOCUS_DOWN);
}
});
BUT if you use scrollView.postDelayed, it will definitely work
scrollView.postDelayed(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
scrollView.fullScroll(ScrollView.FOCUS_DOWN);
}
},1000);
What worked best for me is
scroll_view.post(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
// This method works but animates the scrolling
// which looks weird on first load
// scroll_view.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN);
// This method works even better because there are no animations.
scroll_view.scrollTo(0, scroll_view.getBottom());
}
});
I increment to work perfectly.
private void sendScroll(){
final Handler handler = new Handler();
new Thread(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
try {Thread.sleep(100);} catch (InterruptedException e) {}
handler.post(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
scrollView.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN);
}
});
}
}).start();
}
Note
This answer is a workaround for really old versions of android. Today the postDelayed
has no more that bug and you should use it.
postDelayed
:)
i tried that successful.
scrollView.postDelayed(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
scrollView.smoothScrollTo(0, scrollView.getHeight());
}
}, 1000);
When the view is not loaded yet, you cannot scroll. You can do it 'later' with a post or sleep call as above, but this is not very elegant.
It is better to plan the scroll and do it on the next onLayout(). Example code here:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/10209457/1310343
One thing to consider is what NOT to set. Make certain your child controls, especially EditText controls, do not have the RequestFocus property set. This may be one of the last interpreted properties on the layout and it will override gravity settings on its parents (the layout or ScrollView).
Here is some other ways to scroll to bottom
fun ScrollView.scrollToBottom() {
// use this for scroll immediately
scrollTo(0, this.getChildAt(0).height)
// or this for smooth scroll
//smoothScrollBy(0, this.getChildAt(0).height)
// or this for **very** smooth scroll
//ObjectAnimator.ofInt(this, "scrollY", this.getChildAt(0).height).setDuration(2000).start()
}
Using
If you scrollview already laid out
my_scroll_view.scrollToBottom()
If your scrollview is not finish laid out (eg: you scroll to bottom in Activity onCreate
method ...)
my_scroll_view.post {
my_scroll_view.scrollToBottom()
}
Not exactly the answer to the question, but I needed to scroll down as soon as an EditText got the focus. However the accepted answer would make the ET also lose focus right away (to the ScrollView I assume).
My workaround was the following:
emailEt.setOnFocusChangeListener(new View.OnFocusChangeListener() {
@Override
public void onFocusChange(View v, boolean hasFocus) {
if(hasFocus){
Toast.makeText(getActivity(), "got the focus", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
scrollView.postDelayed(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
scrollView.fullScroll(ScrollView.FOCUS_DOWN);
}
}, 200);
}else {
Toast.makeText(getActivity(), "lost the focus", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
}
});
I actually found that calling fullScroll twice does the trick:
myScrollView.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN);
myScrollView.post(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
myScrollView.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN);
}
});
It may have something to do with the activation of the post() method right after performing the first (unsuccessful) scroll. I think this behavior occurs after any previous method call on myScrollView, so you can try replacing the first fullScroll() method by anything else that may be relevant to you.
Using there is another cool way to do this with Kotlin coroutines. The advantage of using a coroutine opposed to a Handler with a runnable (post/postDelayed) is that it does not fire up an expensive thread to execute a delayed action.
launch(UI){
delay(300)
scrollView.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN)
}
It is important to specify the coroutine's HandlerContext as UI otherwise the delayed action might not be called from the UI thread.
In those case were using just scroll.scrollTo(0, sc.getBottom()) don't work, use it using scroll.post
Example:
scroll.post(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
scroll.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN);
}
});
One possible reason of why scroll.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN)
might not work even wrapped in .post()
is that the view is not laid out. In this case View.doOnLayout() could be a better option:
scroll.doOnLayout(){
scroll.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN)
}
Or, something more elaborated for the brave souls: https://chris.banes.dev/2019/12/03/suspending-views/
A combination of all answers did the trick for me:
Extension Function PostDelayed
private fun ScrollView.postDelayed(
time: Long = 325, // ms
block: ScrollView.() -> Unit
) {
postDelayed({block()}, time)
}
Extension Function measureScrollHeight
fun ScrollView.measureScrollHeight(): Int {
val lastChild = getChildAt(childCount - 1)
val bottom = lastChild.bottom + paddingBottom
val delta = bottom - (scrollY+ height)
return delta
}
Extension Function ScrolltoBottom
fun ScrollView.scrollToBottom() {
postDelayed {
smoothScrollBy(0, measureScrollHeight())
}
}
Be aware that the minimum delay should be at least 325ms or the scrolling will be buggy (not scrolling to the entire bottom). The larger your delta between the current height and the bottom is, the larger should be the delayed time.
Some people here said that scrollView.post didn't work.
If you don't want to use scrollView.postDelayed, another option is to use a listener. Here is what I did in another use case :
ViewTreeObserver.OnPreDrawListener viewVisibilityChanged = new ViewTreeObserver.OnPreDrawListener() {
@Override
public boolean onPreDraw() {
if (my_view.getVisibility() == View.VISIBLE) {
scroll_view.smoothScrollTo(0, scroll_view.getHeight());
}
return true;
}
};
You can add it to your view this way :
my_view.getViewTreeObserver().addOnPreDrawListener(viewVisibilityChanged);
If your minimum SDK is 29 or upper you could use this:
View childView = findViewById(R.id.your_view_id_in_the_scroll_view)
if(childView != null){
scrollview.post(() -> scrollview.scrollToDescendant(childView));
}
This works instantly. Without delay.
// wait for the scroll view to be laid out
scrollView.post(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
// then wait for the child of the scroll view (normally a LinearLayout) to be laid out
scrollView.getChildAt(0).post(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
// finally scroll without animation
scrollView.scrollTo(0, scrollView.getBottom());
}
}
}
}
Success story sharing
scroll.scrollTo(0, scroll.getHeight());
to jump to the bottom, orscroll.smoothScrollTo(0, scroll.getHeight());
for a smoother scrollscrollView.post { scrollView.fullScroll(View.FOCUS_DOWN) }