I am displaying a dialog with an edittext view. However, the softkeyboard will open only if the user presses inside the editview. So I tried calling an InputMethodManager with the following code.
InputMethodManager imm =
(InputMethodManager)getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
imm.showSoftInput(dialogField,0);
The dialogField is the input field. However, when exactly am I supposed to do this? I tried it in the onStart() method of the dialog, but nothing happens. I also tried requesting the focus for the dialogField before, but that changes nothing.
I also tried this code
dialogField.setOnFocusChangeListener(new View.OnFocusChangeListener()
{
public void onFocusChange (View v, boolean hasFocus)
{
if (hasFocus)
{
Main.log("here");
dialogInput.getWindow().setSoftInputMode(
WindowManager.LayoutParams.SOFT_INPUT_STATE_ALWAYS_VISIBLE);
/*
InputMethodManager mgr =
(InputMethodManager) getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
mgr.showSoftInput(dialogField,0);
*/
}
}
});
in both versions. But no soft keyboard would like to appear. The Main.log is just a log, which shows me that the function is actually called. And yes, it is called.
I could get the keyboard with the SHOW_FORCED flag before the dialog opens. But then it will not close on exit. And I can only do that BEFORE I show the dialog. Inside any callbacks it does not work either.
Awesome question, I was trying to do that too and found a solution.
Using the dialog builder class AlertDialog.Builder
you will have to invoke the dialog like this:
AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder();
AlertDialog dialog;
builder.set...
dialog = builder.create();
dialog.getWindow().setSoftInputMode(LayoutParams.SOFT_INPUT_STATE_VISIBLE);
dialog.show();
This worked fine for me.
Note: you must import android.view.WindowManager.LayoutParams;
for the constant value there.
AlertDialog dialog = new AlertDialog.Builder(this).create();
dialog.show();
Window window = dialog.getWindow();
window.clearFlags(WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_NOT_FOCUSABLE | WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_ALT_FOCUSABLE_IM);
window.setSoftInputMode(WindowManager.LayoutParams.SOFT_INPUT_STATE_ALWAYS_VISIBLE);
dialog.getWindow().setSoftInputMode()
after dialog.show()
on Android 4-8 has a nasty side effect: dialog remains on screen after configuration changes, still tied to already destroyed Activity/Fragment.
Kotlin
Here's the tested code.
val dialog = AlertDialog.Builder(requireContext()).apply {
setTitle(…)
setView(editText)
setPositiveButton(…)
setNegativeButton(…)
}
val window = dialog.show().window
window?.clearFlags(WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_NOT_FOCUSABLE or WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_ALT_FOCUSABLE_IM)
window?.setSoftInputMode(WindowManager.LayoutParams.SOFT_INPUT_STATE_ALWAYS_VISIBLE)
Make sure you access the window
property from show()
method. Getting window
from create()
method was returning null
for me, so the keyboard wasn't showing.
Import AlertDialog
from androidx.appcompat.app.AlertDialog
. Import WindowManager
from android.view
.
Dialog Fragment With Kotlin
override onStart Method
override fun onStart() {
super.onStart()
dialog.window?.
setSoftInputMode(
WindowManager.LayoutParams.SOFT_INPUT_STATE_ALWAYS_VISIBLE
)
}
if you want to close after dismiss then override dismiss method with below code
override fun onDismiss(dialog: DialogInterface?) {
val inputMethodManager = context?.getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE) as InputMethodManager
inputMethodManager.hideSoftInputFromWindow(activity?.currentFocus?.windowToken, InputMethodManager.HIDE_IMPLICIT_ONLY)
}
Here's my solution, it's working well for dialog.
txtFeedback.requestFocus();
InputMethodManager inputMethodManager = (InputMethodManager) getSystemService(Context.INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE);
inputMethodManager.toggleSoftInput(InputMethodManager.SHOW_FORCED, InputMethodManager.HIDE_IMPLICIT_ONLY);
Maybe also you need to add this to your activity tag in AndroidManifest.xml for closing the keyboard when the dialog is dismissed.
android:windowSoftInputMode="stateAlwaysHidden"
Success story sharing
setSoftInputMode()
must be called beforeshow()
.getWindow().setSoftInputMode(LayoutParams.SOFT_INPUT_STATE_VISIBLE);
from theonCreate()
method.