Java tutorial
/* * Copyright (C) 2006 The Android Open Source Project * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package android.text.method; import android.text.Editable; import android.view.KeyEvent; import android.view.View; /** * Interface for converting text key events into edit operations on an * Editable class. Note that for most cases this interface has been * superceded by general soft input methods as defined by * {@link android.view.inputmethod.InputMethod}; it should only be used * for cases where an application has its own on-screen keypad and also wants * to process hard keyboard events to match it. * <p></p> * Key presses on soft input methods are not required to trigger the methods * in this listener, and are in fact discouraged to do so. The default * android keyboard will not trigger these for any key to any application * targetting Jelly Bean or later, and will only deliver it for some * key presses to applications targetting Ice Cream Sandwich or earlier. */ public interface KeyListener { /** * Return the type of text that this key listener is manipulating, * as per {@link android.text.InputType}. This is used to * determine the mode of the soft keyboard that is shown for the editor. * * <p>If you return * {@link android.text.InputType#TYPE_NULL} * then <em>no</em> soft keyboard will provided. In other words, you * must be providing your own key pad for on-screen input and the key * listener will be used to handle input from a hard keyboard. * * <p>If you * return any other value, a soft input method will be created when the * user puts focus in the editor, which will provide a keypad and also * consume hard key events. This means that the key listener will generally * not be used, instead the soft input method will take care of managing * key input as per the content type returned here. */ public int getInputType(); /** * If the key listener wants to handle this key, return true, * otherwise return false and the caller (i.e. the widget host) * will handle the key. */ public boolean onKeyDown(View view, Editable text, int keyCode, KeyEvent event); /** * If the key listener wants to handle this key release, return true, * otherwise return false and the caller (i.e. the widget host) * will handle the key. */ public boolean onKeyUp(View view, Editable text, int keyCode, KeyEvent event); /** * If the key listener wants to other kinds of key events, return true, * otherwise return false and the caller (i.e. the widget host) * will handle the key. */ public boolean onKeyOther(View view, Editable text, KeyEvent event); /** * Remove the given shift states from the edited text. */ public void clearMetaKeyState(View view, Editable content, int states); }