Guess I'm missing something obvious here but... I'm storing data in uiModel
in the DiaryViewModel class, and since I use architecture components I'm expecting the data to be retained through screen rotation - but it doesn't. I'm blind to why.
Here's a stripped down fragment
class DiaryFragment: Fragment() {
private lateinit var viewModel: DiaryViewModel
override onCreateView(...) {
viewModel = ViewModelProviders.of(this).get(DiaryViewModel::class.java)
viewModel.getModel().observe(this, Observer<DiaryUIModel> { uiModel ->
render(uiModel)
})
}
}
And the corresponding view model.
class DiaryViewModel: ViewModel() {
private var uiModel: MutableLiveData<DiaryUIModel>? = null
fun getModel(): LiveData<DiaryUIModel> {
if (uiModel == null) {
uiModel = MutableLiveData<DiaryUIModel>()
uiModel?.value = DiaryUIModel()
}
return uiModel as MutableLiveData<DiaryUIModel>
}
}
Can any one see what's missing in this simple example? Right now, uiModel
is set to null
when rotating the screen.
The issue was with how the activity was handling the fragment creation. MainActivity was always creating a new fragment per rotation, as in
override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState)
setContentView(R.layout.activity_main)
supportFragmentManager
.beginTransaction()
.replace(overlay.id, DiaryFragment.newInstance())
.commit()
}
But of course, it works much better when checking if we have a saved instance, as in
override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState)
setContentView(R.layout.activity_main)
if (savedInstanceState == null) {
supportFragmentManager
.beginTransaction()
.replace(overlay.id, DiaryFragment.newInstance())
.commit()
}
}