Yeah, correct, just call notifydatasetchanged on "you mean custom and not
customer ;)" adapter, forgot that one.

On Wed, Oct 21, 2009 at 10:02 PM, Streets Of Boston <[email protected]
> wrote:

>
> No need to call 'invalidate()' on your list-view.
> Call 'notifyDatasetChanged()' on your customer adapter instead,
> whenever you add or delete elements in your ArrayList or change the
> contents of existing elements in your ArrayList.
>
> On Oct 21, 7:53 am, Marc Lester Tan <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Hi Migs,
> >
> > You can try creating custom adapter (subclassing BaseAdapter) backed by
> an
> > ArrayList. So lets say a new data comes in, get the currently selected
> > index, push your new data to arraylist, call invalidate on your listview
> > then call setSelection(position) on listview.
> >
> > hth,
> > Marc
> >
> >
> >
> > On Wed, Oct 21, 2009 at 7:34 PM, Miguel Paraz <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > > Hi,
> > > I'd like to build a ListView with streaming content. New items are
> > > added to the top and old ones are forgotten
> >
> > > If I understand correctly, the ListView was not built for this, right?
> > > The ListAdapter was meant to provide a fixed set of data.
> >
> > > I tried to setAdapter() when new data comes in, but this makes the
> > > ListView forget the current selection.
> >
> > > Is it feasible to subclass or modify ListView behavior so that the
> > > selection stays  the same but gets pushed down?
> >
> > > Thanks!- Hide quoted text -
> >
> > - Show quoted text -
> >
>

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