"Put the header outside the ListView. " How do you even do that ? :D Thought the addHeaderView(v) method was specifically for the ListView ? I guess you are saying that another View should be used and placed within the same Layout where the ListView is in ? ASpecifically on top of it ?
On 12 jun, 22:50, Mark Murphy <[email protected]> wrote: > On 06/12/2010 04:38 PM, Bill Lumberg wrote: > > > I have a ListView with several columns and I need a header row at the > > very top that labels each of these columns that *does not* scroll with > > the rest of the ListView. I am using addHeaderView right now, but I've > > ran into 2 problems: > > > 1) The header scrolls. I need it outside of scrolling so that it's > > always "floating" on top. > > Put the header outside the ListView. > > > 2) Each column in the header isn't lining up with the columns in the > > listview. I can make the header columns and data columns all line up > > perfectly if they're all in one big TableLayout, but how would I get > > the header to be outside of the scrollview yet also stay uniform and > > inline with the data columns? > > You'll need to set the sizes of every one of your columns -- in other > words, use dimension resources instead of wrap_content for the width. If > you use a RelativeLayout for the header and a RelativeLayout for the > rows, you can then use those same dimensions and layout_marginLeft to > have everything consistently line up. > > Or, use GridView. > > Or, write a MultiColumnListView. > > -- > Mark Murphy (a Commons > Guy)http://commonsware.com|http://github.com/commonsguyhttp://commonsware.com/blog|http://twitter.com/commonsguy > > _Android Programming Tutorials_ Version 2.1 Available! -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Android Developers" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/android-developers?hl=en

