Both of those are great suggestion Kostya. Thank you. I will give both approaches a try and see what happens.
On May 12, 3:52 pm, Kostya Vasilyev <[email protected]> wrote: > It probably means you need to clear the animation when there is none. > > However: > > There is already a built-in class, ProgressBar, that can show the > standard progress "wheel', and it works well with setVisbiblity, leaving > no artifacts. Perhaps you could just use that? An added benefit is that > you'll get vendor-specific customizations automatically. > > -- Kostya > > 13.05.2011 0:43, authorwjf пишет: > > > > > > > > > > > Yet the view that gets affected, is not the one being passed into the > > function. Meaning I get the callback to update say row 3, and row 3 > > updates correctly, but the image in row 7 might change as well. Not > > the text in row 7 though, and the only code that updated the image > > view first updates the text view. And its not always row 7, it might > > be some other row or rows or none. Commenting out these 2 lines: > > > Animation spinnerAnimation = > > AnimationUtils.loadAnimation(getContext(), R.anim.rotate); > > spinner.startAnimation(spinnerAnimation); > > > corrects the weird fragment image appearing on a random list view row, > > yet, I also obviously lose my animation. I believe there has to be > > something hanging around or getting reused by the framework to > > optimize the image resource utilization but it doesn't appear to be > > working correctly. > > > This image does a good job of showing the behavior I'm experiencing. > > >http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=2s1agsp&s=7 > > -- > Kostya Vasilyev --http://kmansoft.wordpress.com -- 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

