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I am trying to use an alert dialog to prompt for a username and a password in android. I have found this code here:

  if (token.equals("Not Found"))
    {
        LayoutInflater factory = LayoutInflater.from(this);            
        final View textEntryView = factory.inflate(R.layout.userpasslayout, null);

        AlertDialog.Builder alert = new AlertDialog.Builder(this); 

        alert.setTitle("Please Login to Fogbugz"); 
        alert.setMessage("Enter your email and password"); 
        // Set an EditText view to get user input  
        alert.setView(textEntryView); 
        AlertDialog loginPrompt = alert.create();

        final EditText input1 = (EditText) loginPrompt.findViewById(R.id.username);
        final EditText input2 = (EditText) loginPrompt.findViewById(R.id.password);

        alert.setPositiveButton("Login", new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 
        public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int whichButton) { 
            input1.getText().toString(); **THIS CRASHES THE APPLICATION**


        } 
        }); 

        alert.setNegativeButton("Cancel", new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() { 
          public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int whichButton) { 
            // Canceled. 
          } 
        }); 

        alert.show(); 

    }

EDIT: I was able to set up the proper layout, but receive an error when I try to access the text field. What is the problem here?

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6 Answers

up vote 19 down vote accepted

The API Demos in the Android SDK have an example that does just that.

It's under DIALOG_TEXT_ENTRY. They have a layout, inflate it with a LayoutInflater, and use that as the View.

EDIT: What I had linked to in my original answer is stale. Here is a mirror.

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This worked, but I still receive an error when I try to access the EditText. I edited my answer, is there some problem because the fields are not yet built? – mbauer14 Aug 6 '10 at 21:13
2  
What is "the error"? – EboMike Dec 5 '10 at 2:19
This sample code is no longer present on the website or the latest samples – conners Jul 18 '12 at 8:42
Updated with a link to a mirror. – EboMike Jul 19 '12 at 7:17
1  
Posting links that work now but may not work later is clearly a bad thing for coders who read this post years later. Consider in the future also this aspect and just post a snippet from that code (with proper references to it). – Valentin Despa Dec 8 '12 at 11:56

check this code in alert box have edit textview when click ok it displays on screen using toast.

public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
    setContentView(R.layout.main);

    final AlertDialog.Builder alert = new AlertDialog.Builder(this);
    final EditText input = new EditText(this);
    alert.setView(input);
    alert.setPositiveButton("Ok", new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
        public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int whichButton) {
            String value = input.getText().toString().trim();
            Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), value, Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
        }
    });

    alert.setNegativeButton("Cancel", new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
        public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int whichButton) {
            dialog.cancel();
        }
    });
    alert.show();               
}
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Use these lines in the code, because the textEntryView is the parent of username edittext and password edittext.

    final EditText input1 = (EditText) textEntryView .findViewById(R.id.username); 
    final EditText input2 = (EditText) textEntryView .findViewById(R.id.password); 
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Been stuck on this for so long. I thought I wasn't inflating properly but it turns out I was using the wrong parent. Thanks for your input Nandy! – Kitteh Sep 21 '11 at 9:20

Have a look at the AlertDialog docs. As it states, to add a custom view to your alert dialog you need to find the frameLayout and add your view to that like so:

FrameLayout fl = (FrameLayout) findViewById(android.R.id.custom);
fl.addView(myView, new LayoutParams(MATCH_PARENT, WRAP_CONTENT));

Most likely you are going to want to create a layout xml file for your view, and inflate it:

LayoutInflater inflater = getLayoutInflater();
View twoEdits = inflater.inflate(R.layout.my_layout, f1, false);
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I found another set of examples for customizing an AlertDialog from a guy named Mossila. I think they're better than Google's examples. To quickly see Google's API demos, you must import their demo jar(s) into your project, which you probably don't want.

But Mossila's example code is fully self-contained. It can be directly cut-and-pasted into your project. It just works! Then you only need to tweak it to your needs. See here

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 LayoutInflater factory = LayoutInflater.from(this);
final View textEntryView = factory.inflate(R.layout.text_entry, null);
//text_entry is an Layout XML file containing two text field to display in alert dialog
final EditText input1 = (EditText) textEntryView.findViewById(R.id.EditText1);
final EditText input2 = (EditText) textEntryView.findViewById(R.id.EditText2);             
input1.setText("DefaultValue", TextView.BufferType.EDITABLE);
input2.setText("DefaultValue", TextView.BufferType.EDITABLE);
final AlertDialog.Builder alert = new AlertDialog.Builder(this);
alert.setIcon(R.drawable.icon).setTitle(
"Enter the Text:").setView(
textEntryView).setPositiveButton("Save",
new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog,
int whichButton) {
Log.i("AlertDialog","TextEntry 1 Entered "+input1.getText().toString());
Log.i("AlertDialog","TextEntry 2 Entered "+input2.getText().toString());
/* User clicked OK so do some stuff */
}
}).setNegativeButton("Cancel",
new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog,
int whichButton) {
}
});
alert.show();
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protected by NikiC Nov 17 '11 at 18:04

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