* Feature flag for toolbar menu redesign. Add new items to menu and reorder.
* Handle toolbar items in menu controller
* Remove bookmark from toolbar nav
* Respect toolbar position
* Inline toolbar orientation checks
* Add Todos for bookmark UI tests
* Make variable names consistent
For #18150: Improve showing/hiding of "Select tabs" button in tabs tray
Payload argument is unavailable after first call of notifyItemChanged() as the
whole View need to be updated.
Inject a "isPrivate" lambda in the adapter so it will always know what tabs are
currently showing and so always ensure the expected behavior.
Speculative fix based on the Firebase logs which shows that on a second check
of R.id.tab_wrapper it is not found the screen.
It may be because after `advanceToHalfExpandedState` and before getting a
reference to it in `waitForTabTrayBehaviorToIdle` it was already animated off
the screen.
With this in mind I've added a null check for the view reference before trying
to register an idling resource on it's Behavior.
Also added and used a way to click at a specific location in a View, not just
in the default middle in the View.
It was observed from the Firebase videos that a "click" on the topBar actually
selected the private tabs section. This would leave us to believe that the
"click" was caught by that other View which was placed above the x,y middle of
the topBar.
* Feature flag for toolbar menu redesign. Add new items to menu and reorder.
* Handle toolbar items in menu controller
* Menu controller tests
* Make icons invisible
* Lint
* UI tests reflect design change
* Refactor test names
* Lint fixes
* UI tests
* For #16373: Added performance Inflater to counter # of inflations
This class is quite straight forward. The only thing that I have to point out is the onCreateView method. It usually
calls its super if you don't override it. The problem with that is that the super.onCreateView actually uses
android.view. as a prefix for the XML element it tries to inflate. So if we have an element that isn't part
of that package, it'll crash. As I said in the code, a good example is ImageButton. Calling android.view.ImageButton
will make the app crash. The method is implemented the same way that PhoneLayoutInflater does (Another example
is the AsyncLayoutInflater)
* For #16373: Added test for PerformanceInflater
This test got quite awkward / complicated fast. I wanted to test the to make sure we don't break *any* of our layouts
and to do so, I decided to just retrieve all our XML in our /res/layout folder. However, this gets quite a bit outside of a unit test scope.
The point was to get every layouts and get their LayoutID through the resources using the testContext we have. It gets even weirder, since some
of the XML tags have special implementation in android. One of them is the <fragment> tag. That tag actually is inflated by the OS using the Factory2
that the Activity.java implements. In order to get around the fragment issue, we just return a basic FrameLayout since the system LayoutInflater doesn't deal
won't ever get a <fragment> tag to inflate. Another issue was the <merge> tag. In order to inflate those, you need 1) a root view and 2) attach your view to it.
In order to be able to test those layouts file, I had to create an empty FrameLayout and use it as the root view for testing. Again, I know this is beyond the spirit of a unit test but if we use this inflater, I think it should make sure that no layouts are broken by it.
* For #16373: Overrode getSystemService to return PerformanceInflater
This allows PerformanceInflater to be called in every inflation to keep track of the number of inflations we do.
* For #16373: Added UI test for # of inflations
* For #16373: Lint fix
* For #167373: Changed the LayoutInflater cloneInContext to take this instead of inflater
The inflater parameter is set on the first call from the OS from the Window object. However, the activity itself sets multiple factories on the inflater
during its creation (usually through AppCompatDelegateImpl.java). This means that, once we initially set the inflater with a null check, we pass an inflater
that has no factory initially. However, since we keep a reference to it, when cloneInContext was called, it cloned the inflater with the original inflater
which didn't have any factories set up. This meant that the app would crash on either browserFragment creation or any thing that required appCompat (such as
ImageView and ImageButton). Now, passing itself with a cloneInContext means we keep all the factories initially set by the activity or the fragment.
* For #16373: Fixed code issues for PR. No behavior change
* For #16373: fixed some code nits