Swipe one item at a time Recyclerview [duplicate]

This softens the movement between items:

public class SnapHelperOneByOne extends LinearSnapHelper {

    @Override
    public int findTargetSnapPosition(RecyclerView.LayoutManager layoutManager, int velocityX, int velocityY) {

        if (!(layoutManager instanceof RecyclerView.SmoothScroller.ScrollVectorProvider)) {
            return RecyclerView.NO_POSITION;
        }

        final View currentView = findSnapView(layoutManager);

        if (currentView == null) {
            return RecyclerView.NO_POSITION;
        }

        LinearLayoutManager myLayoutManager = (LinearLayoutManager) layoutManager;

        int position1 = myLayoutManager.findFirstVisibleItemPosition();
        int position2 = myLayoutManager.findLastVisibleItemPosition();

        int currentPosition = layoutManager.getPosition(currentView);

        if (velocityX > 400) {
            currentPosition = position2;
        } else if (velocityX < 400) {
            currentPosition = position1;
        }

        if (currentPosition == RecyclerView.NO_POSITION) {
            return RecyclerView.NO_POSITION;
        }

        return currentPosition;
    }
}

Example:

LinearSnapHelper linearSnapHelper = new SnapHelperOneByOne();
linearSnapHelper.attachToRecyclerView(recyclerView);

This is late, i know.

There is a very simple way to get exactly the requested scrolling behaviour with the use of a custom SnapHelper.

Create your own SnapHelper by overwriting the standard one (android.support.v7.widget.LinearSnapHelper).

public class SnapHelperOneByOne extends LinearSnapHelper{

    @Override
    public int findTargetSnapPosition(RecyclerView.LayoutManager layoutManager, int velocityX, int velocityY){

        if (!(layoutManager instanceof RecyclerView.SmoothScroller.ScrollVectorProvider)) {
            return RecyclerView.NO_POSITION;
        }

        final View currentView = findSnapView(layoutManager);

        if( currentView == null ){
            return RecyclerView.NO_POSITION;
        }

        final int currentPosition = layoutManager.getPosition(currentView);

        if (currentPosition == RecyclerView.NO_POSITION) {
            return RecyclerView.NO_POSITION;
        }

        return currentPosition;
    }
}

This is basicly the stadard method, but without adding a jump counter which gets calculated by scroll speed.

If you swipe fast and long, the next(or previous) view will be centered (shown).

If you swipe slow and short, the current centered view stays centered after release.

I hope this answer can still help anybody.


https://github.com/googlesamples/android-HorizontalPaging/

This has the link to something similar to what you have shown in the images. Let me know if there is something additional you are looking for, and I will link the relevant libraries.

Basically the difference between ViewPager and recyclerView is that, in recyclerView you are switching between many item, while in ViewPager you are switching between many fragments or independent pages itself.

I see you are using this https://github.com/lsjwzh/RecyclerViewPager, is there any particular use case you have in mind?