// recyclerView.layoutManager = LinearLayoutManager(context)composeView.setContent{LazyColumn(Modifier.fillMaxSize()){// We use a LazyColumn since the layout manager of the RecyclerView is a vertical LinearLayoutManager}}
@ComposablefunListItem(data:MyData,modifier:Modifier=Modifier){Row(modifier.fillMaxWidth()){Text(text=data.name)// … other composables required for displaying `data`}}
[null,null,["最后更新时间 (UTC):2025-08-22。"],[],[],null,["# Migrate RecyclerView to Lazy list\n\n[`RecyclerView`](/develop/ui/views/layout/recyclerview) is a View component that makes it easy to efficiently display\nlarge sets of data. Instead of creating views for each item in the data set,\n`RecyclerView` improves the performance of your app by keeping a small pool of\nviews and recycling through them as you scroll through those items.\n\nIn Compose, you can use [Lazy lists](/develop/ui/compose/lists#lazy) to accomplish the same thing. This page\ndescribes how you can migrate your `RecyclerView` implementation to use Lazy lists\nin Compose.\n\nMigration steps\n---------------\n\nTo migrate your `RecyclerView` implementation to Compose, follow these steps:\n\n1. Comment out or remove the `RecyclerView` from your UI hierarchy and add a\n `ComposeView` to replace it if none is present in the hierarchy yet. This\n is the container for the Lazy list that you'll add:\n\n \u003cFrameLayout\n android:layout_width=\"match_parent\"\n android:layout_height=\"match_parent\"\u003e\n\n \u003c!-- \u003candroidx.recyclerview.widget.RecyclerView--\u003e\n \u003c!-- android:id=\"@+id/recycler_view\"--\u003e\n \u003c!-- android:layout_width=\"match_parent\"--\u003e\n \u003c!-- android:layout_height=\"match_parent /\u003e\"--\u003e\n\n \u003candroidx.compose.ui.platform.ComposeView\n android:id=\"@+id/compose_view\"\n android:layout_width=\"match_parent\"\n android:layout_height=\"match_parent\" /\u003e\n\n \u003c/FrameLayout\u003e\n\n2. Determine what type of Lazy list composable you need based on your\n `RecyclerView`'s layout manager (see table below). The composable you select\n will be the top-level composable of the `ComposeView` you added in the\n previous step.\n\n | `LayoutManager` | Composable |\n |------------------------------|--------------------------------------------------------------|\n | `LinearLayoutManager` | `LazyColumn` or `LazyRow` |\n | `GridLayoutManager` | `LazyVerticalGrid` or `LazyHorizontalGrid` |\n | `StaggeredGridLayoutManager` | `LazyVerticalStaggeredGrid` or `LazyHorizontalStaggeredGrid` |\n\n\n ```kotlin\n // recyclerView.layoutManager = LinearLayoutManager(context)\n composeView.setContent {\n LazyColumn(Modifier.fillMaxSize()) {\n // We use a LazyColumn since the layout manager of the RecyclerView is a vertical LinearLayoutManager\n }\n }https://github.com/android/snippets/blob/dd30aee903e8c247786c064faab1a9ca8d10b46e/compose/snippets/src/main/java/com/example/compose/snippets/interop/MigrationCommonScenariosSnippets.kt#L79-L84\n ```\n\n \u003cbr /\u003e\n\n3. Create a corresponding composable for each view type in your\n `RecyclerView.Adapter` implementation. Each view type typically maps to a\n `ViewHolder` subclass, though this may not always be the case. These\n composables will be used as the UI representation for different types of\n elements in your list:\n\n\n ```kotlin\n @Composable\n fun ListItem(data: MyData, modifier: Modifier = Modifier) {\n Row(modifier.fillMaxWidth()) {\n Text(text = data.name)\n // ... other composables required for displaying `data`\n }\n }https://github.com/android/snippets/blob/dd30aee903e8c247786c064faab1a9ca8d10b46e/compose/snippets/src/main/java/com/example/compose/snippets/interop/MigrationCommonScenariosSnippets.kt#L124-L130\n ```\n\n \u003cbr /\u003e\n\n The logic in your `RecyclerView.Adapter`'s `onCreateViewHolder()` and\n `onBindViewHolder()` methods will be replaced by these composables and the\n state that you provide them with. In Compose, there is no separation between\n creating a composable for an item and binding data into it---these concepts are\n coalesced.\n4. Within the `content` slot of the Lazy list (the trailing lambda parameter),\n use the `items()` function (or an equivalent overload) to iterate through the\n data for your list. In the `itemContent` lambda, invoke the appropriate\n composable item for your data:\n\n\n ```kotlin\n val data = listOf\u003cMyData\u003e(/* ... */)\n composeView.setContent {\n LazyColumn(Modifier.fillMaxSize()) {\n items(data) {\n ListItem(it)\n }\n }\n }https://github.com/android/snippets/blob/dd30aee903e8c247786c064faab1a9ca8d10b46e/compose/snippets/src/main/java/com/example/compose/snippets/interop/MigrationCommonScenariosSnippets.kt#L90-L97\n ```\n\n \u003cbr /\u003e\n\n| **Tip:** Provide additional parameters to `items()` to optimize your list: use the `key` parameter to provide a unique key for the underlying data so that scroll position will be maintained when items change, or use the `contentType` parameter to specify a content type for the underlying data (this is a similar concept to `RecyclerView`'s view types) so you can reuse item compositions more efficiently.\n\nCommon use cases\n----------------\n\n### Item decorations\n\n`RecyclerView` has the concept of an `ItemDecoration`, which you can use to add a\nspecial drawing for items in the list. For example, you can add an\n`ItemDecoration` to add dividers between items:\n\n\n```kotlin\nval itemDecoration = DividerItemDecoration(recyclerView.context, LinearLayoutManager.VERTICAL)\nrecyclerView.addItemDecoration(itemDecoration)https://github.com/android/snippets/blob/dd30aee903e8c247786c064faab1a9ca8d10b46e/compose/snippets/src/main/java/com/example/compose/snippets/interop/MigrationCommonScenariosSnippets.kt#L103-L104\n```\n\n\u003cbr /\u003e\n\nCompose does not have an equivalent concept of item decorations. Instead, you\ncan add any UI decorations in the list directly in the composition. For example,\nto add dividers to the list, you can use the `Divider` composable after each\nitem:\n\n\n```kotlin\nLazyColumn(Modifier.fillMaxSize()) {\n itemsIndexed(data) { index, d -\u003e\n ListItem(d)\n if (index != data.size - 1) {\n HorizontalDivider()\n }\n }\n}https://github.com/android/snippets/blob/dd30aee903e8c247786c064faab1a9ca8d10b46e/compose/snippets/src/main/java/com/example/compose/snippets/interop/MigrationCommonScenariosSnippets.kt#L111-L118\n```\n\n\u003cbr /\u003e\n\n### Item animations\n\nAn `ItemAnimator` can be set on a `RecyclerView` to animate the appearance of\nitems as changes are made to the adapter. By default, `RecyclerView` uses\n[`DefaultItemAnimator`](/reference/androidx/recyclerview/widget/DefaultItemAnimator) which provides basic animations on remove, add, and\nmove events.\n\nLazy lists have a similar concept through the `animateItemPlacement` modifier.\nSee [Item animations](/develop/ui/compose/lists#item-animations) to learn more.\n\nAdditional resources\n--------------------\n\nFor more information about migrating a `RecyclerView` to Compose, see the\nfollowing resources:\n\n- [Lists and Grids](/develop/ui/compose/lists#item-animations): Documentation for how to implement lists and grids in Compose.\n- [Jetpack Compose Interop: Using Compose in a RecyclerView](https://medium.com/androiddevelopers/jetpack-compose-interop-using-compose-in-a-recyclerview-569c7ec7a583): Blog post for efficiently using Compose within a `RecyclerView`.\n\nRecommended for you\n-------------------\n\n- Note: link text is displayed when JavaScript is off\n- [Lists and grids](/develop/ui/compose/lists)\n- [Migrate `CoordinatorLayout` to Compose](/develop/ui/compose/migrate/migration-scenarios/coordinator-layout)\n- [Other considerations](/develop/ui/compose/migrate/other-considerations)"]]