Your question does seem to show your research but this sentence is not going to cut it:
I have tried the following solutions mentioned elsewhere in Stack Overflow but none of them seems to work
You should have added links to the posts you tried those solutions from. So you could have said something like:
from Force EditText to lose focus when: some keyboard keys are pressed and when user clicks on something else in the activity I tried [code block] but that gave me [what ever it did]
and that basically for each possible solution you tried and dismissed.
Doing it that way achieves two objectives:
- it narrows down the scope of your problem
- it helps users who want to answer to verify if a possible solution was already tried.
Linking to the other questions with non helping answers also helps to check if you correctly assessed your actual issue. By not sharing those links the visitors had to redo your research without knowing if what they will find was actually what you tried.
I'm not an Android dev but isn't it important to share on which version of the OS you have this issue? Ignore this if the problem is version independent.
One final remark:
so I might have gotten a bit angry about the downvotes.
Never loose your temper, no matter how bad received a post will be. Down votes are for the post, not for you. Just feel sorry for your post and work with feedback you get to improve it. Leaving a comment like: hey @user, thanks for finding that dupe, I did find that one and the accepted answer looked hopeful but didn't work because... I fail to see what is differnt in my case though or similar wording will get a much better reception then No, not a dupe, read my question!