I've used this tutorial in order to create and populate my own SQLite database for android. http://www.reigndesign.com/blog/using-your-own-sqlite-database-in-android-applications
However, using these exact methods mean that the database doesnt upgrade w开发者_运维知识库ith the following code
private static final int DB_Version = 2;
public DbConnector(Context context){
super(context, DB_Name, null, DB_Version);
this.context = context;
}
In fact the method onUpgrade() is never called :(
Grateful for any help
Here is the answer thanks to Joe Masilotti on http://www.reigndesign.com/blog/using-your-own-sqlite-database-in-android-applications/comment-page-2/
private static final int DATABASE_VERSION = 1;
Change the constructor to:
public DataBaseHelper(Context context) {
super(context, DB_NAME, null, DATABASE_VERSION);
this.myContext = context;
}
Change the createDataBase
to (thanks @kondortek):
public void createDataBase() throws IOException {
boolean dbExist = checkDataBase();
if (dbExist) {
Log.v(“DB Exists”, “db exists”);
// By calling this method here onUpgrade will be called on a
// writeable database, but only if the version number has been
// bumped
this.getWritableDatabase();
}
dbExist = checkDataBase();
if (!dbExist) {
// By calling this method and empty database will be created into
// the default system path of your application so we are gonna be
// able to overwrite that database with our database.
this.getReadableDatabase();
try {
copyDataBase();
} catch (IOException e) {
throw new Error(“Error copying database”);
}
}
}
Change onUpgrade
to:
public void onUpgrade(SQLiteDatabase db, int oldVersion, int newVersion) {
if (newVersion > oldVersion)
Log.v(“Database Upgrade”, “Database version higher than old.”);
myContext.deleteDatabase(DB_NAME);
}
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