I have few activities and from one activity I open another and that go back to the first one...
The point is onCreate is called ones , and onResume every time when the activity is show. For example when I close B that was previouslly started from A, the onResume is called but not onCreate....
my problem is that I do not want to run the onResu开发者_StackOverflow中文版me if it comes after onCreate, I want to run the code only if onCreate wasn't called
Is this possible to do WITHOUT static flag ?
is there some method or flag from android like comesAfterOnCreate ?
@Override
protected void onResume() {
if(comesAfterOnCreate){
//DO not run this code
}else{
//run the long task
}
I show a lot of answers with solution using static flag, Thanks to all of you for the effort and offering the help, but I was interested is there some method or something...
Try this,
boolean flag = false;
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
flag = true;
....
}
@Override
protected void onResume() {
super.onResume();
if(flag == true){
..... // it has came from onCreate()
}
else{
.....// it has directly came to onResume()
}
}
Now, when the Acitivity will finish the value of flag will be false again and onResume()
will be called with value false.
Hope this works for you.
its not a difficult job, you can use boolean
or see here Is that possible to check was onCreate called because of orientation change?
So as in my comment:
private boolean onCreateRunned = false;
@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState){
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
onCreateRunned = true;
//More code
}
@Override
public void onResume(){
super.onResume();
if(onCreateRunned){
onCreateRunned = false; //important, or it will run only once.
// Do your code
}
}
As shown in the Activity - Android Documentation.
An activity has essentially four states:
1. If an activity in the foreground of the screen (at the top of the stack), it is active or running.
2. If an activity has lost focus but is still visible (that is, a new non-full-sized or transparent activity has focus on top of your activity), it is paused. A paused activity is completely alive (it maintains all state and member information and remains attached to the window manager), but can be killed by the system in extreme low memory situations.
3. If an activity is completely obscured by another activity, it is stopped. It still retains all state and member information, however, it is no longer visible to the user so its window is hidden and it will often be killed by the system when memory is needed elsewhere.
4. If an activity is paused or stopped, the system can drop the activity from memory by either asking it to finish, or simply killing its process. When it is displayed again to the user, it must be completely restarted and restored to its previous state.
Here is the lifecycle of an activity, as shown in the Android documentation:
There are three key loops you may be interested in monitoring within your activity:
1. The entire lifetime of an activity happens between the first call to onCreate(Bundle) through to a single final call to onDestroy(). An activity will do all setup of "global" state in onCreate(), and release all remaining resources in onDestroy(). For example, if it has a thread running in the background to download data from the network, it may create that thread in onCreate() and then stop the thread in onDestroy().
2. The visible lifetime of an activity happens between a call to onStart() until a corresponding call to onStop(). During this time the user can see the activity on-screen, though it may not be in the foreground and interacting with the user. Between these two methods you can maintain resources that are needed to show the activity to the user. For example, you can register a BroadcastReceiver in onStart() to monitor for changes that impact your UI, and unregister it in onStop() when the user an no longer see what you are displaying. The onStart() and onStop() methods can be called multiple times, as the activity becomes visible and hidden to the user.
3. The foreground lifetime of an activity happens between a call to onResume() until a corresponding call to onPause(). During this time the activity is in front of all other activities and interacting with the user. An activity can frequently go between the resumed and paused states -- for example when the device goes to sleep, when an activity result is delivered, when a new intent is delivered -- so the code in these methods should be fairly lightweight.
Conclusion: You can't change the order of lifecycle execution.
Try including toasts in OnCreate and OnResume and test if the "onResume" toast comes when you run the app before the OnCreate toast. Or print a Log message from the respective methods
I thing @suri is right. but if want to be more clear with onCreate()
and onResume()
then put
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
System.out.println(">>>>>> This is oncreate method");
....
}
@Override
protected void onResume() {
super.onResume();
System.out.println("This is onResume method <<<<<<<<<");
}
This is simplest to check your question.
This can help other beginners:
private boolean isOnCreateCalled = false;
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
Log.i("MyTag" , "onCreate called");
isOnCreateCalled = true;
}
}
@Override
protected void onResume() {
super.onResume();
Log.i("MyTag" , "onResume called");
if (isOnCreateCalled) {
isOnCreateCalled = false;
Log.i("MyTag" , "onResume's condition called once");
// Your codes here...
}
}
See the result in Logcat!
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