Loader
Loader is good choice for prevent memory leak if you want to load data in background when oncreate method is called. For example when we execute Asynctask in oncreate method and we rotate the screen so the activity will recreate which will execute another AsyncTask again, so probably two Asyntask running in parallel together rather than like loader which will continue the background process we executed before.
Basic AsyncTaskLoader
Section titled “Basic AsyncTaskLoader”AsyncTaskLoader is an abstract Loader that provides an AsyncTask to do the work.
Here some basic implementation:
final class BasicLoader extends AsyncTaskLoader<String> {
public BasicLoader(Context context) { super(context); }
@Override public String loadInBackground() { // Some work, e.g. load something from internet return "OK"; }
@Override public void deliverResult(String data) { if (isStarted()) { // Deliver result if loader is currently started super.deliverResult(data); } }
@Override protected void onStartLoading() { // Start loading forceLoad(); }
@Override protected void onStopLoading() { cancelLoad(); }
@Override protected void onReset() { super.onReset();
// Ensure the loader is stopped onStopLoading(); }}Typically Loader is initialized within the activity’s onCreate() method, or within the fragment’s onActivityCreated(). Also usually activity or fragment implements LoaderManager.LoaderCallbacks interface:
public class MainActivity extends Activity implements LoaderManager.LoaderCallbacks<String> {
// Unique id for loader private static final int LDR_BASIC_ID = 1;
@Override protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) { super.onCreate(savedInstanceState); setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
// Initialize loader; Some data can be passed as second param instead of Bundle.Empty getLoaderManager().initLoader(LDR_BASIC_ID, Bundle.EMPTY, this); }
@Override public Loader<String> onCreateLoader(int id, Bundle args) { return new BasicLoader(this); }
@Override public void onLoadFinished(Loader<String> loader, String data) { Toast.makeText(this, data, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show(); }
@Override public void onLoaderReset(Loader<String> loader) { }}In this example, when loader completed, toast with result will be shown.
AsyncTaskLoader with cache
Section titled “AsyncTaskLoader with cache”It’s a good practice to cache loaded result to avoid multiple loading of same data.
To invalidate cache onContentChanged() should be called. If loader has been already started, forceLoad() will be called, otherwise (if loader in stopped state) loader will be able to understand content change with takeContentChanged() check.
Remark: onContentChanged() must be called from the process’s main thread.
Javadocs says about takeContentChanged():
Take the current flag indicating whether the loader's content had changed while it was stopped. If it had, true is returned and the flag is cleared.
public abstract class BaseLoader<T> extends AsyncTaskLoader<T> {
// Cached result saved here private final AtomicReference<T> cache = new AtomicReference<>();
public BaseLoader(@NonNull final Context context) { super(context); }
@Override public final void deliverResult(final T data) { if (!isReset()) { // Save loaded result cache.set(data); if (isStarted()) { super.deliverResult(data); } } }
@Override protected final void onStartLoading() { // Register observers registerObserver();
final T cached = cache.get(); // Start new loading if content changed in background // or if we never loaded any data if (takeContentChanged() || cached == null) { forceLoad(); } else { deliverResult(cached); } }
@Override public final void onStopLoading() { cancelLoad(); }
@Override protected final void onReset() { super.onReset(); onStopLoading(); // Clear cache and remove observers cache.set(null); unregisterObserver(); }
/* virtual */ protected void registerObserver() { // Register observers here, call onContentChanged() to invalidate cache }
/* virtual */ protected void unregisterObserver() { // Remove observers }}Reloading
Section titled “Reloading”To invalidate your old data and restart existing loader you can use restartLoader() method:
private void reload() { getLoaderManager().reastartLoader(LOADER_ID, Bundle.EMPTY, this);}Pass parameters using a Bundle
Section titled “Pass parameters using a Bundle”You can pass parameters by Bundle:
Bundle myBundle = new Bundle();myBundle.putString(MY_KEY, myValue);Get the value in onCreateLoader:
@Overridepublic Loader<String> onCreateLoader(int id, final Bundle args) { final String myParam = args.getString(MY_KEY); ...}Parameters
Section titled “Parameters”|Class|Description |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|--- |LoaderManager|An abstract class associated with an Activity or Fragment for managing one or more Loader instances. |LoaderManager.LoaderCallbacks|A callback interface for a client to interact with the LoaderManager. |Loader|An abstract class that performs asynchronous loading of data. |AsyncTaskLoader|Abstract loader that provides an AsyncTask to do the work. |CursorLoader|A subclass of AsyncTaskLoader that queries the ContentResolver and returns a Cursor.
Remarks
Section titled “Remarks”Introduced in Android 3.0, loaders make it easy to asynchronously load data in an activity or fragment. Loaders have these characteristics:
- They are available to every Activity and Fragment.
- They provide asynchronous loading of data.
- They monitor the source of their data and deliver new results when the content changes.
- They automatically reconnect to the last loader’s cursor when being recreated after a configuration change. Thus, they don’t need to re-query their data.