I\'ve been doing a bunch of research and looking over the documentation for ASyncTask in Android, but I just can\'t seem to wrap my head around it. I simply want to run some
AsyncTask uses parameterized types (java generics) so that you can specify the types it uses when you define your own AsyncTask. Perhaps it's easier to explain in this form:
public abstract class AsyncTask<Params, Progress, Result> {
...
protected abstract Result doInBackground(Params... params);
protected abstract void onProgressUpdate(Progress... progress);
protected abstract void onPostExecute(Result result);
...
}
There are no classes named Params, Progress, or Result. These are instead generic types. They are just placeholders for types you wish to use when you define your own AsyncTask subclass. The above could equally be written as such:
public abstract class AsyncTask<A, B, C> {
...
protected abstract C doInBackground(A... params);
protected abstract void onProgressUpdate(B... progress);
protected abstract void onPostExecute(C result);
...
}
Suppose I were defining an AsyncTask that takes a list of Strings representing URLs, and it will ping each one to see if it's reachable, then return the number that were reachable. Meanwhile, with each test, it will update a ProgressBar
as each test completes. It might look something like this:
public class MyAsyncTask extends AsyncTask<String, Integer, Integer> {
@Override
protected Integer doInBackground(String... params) {
int total = params.length;
int successfulPings = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < total; i++) {
if (isReachable(params[i])) {
successfulPings++;
}
publishProgress(i, total);
}
return successfulPings;
}
@Override
protected void onProgressUpdate(Integer... progress) {
int testsSoFar = progress[0];
int totalTests = progress[1];
progressBar.setMax(totalTests);
progressBar.setProgress(testSoFar);
}
@Override
protected void onPostExecute(Integer result) {
Toast.makeTest(context, "Reached " + result + " sites.", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
}
I would initiate this as follows:
String[] urls = ...
MyAsyncTask task = new MyAsyncTask();
task.execute(urls);
The argument passed into execute
will be passed into doInBackground
. Whatever you do in doInBackground
, you need to return something that gets passed in as the argument to onPostExecute
. While in doInBackground
, you can call publishProgress
, where you can do something like I did (but you don't have to).
The three types used by an asynchronous task are the following:
Params, the type of the parameters sent to the task upon execution. i.e if you want to send some variable/array to your async task background task. You use that information using that variable.
Progress, the type of the progress units published during the background computation. i.e to show the progress of your background progress. ( such as showing how much a video/image is downloaded)
String[] username;
username[0]="user1"; username[1]="user2";
new asynctask().execute(username);
private class asynctask extends AsyncTask <USER, Integer, String>
{
@Override
protected void onPreExecute()
{
// anything you want to do prior starting the async task.
}
@Override
protected String doInBackground(USER... users)
{
int count = users.length;
for (int i = 0; i < count; i++)
retriveinformation(users[i]);
return "Hey";
}
protected void onProgressUpdate(Integer... progress) {
setProgressPercent(progress[0]);
}
protected void onPostExecute(String result) {
// the value result is HEY that is returned by doInBackground.
}
}
Not all types are always used by an asynchronous task. To mark a type as unused, simply use the type Void.
information taken from https://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/AsyncTask.html
Let me try my hand at this. All the info I am parsing is from the link shared by Karakuri in the comments to the question.
The angle brackets' contents, in order, are called "parameters", "progress", and "result". Parameters is the type of parameters (using varargs) that will be fed to "doInBackground". They will be receive by that method in an array. You will use these parameters as your data to work on in the background thread.
"Progress" is the types of values fed into the onProgressUpdate. When you override this method, you will take in data of this type, format it, and use it in the progress display. From my reading, it is up to you to publish your progress in doInBackground to be consumed by onProgressUpdate.
"Result" is the data type of the result of the operation. This will be the return type of doInBackground, as well as the parameter type of onPostExecute. For parameters that include the "..." (called varargs), you can put in as many arguments as you want. They must be separated by commas, and must all be of the type specified before the "...". The items will be passed to the function in an array. So, to answer your questions:
Some thoughts: if you are a beginner, leave "progress" void for now, and don't override onProgressUpdate. It is very important in production code, but a lot of extra hard work for beginner learning projects. onPreExecute is also likely more trouble than it is worth at your level. Just remember they exist, and when you need them, you will likely know. Also, good work on not avoiding the subject of multithreading just because it is difficult.
My basic suggestion is to research more about AsyncTask but I'll as well try and Answer your questions:
1- In the angle brackets, I have Void, Void, Void. What exactly do those represent and how do I know what's correct to place in there?
They are the input argument types for the overridden methods: doInBackground() onPreExecute(), onProgressUpdate() and ... respectively.
2- For each method within the class, I have the each method called as void. When should they be different than void (like boolean, String, long, etc.)?
I'll give you an example: onPostExecute() is guaranteed to be called after doInBackground(), so if onPostExecute(int someCounter) has an integer in its input, then doInBackground() should return an integer rather than void. So it will be declared like this:
int doInBackground(){
//bla bla bla
int someIntegerValue;
return someIntegerValue;
}
3- For the doInBackground() method, I have Void... voids in the parenthesis. What exactly should I be putting in there? What do they represent?
They are var-args, basically speaking, they represent Variable number of Arguments. Read more about them here.
Once again I suggest you delve into threading in Android and get a sense of why AsyncTask is needed. Good Luck,