I\'m trying to do something using a boolean
in a Fragment
class each time the Fragment
is displayed.
My app laun
Simple solution, set your boolean to a static.
This of course does not comply to the good practices of programming.
To answer you question more directly, I'm assuming that the fragments and activities get destroyed and new instances are created, hence the boolean being set to true again. As such, by making the variable static, it's state will remain across all instances of that class.
You have made an assumption that the Fragment
instance remains in existence as long as the app is alive. It is a reasonable assumption, and your approach would work fine if that assumption were true.
Unfortunately, a Fragment
is destroyed when it recedes into the background, and created anew when it returns to the foreground. This is why it appears to "refresh". The same is not true of an Activity
. When an Activity
recedes into the background, it is not destroyed immediately. Rather, it is maintained on the current task's backstack for some time, and if it returns to the foreground, it is the same instance.
To combat this problem, there are four different ways:
FirstTime
as static
. This should work. I've used this before. However, this should only be used in extreme cases when there is an absolute necessity to preserve the value of a member field, and only when no other way is available. Making a variable static
leads to a classic memory leak.Save the value of FirstTime
in your Fragment
using onSaveInstanceState():
@Override
public void onSaveInstanceState(Bundle outState) {
super.onSaveInstanceState(outState);
outState.putBoolean("FirstTime", FirstTime);
}
and retrieve the value in onCreate()
:
@Override
public void onCreate (Bundle savedInstanceState){
super.onCreate();
FirstTime = savedInstanceState.getBoolean("FirstTime");
}
Declare FirstTime
in a global constants class instead of putting it in the Fragment
:
public class GlobalConstants{
public static boolean FirstTime = true;
// other global constants ...
}
and access it in your Fragment
like this:
if (GlobalConstants.FirstTime) {
GlobalConstants.FirstTime = false;
} else {
//Other stuff here cause it's not true
}
Save the value of FirstTime
in a SharedPreference:
SharedPreferences sp = getActivity().getPreferences(Context.MODE_PRIVATE);
SharedPreferences.Editor editor = sp.edit();
editor.putBoolean("FirstTime", FirstTime);
editor.commit();
and retrieve its value in this way:
SharedPreferences sp = getActivity().getPreferences(Context.MODE_PRIVATE);
FirstTime = sp.getBoolean("FirstTime", true);
The first three methods will maintain the value of FirstTime
while the application is alive. The fourth method will preserve the value of FirstTime
beyond the lifetime of the application, i.e. when the app restarts, FirstTime
will be true
or false
depending on what its value was last set before the app exited.
References:
1. Handling the Fragment Lifecycle.
2. Saving Key-Value Sets.
3. Visibility and Lifetime.
EDIT:
To understand how to use onSaveInstanceState()
, see the following links:
1. Saving (and Retrieving) Android Instance State.
2. Once for all, how to correctly save instance state of Fragments.
3. Handling Configuration Changes.
It is confusing, but it will be useful to you once you understand it.