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Android 9 Development Cookbook

You're reading from   Android 9 Development Cookbook Over 100 recipes and solutions to solve the most common problems faced by Android developers

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788991216
Length 464 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Rick Boyer Rick Boyer
Author Profile Icon Rick Boyer
Rick Boyer
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Activities FREE CHAPTER 2. Layouts 3. Views, Widgets, and Styles 4. Menus and Action Mode 5. Fragments 6. Home Screen Widgets, Search, and the System UI 7. Data Storage 8. Alerts and Notifications 9. Using the Touchscreen and Sensors 10. Graphics and Animation 11. A First Look at OpenGL ES 12. Multimedia 13. Telephony, Networks, and the Web 14. Location and Using Geofencing 15. Getting Your App Ready for the Play Store 16. Getting Started with Kotlin 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Storing persistent activity data

Being able to store information about our activities on a temporary basis is very useful, but more often than not, we will want our application to remember information across multiple sessions.

Android supports SQLite, but that could be a lot of overhead for simple data, such as the user's name or a high score. Fortunately, Android also provides a lightweight option for these scenarios with SharedPreferences(In a real-world application, you'll likely use both options for saving data.)

Getting ready

You can either use the project from the previous recipe or start a new project and call it PersistentData. In the previous recipe, we saved mCounter in the session state. In this recipe, we'll add a new method to handle onPause() and save mCounter to SharedPreferences. We'll restore the value in onCreate().

How to do it...

We have only two changes to make, and both are in MainActivity.java:

  1. Add the following onPause() method to save the data before the activity closes:
@Override
protected void onPause() {
super.onPause();
SharedPreferences settings = getPreferences(MODE_PRIVATE);
SharedPreferences.Editor editor = settings.edit();
editor.putInt(KEY_COUNTER, mCounter);
editor.commit();
}
  1. Then, add the following code at the end of onCreate() to restore the counter:
SharedPreferences settings = getPreferences(MODE_PRIVATE);
int defaultCounter = 0;
mCounter = settings.getInt(KEY_COUNTER, defaultCounter);
((TextView)findViewById(R.id.textViewCounter))
.setText("Counter: " + Integer.toString(mCounter));
  1. Run the program and try it out.

How it works...

As you can see, this is very similar to saving state data, because it also uses name/value pairs. Here, we just stored an int, but we can just as easily store one of the other primitive data types. Each data type has equivalent getters and setters, for example, SharedPreferences.getBoolean() or SharedPreferences.setString().

Saving our data requires the services of SharedPreferences.Editor. This is evoked with edit() and accepts remove() and clear() procedures, as well as setters such as putInt(). Note that we must conclude any changes with the commit() statement.

There's more...

There is a slightly more sophisticated variant of the getPreferences() accessor: getSharedPreferences(). It can be used to store multiple preference sets.

Using more than one preference file

Using getSharedPreferences() is no different from using its counterpart, but it allows for more than one preference file. It takes the following form:

getSharedPreferences(String name, int mode) 

Here, name is the file. The mode can be either MODE_PRIVATE, MODE_WORLD_READABLE, or MODE_WORLD_WRITABLE and describes the file's access levels.

See also

  • Chapter 7, Data Storage, for more examples on data storage
You have been reading a chapter from
Android 9 Development Cookbook - Third Edition
Published in: Oct 2018
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781788991216
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