Reputation: 12018
I want to run a thread (Which does some time consuming task in background and does NOT update UI) it just downloads some files form the internet and it is independent from the UI.
I want to run this thread repeatedly after some time interval.
How can i do this, I have thread something like below:
boolean mResult =false;
void onCreate()
{
DownloadThread mDownloadThread = new DownloadThread();
mDownloadThread.start();
}
class DownloadThread extends Thread implements Runnable
{
public void run()
{
// My download code
mResult = result;
}
}
Do i need to use Handler
for implementing this?
Upvotes: 5
Views: 25970
Reputation: 54732
Option 1:
volatile boolean flag = true;
public void run()
{
while(flag)
{
// Do your task
try{
Thread.Sleep(interval);
} catch(Exception e){
}
}
}
Option 2:
Timer timer = new Timer();
timer.scheduleAtFixedRate(new TimerTask() {
@Override
public void run() {
// Do your task
}
}, 0, interval);
Option 3:
volatile boolean flag = true;
public void someMethod(){
// Do your task
try{
Thread.Sleep(interval);
} catch(Exception e){
}
if(flag)
return;
else
someMethod();
}
Option 4:
final Handler handler = new Handler();
volatile boolean flag = true;
Class A implements Runnable{
public void run(){
// Do your Task
}
if(!flag)
handler.postDelayed(a, interval);
}
A a = new A();
handler.postDelayed(a);
There will be many more options. I never tried option 3 and 4. It just came to my mind and I wrote. If I were you I would use any of 1 or 2.
Upvotes: 22
Reputation: 5057
Prefered choice is
java.util.concurrent.ScheduledExecutorService
Newer and robust implementation, More here ScheduledExecutorService
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 391
I would use a Timer to achieve this. Try this:
void onCreate()
{
Timer t = new Timer();
t.scheduleAtFixedRate(new TimerTask() {
@Override
public void run() {
// Download your stuff
}
}, 0, 1000);
}
It starts immediately and the run-Method gets called every second.
Upvotes: 5