Kannan Ramaswamy
Kannan Ramaswamy

Reputation: 221

Resources.getSystem() vs getResources()

I am new to Android and I am learning the SDK myself from resource available over the net.

I came across a situation now. I am trying the below code:

Type 1:getResources().getString(android.R.string.cancel);

Type 2: Resources.getSystem().getString(android.R.string.cancel);

Type 3: getString(android.R.string.cancel);

All of the above methods return the same value. So what are these methods, what are their use cases. What are the good practices on when to use which method. Please help me out.

Upvotes: 22

Views: 17185

Answers (3)

Lodorenos
Lodorenos

Reputation: 163

All 3 return the same value, but Resources.getSystem() references to the system resources and might cause a crash if used incorrectly.

The advised usage is "getString(android.R.string.cancel);"

It is also used as such in the WalkieTalkieActivity.java code on the Android developer website.

Upvotes: 5

Gangnus
Gangnus

Reputation: 24464

The difference is not only in what you get, but in WHERE can you use them.

The first and the third ones are using "context." invisibly. So, very often (in static members or out of activity members) you can't use them directly, unless you pass context or resource as a static variable or as a parameter into your scope. But the second one

Resources.getSystem().getString(android.R.string.cancel)

You can use ABSOLUTELY EVERYWHERE in your application, even in static constants declaration! But for system resources only

Upvotes: 12

Hoang
Hoang

Reputation: 1047

These three methods are all the same. Here is the root method : getApplicationContext().getResource().getString("") and here is shortcut method : getString("") Use the shortcut method when you are processing on apps context. In almost every case, we use getString() to get Strings defined in the String file.

Upvotes: 1

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