cursor loader for each content provider uri - android

I'm reading about cursor loaders, and I want to use them to observe changes on my sqlite db and for future use with GCM. I want to ask a simple question, should I make a cursor loader for each URI that I use in my Content provider, or there is a way to make only one general loader that will observe and change on any URI and update the corresponding activity?
To make my question specific to my case, I'll explain what i want to do. I'm making a social media app, so I have a list of feeds list view of which each list item will contain another list view that represents the comments. so I think I'll have two cursor adapters and two loaders, is that right?

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Any cursorLoader with out content provider that notyfies data change?

i am working on a project where i have recyclerview and i populate the recyclerview with data from database and i am using cursor loader to load the data and custom cursor adapter to set the data to recyclerview.I have not created any content provider because my app dose not share any information.But the problem is since i am not using any content provider cursorloader is not refreshing after the data change.I just want to know if there is any way to solve the problem or are there any custom cursorloaders that do the work..
Thank you
Well, you can use content providers without sharing the contents with other apps. Honestly I don't know why the documentation states that you only should use one if you want to share data. Thats nonsense considering that you get tons of neat features for free by simply using a content provider. And if you don't want to share any data with other apps, then set the 'exported' flag to false in the manifest file.
If you don't want to use a provider, then you can signal a change with:
[any Context].getContentResolver().notifyChange(youtUri, null)

Best practice for loose coupling between data & UI in Android - Adapter, Filter, CursorLoader and ContentProvider

Assume we have an Activity with n TextViews that represent one line notes. These notes are stored somewhere (local database, network etc), and each time onResume() being called, the proper number of TextViews are drawn according to that stored data.
Now, lets say the user want to delete a note, what would be the best way the resolve the specific TextView, back to its storage entity?
At the moment, the only way I know is by using View.Tag, and having some manager to translate it to data entity, but it look rather messy.
Are there any other options?
In Android, the Adapter acts a bridge between the view and the data model. You could display the n TextViews in either a ListView or a GridView, and when the user adds or deletes a note, the local or server database is first updated. Upon completion of the web service call and/or the local database update, the new data is added to the underlying Adapter. The View is then refreshed by calling adapter.notifyDataSetChanged(). This would be the way to do it.
Approaches:
If updating the local SQLite database, you could consider using a
CursorAdpater
to hold the data for the View, as it directly maps the entries in
the local database to the View.
If making use of a ContentProvider, it is even possible to combine
a CursorAdapter with a
LoaderManager
and a
CursorLoader:
these plug into the Activity / Fragment life-cycle and monitor
the underlying ContentProvider for changes that are published
automatically to the View on a separate thread.
It is also possible to use a
Filter
in conjunction with the Adapter to define a dynamic mechanism that
sorts the data entries on-the-fly. The filtering is performed by the
Filter on a separate thread, as per a query entered by the user,
possibly in an
AutoCompleteTextView.
References:
See the Retrieving a List of
Contacts
tutorial. The example here retrieves a set of contacts from the
contacts ContentProvider based on a dynamic, alphabetical search by
the user. It makes use of CursorAdapter, CursorLoader and
LoaderManager to monitor and update the data, and it displays the
search results in a ListView.
See also the Android Realtime (Instant) Search with Filter Class example, which shows how a Filter is to be used.
Android AutoCompleteTextView with Custom Adapter filtering.
Android AutocompleteTextView using ArrayAdapter and Filter.

Loading a BIG SQLiteDatabase in a ListActivity

I'm working on an Android project I need to finish very fast.
One of the app's features is loading a SQLite database content and listing it in a ListView inside a ListActivity.
The database contains a few tables, among which 2 are very large.
Each item in the database has many columns, out of which I need to display at least 2 (Name, Price), although preferably is 3.
This might seem a pretty easy task, as all I need to do in this part of the app is read a database and list it. I did this without any problems, testing the app versus a small sample database.
In my FIRST version, I used a Cursor to get the query, then an ArrayAdapter as the list's adapter, and after the query I simply loop the cursor from start to end, and for each position I add the Cursor's content to the adapter.
The onItemClickListener queries the database again versus other parameters (basically I open categories) so it clears the adapter, then loops the Cursor and adds its content to the adapter all over again.
The app worked like a charm, but when I used a real-life, big database (>300MB) I suddenly got my app taking very long to display the contents, and sometimes even blocking.
So I did some research and started using a SimpleCursorAdapter that automatically links the contents of a Cursor to the ListView using the usual parameters (String[] from, int[] to etc., where I used android.R.layout.simple_list_item_2 and android.R.id.text1 and text2).
Problem is, is doesn't change much the time to load.
I've came across some suggested solutions on different web sites and tutorials, most of them using, in one way or another, the AsyncTask class. I tried implementing this manually myself but it's hard to keep track of multiple threads and I failed.
Tutorials keep telling how to do this with content providers, but I found nothing clear bout my specific situation: very big SQLite database -> read to ListView.
Now my head is filled in with notions like LoaderManager, LoaderAdapter etc, all mixed up and confused in my head.
Can anybody please provide me a complete, nice, clean solution to do this "simple" task?
Again: I want to read a BIG SQLiteDatabase and display it in a ListView. I want the app NOT to block.
I need a class that has a member function that takes as parameter a query and the ListActivity's context and takes itself care of displaying the result of the query in the view.
Please don't provide me abstract answers. I'm running out of time and I'm very confused right now and I need a clean complete solution.
You're my only hope.
If you query such large database it will take tym, you need to find a smart way,
Like limit you database query to get first 10 or 30 items and then maintain,once last item is reached query rest 30 items and bind them
Refer this tutorial, it will teach you how to add data dynamically in a list view
http://p-xr.com/android-tutorial-dynamicaly-load-more-items-to-the-listview-never-ending-list/
The above list has expired chk this
http://mobile.dzone.com/news/android-tutorial-dynamicaly
If you query large database it will take time to fetch data and show it on List View. So it is better to populate data at run time. You can use Lazy Adapter concept to load data . This link1 may be useful for You.
Thanks
you can also use :
public class TodosOverviewActivity extends ListActivity implements
LoaderManager.LoaderCallbacks<Cursor>
check this link for more details.

Paged list and CursorLoader

I need to implement paged list, that uses Loader to get Cursor from ContentProvider. I have footer and when user clicks it - I need to add next records to list.
How can I refresh data in the list, using Loader? Or what should I do here?
I think you should read this article about Loaders in Android first, to get a better understanding of how Loaders can be used in Android. You can even find LoaderCursor example with source codes under Android ApiDemos section in this article.

Android listing design problem with cursors

I have a following situation in my android app.
I have an app that fetches messages from inbox, sent items and drafts based on search keywords. I use to accomplish this by fetching cursors for each manually based on selection by user and then populating them in a custom data holder object. Filter those results based on given keywords and then manually render view with respective data.
Someone suggested that I should use a custom Cursor adapter to bind view and my cursor data. So I tried doing that. Now what I am doing is this:
Fetch individual cursors for inbox, sent items and drafts. Merge them into one using Merge cursor and then pass that back to my CursorAdapter implmentation.
Now where or how do I filter my cursor data based on keywords; because now binding will ensure that they are directly rendered to view on list. Also, some post fetching operation like fetching sender's contact pic and all will be something that I do not want to move to adapter. If I do all this processing in adapter; it'll be heavy and ugly.
How could I have designed it better such that it performs and the responsibilities are shared and distributed.
Any ideas will be helpful.
Using cursors and adapters does not work out well for the most part. Our experience as led down a different technique.
Your best bet is to "pump" the cursors in an AsyncTask into an ArrayList<data-holding object>, then you can do processing and then sort that list as necessary with Collections.sort() and the Comparator of your own construction, and then use ArrayAdapter to present the resulting list. This releases cursors ASAP and stays off the UI thread while doing it and you can sort however you feel like.
Remember always process in the background and avoid ANR!
We use this in all of our apps (14 on The Market) and it works like Butter.

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