in the below code send() function is executing many times in a second,i want to execute send() once in a second,how i change the code
timer.scheduleAtFixedRate(
new TimerTask() {
public void run() {
try {
send();
} catch (Exception e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
},
1000,
1000);
send function is given below
void send() throws Exception, IOException
{
s=new Socket("10.0.2.2",4200);
r=new PrintWriter(s.getOutputStream());
while(true)
{
Log.e("msg","hi send\n");
r.print("hai");
}
}
Logcat output is given below
I replaced timers with Runnables/Handlers recently, it's much easier
//declare at top of your activity
private Handler h = new Handler();
private Runnable myRunnable = new Runnable() {
public void run() {
//do stuff
//run again in one second
h.postDelayed(myRunnable, 1000);
}
};
//trigger the runnable somewhere in your code e.g. onClickHander or onCreate etc
h.postDelayed(myRunnable, 1000);
It happened for me when I used a TaskTimer and the phone got into sleep mode. I think it is related to TimerTask using Thread.sleep() to provide the timing. This relies on uptimeMillis() which according to documentation - 'is counted in milliseconds since the system was booted. This clock stops when the system enters deep sleep (CPU off, display dark, device waiting for external input), but is not affected by clock scaling, idle, or other power saving mechanisms. This is the basis for most interval timing such as Thread.sleep(millls)'
Solution would be either to use AlarmManager or WakeLocks.
an easier approach would look like this:
new Thread() {
public void run() {
while(true) {
send();
try{
Thread.sleep(1000); // pauses for 1 second
catch(Exception e) {}
}
}
}.start();
Related
I'm calling methode doSomething() continuously with a thread.sleep(100). This happens in on the UIThread, so the UIthread gets unresponsive. What is the correct way in Android to run the method doSomething() or the entire someobject in a seperate thread?
public void loop(){
while(true){
someObject.doSomething();
try {
Thread.sleep(100);
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Right now i'm using
new Thread(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
someObject.doSomething();
}
}).start();
This obviously creates a different thread for each iteration. I don't think this is the correct way. What is the correct way in Android?
new Thread(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
while(true){
try {
Thread.sleep(100);
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
someObject.doSomething();
}
}
}).start();
Since run never returns, the thread will never end and will loop forever. It will call doSomething roughly every 100 ms (as close as sleep will get, which isn't exact).
You can make your own Thread class, with Looper and Handler, posting your doSomething every 100ms:
public class MyThread extends Thread{
private Handler myHandler;
#Override
public void run(){
Looper.prepare();
myHandler = new Handler();
myHandler.post(doSomethingRunnable);
}
Runnable doSomethingRunnable = new Runnnable{
doSomething(); //or myHandler.postDelayed() first for greater accuracy, but only if doSomething doesnt take too long
myHandler.postDelayed(doSomethingRunnable, 100);
};
doSomething(){
thisStuff(thatStuff());
}
}
You can use AsyncTask. doInBackground() is called on a background thread and will not block UI. This is the preferred way for doing stuff on background threads.
For a long running task. You can use an IntentService and put your background code in onHandleIntent
You can use a basic thread but it may be hard to manage. You can read more about threads in android here
I need to repeat a task every 1 hour in the background (I am sending some info to my server).
I tried to use a service with a post delay handler calling it self.
handler = new Handler();
runable = new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
try{
//sending info to server....
}
catch (Exception e) {
// TODO: handle exception
}
finally{
//also call the same runnable
handler.postDelayed(this, 1000*60*60);
}
}
};
handler.postDelayed(runable, 1000*60*60);
This did not work, in small time interval of 1 minutes it worked fine, when i changed it to 5 minutes it worked for about 5 repetitions and then the timing got wrong and after an hour the service shut down.
i want to try to use a AlarmManager but in the documentation
it says "As of Android 4.4 (API Level 19), all repeating alarms are inexact"
does anybody know how inexact it is? is it seconds? ,minutes?
can i rely on this to work on time?
does anybody have any other suggestions for repeating tasks in a service?
Thanks
You can use this This Code is for repeated calling on oncreate method or anyother thing
public void callAsynchronousTask() {
final Handler handler = new Handler();
Timer timer = new Timer();
TimerTask doAsynchronousTask = new TimerTask() {
#Override
public void run() {
handler.post(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
try {
onCreate();
} catch (Exception e) {
}
}
});
}
};
timer.schedule(doAsynchronousTask, 0, 1000); //execute in every 1000 ms
}
I am using a timeschedular in android to schedule an AsyncTask in my app.I was able to work it out well,now i want every time the duration after which the task runs to be changed i am using this code
ip=3000;
final Handler handler = new Handler();
Timer timer = new Timer();
TimerTask doAsynchronousTask = new TimerTask() {
#Override
public void run() {
handler.post(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
try {
play_duration=durat.get(vn);
ip=Integer.valueOf(play_duration);
ip=ShowImages.ip*1000;
Showtime s1 = new Showtime();
s1.execute(what,f12,transi,play_duration);
} catch (Exception e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
}
}
});
}
};
timer.schedule(doAsynchronousTask, 0,ip);
i am trying to change the value of ip variable every time in the thread but it do not change and i do not know why my thread always run after the initial value of ip that is 3000 miliseconds, can someone suggest a way to do it..thanks
to change component on the UI use the runOnUiThread,
see here, here and here to do that thing on the background you can use something like -
while(true)
{
runOnUiThread() {
do some stuf here;
}
Thread.Sleep(300); //<--- that should be nothing for the user and enough for the cpu
}
if you need more accurate answer post your code and ill guide you through
I'm trying to run a piece of code periodically every 3 seconds that can change the color of a button.
So far I have:
ScheduledExecutorService scheduleTaskExecutor = Executors.newScheduledThreadPool(2);
// This schedule a runnable task every 2 minutes
scheduleTaskExecutor.scheduleAtFixedRate(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
queryFeedback2(); // display the data
}
}, 0, 3, TimeUnit.SECONDS);
This code will run the piece of code but will not update my UI with the results.
Firstly, what code be cause my UI updating issues?
And secondly, is this the way I should be running my code periodically? Is there a better way?
Yes, there are few options available.
Thread
Runnable
TimerTask
As stated by alex2k8 in their answer here:
final Runnable r = new Runnable()
{
public void run()
{
tv.append("Hello World");
handler.postDelayed(this, 1000);
}
};
handler.postDelayed(r, 1000);
Or we can use normal thread for example (with original Runner):
Thread thread = new Thread()
{
#Override
public void run() {
try {
while(true) {
sleep(1000);
handler.post(r);
}
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
};
thread.start();
You may consider your runnable object just as a command that can be
sent to the message queue for execution, and handler as just a helper
object used to send that command.
More details are here
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/Handler.html
You can update the UI from
handler. Tutorial for using handler, thread is available here.
Selecting between above mentioned option is really based on what kind of functionality you need. If you only need to do something at few interval then any of the above should be fine.
I have an app that runs 2 threads in loops. 1st one is updating a graph in 1s interval and the second one is updating another graph at 60s interval. The second task is taking a long time since it is quering some server in the internet 3 times that might not always be available and even if it is it will take up to 5-7s to execute.
What is happening is when I launch the second thread it will pause execution of the first one and that is not what I want, I wish both run concurrently. Here in the Youtube video you can see the results of the app running. http://youtu.be/l7K5zSWzlxI
"thread_updater1s" is running a green graph, large readout, and a timer in the corner so you clearly see it stalls for 11 seconds.
1)First of all why is that happening? how to fix it?
2)I'm aware that I might not launch the threads properly at all. I had hard time understanding how to make something to run in a interval loop in Java and my code worked fine for one graph/tread. Now when I have 2 loops in separate threads I don't know why they are not executing concurrently.
Here is the code:
public class LoopExampleActivity extends Activity {
#Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
this.requestWindowFeature(Window.FEATURE_NO_TITLE);
setContentView(R.layout.main);
thread_updater1s.start();
thread_updater2.start();
}// end of onCreate
final Runnable r1s = new Runnable() {
public void run() {
do_1s_updates(); // those are very quick http calls to the local API server
} // to get data nessessary for some plot.
// They have 1s timeout as well but rarely timeout
};
final Runnable r2 = new Runnable() {
public void run() {
do_large_updates(); //This makes 7 long call over the Internet to the slow https
//server once every 60s. Has 10s timeout and sometimes takes as much as
//7s to execute
}
};
Thread thread_updater1s = new Thread() {
#Override
public void run() {
try {
while (true) {
handler.post(r1s);
sleep(1000);
}
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
};
Thread thread_updater2 = new Thread() {
#Override
public void run() {
try {
while (true) {
handler2.post(r2);
sleep(60000);
}
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
};
}
PS. please be forgiving and informative I only code Java for 15 days so far with absolutely no prior experince or lesson.
You need to make the http requests in the threads (not the posted runnables). Then, when you have the data downloaded, you create a runnable with that data that will update the graph and post that runnable to be executed by the UI thread. Here is an example:
public class LoopExampleActivity extends Activity {
#Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
this.requestWindowFeature(Window.FEATURE_NO_TITLE);
setContentView(R.layout.main);
thread_updater1s.start();
thread_updater2.start();
}// end of onCreate
Thread thread_updater1s = new Thread() {
#Override
public void run() {
try {
while (true) {
final Object data = getDataFromServer1();
handler.post(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
updateGraph1(data);
}
);
sleep(1000);
}
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
};
Thread thread_updater2 = new Thread() {
#Override
public void run() {
try {
while (true) {
final Object data = getDataFromServer2();
handler.post(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
updateGraph2(data);
}
);
sleep(60000);
}
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
};
Obviously, change that final Object data by the appropriate class that represents your data downloaded.
handler.post pushes the runnable onto the main (UI) thread's message queue for execution on the main thread.
So what you're doing is every sleep interval, you're sending a message to the main thread to run the function. Clearly, the main thread can't run 2 things at once, so that's why one runnable is delayed for the next one.
You probably want to do the work of the runnable in the separate threads - why did you start using a handler? What happens if you call do_1s_updates and do_large_updates directly instead of through the handler & runnable?