Seeking guidance: data storage decision - android

I apologize in advance if this question is too broad or too "it-depends."
Basically, I need to make a decision about how to store and access data in my app. The app works very much like flashcards; the "front" of the card presents the topic and the "back" presents the details/explanation. At first it seemed like a SQLite database would work best for this type of structure (and maybe it really is, I just don't know) because the data is static and this model works well with the rows and columns structure of a db. (btw, as of now, I'm using openCSV to parse the csv files containing my cards. Thought it was easier than SQLite...)
My issue (finally) is that I want to be able to display images for some of the data items. Some cards, for example, should display a corresponding image. Is this something that I can do with a SQLite db? Like, have one column store the path to an image....? Maybe what I'm asking is really basic, but I just haven't seen too many examples to really have a good sense of the design options out there.
I might also be confused about how I would dynamically change my views based on whether there is an image available. Maybe that's just an issue of dynamically creating an imageview whose source is the file that the db points to...
In summary, I'd really appreciate some guidance on how I can fetch and display text data along with images when they're available, whether it be in SQLite or some other way.
Thanks!

If all this data is being shipped with the app, I'd suggest just keeping everything stored as resources. You can have string arrays for the topics and details, and you can store images either as drawable resources or as assets. In the latter case, you could store the asset names as another string array resource. (In the former case, you'd have to build a map from each card to the resource identifier. This is, unfortunately, one area in which the Android resources architecture doesn't shine.)
If you want to use SQLite, it has BLOB fields in which you could store the images themselves, or int fields in which you could store image resource identifiers. Take a look at the searchable dictionary sample project for how to build an SQLite data base from resource data.

Sorry but this really is a 'it depends' kind of topic.
Unless you're storing a large number of rows of data (around the order of 10 000) then an XML file would be your best bet. In a Train Timetable app I recently wrote we went with a XML SAX parser loading a 14 000 record database to memory and it took no more than 2 seconds on an HTC Hero, so even for large databases its pretty fast.
The SQLite option is preferable only if you want to make use of relationships that come with a database structure. It is better at handling large numbers of rows but terrible at handling images.
Since you're flash cards are not relational I would recommend an xml file, using the xmlSax parser, and a folder of images within your assets folder. You could even run the images through pngCrunch to save some space.
XML is very flexible, below is an example of what your xml file could look like. Check out http://www.w3schools.com/schema/ for more information on writing an xml schema.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<cards>
<card title="card 1" topic="atopic" image="image file name">
<front>Lots of text</front>
<back>Lots of text</back>
</card>
<card ..>
..
</card>
</cards>

Related

How do I optimize loading a lot of Strings in my android app?

I'm currently working on a project where I have a dictionary list of words of the english language. I use this list to figure out if a user has inputted a valid word. The whole list is rather lengthy, were talking about 100k of Strings, but I have partitioned the list into smaller bits. These files are stored as xml files and are accessed by the assetmanager. I use the parser as such to open the file:
document = documentBuilder.parse(xmlFile);
The document is a Document object using the library: org.w3c.dom.Document
So the problem is that this actually slows down the app A LOT, even with the smaller partitioned files (in fact initially I just had one file with all the 100k Strings and it crashed the app immediately). So should I use text files instead? Or instead of using the assetmanager should I store my data in resources? Or any other way to optimize speed for that matter? I'm open to any suggestions.
Why not store the word list in an sqlite table? You get indexed-based searches. If each entry is one word then a normal table is fine. If you are using multiple words per entry, then an fts table (full-text-search) solution would be best.
If speed is paramount (i.e. you don't care how much memory you use up -- which would be very unusual for an android app), then loading the words into a hashtable would probably give you the fastest per word lookup. It would take some time to load the list on startup, however.
So I was playing around with different approaches and found out that instead of using partitioned xml files, I used text files saved in the asset folder which greatly reduced execution time.
if you have a big traitement to deal with and you this my make your apps slow, i recommande you to use AsyncTask so that you can do what ever you want in backGround and meanwhile you can do another thing, take a look in this official documentation

Android, storing big number of small images linked to database

I have been asked to create a tiny android app.
In everyday work i code for .NET and I have no experience connected with Android, but as it is a really small app I guess it's going to be a good experience rather than something hard.
The core of the app would be a small database (probably XML, unless somebody suggest better solution) that would contain categories, names of the institutions assigned with each category and logo (not very high resolution I guess a single file would be <100kB) of the institution.
The database also would not be very big - I expect not more than 1000 records in total. The DB has to be totally offline and local, it cannot require Internet access when operating.
The model I assume would be to ship new version of the application when the database changes (which is not going to be very frequent).
What is the best way to deal with these requirements?
My first idea was to create an XML file that would contain the records and link to the image. The XML and all the images linked to it would be stored in single file (preferably zip) that would be stored in app resources. This is very good as it is going to be very easy to update the database.
The second idea that somebody suggested me would be to use SQLite and store images in BLOB. In general I have read that it isn't a good idea to store images in database directly, and I am afraid if it's going to be possible to meet all requirements mentioned above.
Mostly I have no idea how to update the database easily and attach it to new version of application.
Any suggestions?
I would be grateful for any response.
I wouldn't go about using XML to save your data and by no means zip anything.
I think your way of thinking is ok, but you're making things really complicated for yourself.
Seeing as you're used to .NET I suppose you're also pretty confident with SQL, so I'd suggest you have a look at how to use the built-in SQLite database in Android.
If you would go the XML route you'd have to serialize and de-serialize the XML file over and over again and then parse the XML. Ok you don't have a lot of data, but searching inside an XML file with at least 1000 nodes would be slow in comparison to the performance of a database.
Also upgrading an existing SQLite database is not that hard - Android has methods for that (onUpgrade coming from the SQLiteOpenHelper).
As to saving images I'm assuming that you won't fetch new pictures from the Internet, so it would be best just to store them in the drawable folder of your app (be mindful of different screensizes) and then reading them into an ImageView when needed. To figure out what image should go for what institution I would store either the image name of each image in the SQLite database or store the resource id for each image in the database - for instance R.drawable.myawesomepictureformyinstitution.
I know my answer is somewhat "superficial", but your question is also somewhat "broad" and hard to answer without me actually writing most of the code, and that's not my intention ;-)
Hope this helps - let me know if anything is unclear.

Android Performance : Flat file vs SQLite

There are few questions related to this topic on stackoverflow, But I didn't get the proper answer. I have some doubts on performance of flat files, Is it better to use flat files instead of SQLite ? Can anybody have performance statistics ? Or example of proper way to code flat file in android.
Aside from performance benefits, here's a simple list of advantages of using SQLite rather than flat file:
You can query items as you wish -- don't need to load all of them and select which ones you need.
Deleting records is a much less painful process. No rewriting of whole files into wherever.
Updating a record is as easy as removing or creating one.
Have you ever tried doing cross-referencing lookups on a flat file? Not worth it.
To summarize, it's every advantage a Database has over a text file.
It depends on your requirement.
If your storage data size is structured-bulky in size then i suggest you for SQLite. On the other hand if the data size is just a single or few lines then flat file is best option.
What makes difference between them is, SQLite stores data in structured format, so it will be easier to find a record from multiple set of records which is very tedious process in case of flat file.
However when if you are storing blob kind of data then it is suggested to use combination of both, SQLite and file system both. i.e. store the image/sound/video data as file format and store their path in SQLite.
Also visit this accessing performance.
SQlite definitely way better in terms of performance and this gets even more important as the size of your data increases.
I've been working on a flutter app where I needed to display a filtered list of items dynamically based on typed text. I initially used a json file to store data and would read and store relevant values into a list, then filter this list as the user types.
This worked just fine with a few items so I thought I was fine until I tested with a real dataset which contained over 150,000 items. Trying to filter a list this large as a user types crashed the app. I moved to a database solution and all my problems were solved. Instant filtering and no more crashes

Which is better? Database or xmlfile? [duplicate]

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I really like Xml for saving data, but when does sqlite/database become the better option? eg, when the xml has more than x items or is greater than y MB?
I am coding an rss reader and I believe I made the wrong choice in using xml over a sqlite database to store a cache of all the feeds items. There are some feeds which have an xml file of ~1mb after a month, another has over 700 items, while most only have ~30 items and are ~50kb in size after a several months.
I currently have no plans to implement a cap because I like to be able to search through everything.
So, my questions are:
When is the overhead of sqlite/databases justified over using xml?
Are the few large xml files justification enough for the database when there are a lot of small ones, though even the small ones will grow over time? (a long long time)
updated (more info)
Every time a feed is selected in the GUI I reload all the items from that feeds xml file.
I also need to modify the read/unread status which seems really hacky when I loop through all nodes in the xml to find the item and then set it to read/unread.
Man do I have experience with this. I work on a project where we originally stored all of our data using XML, then moved to SQLite. There are many pros and cons to each technology, but it was performance that caused the switchover. Here is what we observed.
For small databases (a few meg or smaller), XML was much faster, and easier to deal with. Our data was naturally in a tree format, which made XML much more attractive, and XPath allowed us to do many queries in one simple line rather than having to walk down an ancestry tree.
We were programming in a Win32 environment, and used the standard Microsoft DOM library. We would load all the data into memory, parse it into a DOM tree and search, add, modify on the in memory copy. We would periodically save the data, and needed to rotate copies in case the machine crashed in the middle of a write.
We also needed to build up some "indexes" by hand using C++ tree maps. This, of course would be trivial to do with SQL.
Note that the size of the data on the filesystem was a factor of 2-4 smaller than the "in memory" DOM tree.
By the time the data got to 10M-100M size, we started to have real problems. Interestingly enough, at all data sizes, XML processing was much faster than SQLite turned out to be (because it was in memory, not on the hard drive)! The problem was actually twofold- first, loadup time really started to get long. We would need to wait a minute or so before the data was in memory and the maps were built. Of course once loaded the program was very fast. The second problem was that all of this memory was tied up all the time. Systems with only a few hundred meg would be unresponsive in other apps even though we ran very fast.
We actually looking into using a filesystem based XML database. There are a couple open sourced versions XML databases, we tried them. I have never tried to use a commercial XML database, so I can't comment on them. Unfortunately, we could never get the XML databases to work well at all. Even the act of populating the database with hundreds of meg of XML took hours.... Perhaps we were using it incorrectly. Another problem was that these databases were pretty heavyweight. They required Java and had full client server architecture. We gave up on this idea.
We found SQLite then. It solved our problems, but at a price. When we initially plugged SQLite in, the memory and load time problems were gone. Unfortunately, since all processing was now done on the harddrive, the background processing load went way up. While earlier we never even noticed the CPU load, now the processor usage was way up. We needed to optimize the code, and still needed to keep some data in memory. We also needed to rewrite many simple XPath queries as complicated multiquery algorithms.
So here is a summary of what we learned.
For tree data, XML is much easier to query and modify using XPath.
For small datasets (less than 10M), XML blew away SQLite in performance.
For large datasets (greater than 10M-100M), XML load time and memory usage became a big problem, to the point that some computers become unusable.
We couldn't get any opensource XML database to fix the problems associated with large datasets.
SQLite doesn't have the memory problems of XML DOM, but it is generally slower in processing the data (it is on the hard drive, not in memory). (note- SQLite tables can be stored in memory, perhaps this would make it as fast.... We didn't try this because we wanted to get the data out of memory.)
Storing and querying tree data in a table is not enjoyable. However, managing transactions and indexing partially makes up for it.
I basically agree with Mitchel, that this can be highly specific depending on what are you going to do with XML and SQLite. For your case (cache), it seems to me that using SQLite (or other embedded databases) makes more sense.
First I don't really think that SQLite will need more overhead than XML. And I mean both development time overhead and runtime overhead. Only problem is that you have a dependence on SQLite library. But since you would need some library for XML anyway it doesn't matter (I assume project is in C/C++).
Advantages of SQLite over XML:
everything in one file,
performance loss is lower than XML as cache gets bigger,
you can keep feed metadata separate from cache itself (other table), but accessible in the same way,
SQL is probably easier to work with than XPath for most people.
Disadvantages of SQLite:
can be problematic with multiple processes accessing same database (probably not your case),
you should know at least basic SQL. Unless there will be hundreds of thousands of items in cache, I don't think you will need to optimize it much,
maybe in some way it can be more dangerous from security standpoint (SQL injection). On the other hand, you are not coding web app, so this should not happen.
Other things are on par for both solutions probably.
To sum it up, answers to your questions respectively:
You will not know, unless you test your specific application with both back ends. Otherwise it's always just a guess. Basic support for both caches should not be a problem to code. Then benchmark and compare.
Because of the way XML files are organized, SQLite searches should always be faster (barring some corner cases where it doesn't matter anyway because it's blazingly fast). Speeding up searches in XML would require index database anyway, in your case that would mean having cache for cache, not a particularly good idea. But with SQLite you can have indexing as part of database.
Don't forget that you have a great database at your fingertips: the filesystem!
Lots of programmers forget that a decent directory-file structure is/has:
It's fast as hell
It's portable
It has a tiny runtime footprint
People are talking about splitting up XML files into multiple XML files... I would consider splitting your XML into multiple directories and multiple plaintext files.
Give it a go. It's refreshingly fast.
Use XML for data that the
application should know -
configuration, logging and what not.
Use databases(oracle, SQL server etc) for data that the user
interacts with directly or
indirectly - real data
Use SQLite if the user data is more
of a serialized collection - like
huge list of files and their content
or collection of email items etc.
SQLite is good at that.
Depends on the kind and the size of the data.
I wouldn't use XML for storing RSS items. A feed reader makes constant updates as it receives data.
With XML, you need to load the data from file first, parse it, then store it for easy search/retrieval/update. Sounds like a database...
Also, what happens if your application crashes? if you use XML, what state is the data in the XML file versus the data in memory. At least with SQLite you get atomicity, so you are assured that your application will start with the same state as when the last database write was made.
XML is best used as an interchange format when you need to move data from your application to somewhere else or share information between applications. A database should be the preferred method of storage for almost any size application.
When should XML be used for data persistence instead of a database? Almost never. XML is a data transport language. It is slow to parse and awkward to query. Parse the XML (don't shred it!) and convert the resulting data into domain objects. Then persist the domain objects. A major advantage of a database for persistence is SQL which means unstructured queries and access to common tools and optimization techniques.
I have made the switch to SQLite and I feel much better knowing it's in a database.
There are a lot of other benefits from this:
Adding new items is really simple
Sorting by multiple columns
Removing duplicates with a unique index
I've created 2 views, one for unread items and one for all items, not sure if this is the best use of views, but I really wanted to try using them.
I also benchmarked the xml vs sqlite using the StopWatch class, and the sqlite is faster, although it could just be that my way of parsing xml files wasn't the fastest method.
Small # items and size (25 items, 30kb)
~1.5 ms sqlite
~8.0 ms xml
Large # of items (700 items, 350kb)
~20 ms sqlite
~25 ms xml
Large file size (850 items, 1024kb)
~45 ms sqlite
~60 ms xml
To me it really depends on what you are doing with them, how many users/processes need access to them at the same time etc.
I work with large XML files all the time, but they are single process, import style items, that multi-user, or performance are not really needs.
SO really it is a balance.
If any time you will need to scale, use databases.
XML is good for storing data which is not completely structured and you typically want to exchange it with another application. I prefer to use a SQL database for data. XML is error prone as you can cause subtle errors due to typos or ommissions in the data itself. Some open source application frameworks use too many xml files for configuration, data, etc. I prefer to have it in SQL.
Since you ask for a rule of thumb, I would say that use XML based application data, configuration, etc if you are going to set it up once and not access/search it much. For active searches and updations, its best to go with SQL.
For example, a web server stores application data in a XML file and you dont really need to perform complex search, update the file. The web server starts, reads the xml file and thats that. So XML is perfect here. Suppose you use a framework like Struts. You need to use XML and the action configurations dont change much once the application is developed and deployed. So again, the XML file is a good way. Now if your Struts developed application allows extensive searches and updations, deletions, then SQL is the optimal way.
Offcourse, you will surely meet one or two developers in your organisation who will chant XML or SQL only and proclaim XML or SQL as the only way to go. Beware of such folks and do what 'feels' right for your application. Dont just follow a 'technology religion'.
Think of things like how often you need to update the data, how often you need to search the data. Then you will have your answer on what to use - XML or SQL.
I agree with #Bradley.
XML is very slow and not particularly useful as a storage format. Why bother? Will you be editing the data by hand using a text editor? If so, XML still isn't a very convenient format compared to something like YAML. With something like SQlite, queries are easier to write, and there's a well defined API for getting your data in and out.
XML is fine if you need to send data around between programs. But in the name of efficiency, you should probably produce the XML at sending time, and parse it into "real data" at receive time.
All the above means that your question about "when the overhead of a database is justified" is kind of moot. XML has a way higher overhead, all the time, than SQlite does. (Full-on databases like MSSQL are heavier, especially in administrative overhead, but that's a totally different question.)
XML can be stored as text and as a binary file format.
If your primary goal is to let a computer read / write a file format effeciently you should work with a binary file format.
Databases are an easy to use way of storing and maintaining data.
They are not the fastest way to store data that is a binary file format.
What can speed things up is using an in memory database / database type. Sqlite has this option.
And this sounds like the best way to do it for you.
My opinion is that you should use SQLite (or another appropriate embedded database) anytime you don't need a pure-text file format. Note, this is a pretty big exception. There are a lot of scenarios that require, or are benefited by, pure-text file formats.
As far as overhead goes, SQLite compiles to something like 250 k with normal flags. Many XML parsing libraries are larger than SQLite. You get no concurrency gains using XML. The SQLite binary file format is going to support much more efficient writes (largely because you can't append to the end of a well-formatted XML file). And even reading data, most of which I assume is fairly random access, is going to be faster using SQLite.
And to top it all off, you get access to the benefits of SQL like transactions and indexes.
Edit: Forgot to mention. One benefit of SQLite (as opposed to many databases) is that it allows any type in any row in any column. Basically, with SQLite you get the same freedom you have with XML in terms of datatypes. This also means that you don't have to worry about putting limits on text columns.
You should note that many large Relational DBs (Oracle and SQLServer) have XML datatypes to store data within a database and use XPath within the SQL statement to gain access to that data.
Also, there are native XML databases which work very much like SQLite in the sense they are one binary file holding a collection of documents (which could roughly be a table) then you can either XPath/XQuery on a single document or the whole collection. So with an XML database you can do things like store the days data as a separate XML document in the collection... so you just need to use that one document when your dealing with the data for today. But write an XQuery to figure out historical data on the collection of documents for that person. Slick.
I've used Berkeley XMLDB (now backed by Oracle). There are others if you search google for "Native XML Database". I've not seen a performance problem with storing/retrieving data in this manner.
XQuery is a different beast (but well worth learning), however you may be able to just use the XPaths you currently use with slight modifications.
A database is great as part of your program. If quering the data is part of your business logic.
XML is best as a file format, especially if you data format is:
1, Hierarchal
2, Likely to change in the future in ways you can't guess
3, The data is going to live longer than the program
I say it's not a matter of data size, but of data type. If your data is structured, use a relational database. If your data is semi-structured, use XML or - if the data amounts really grow too large - an XML database.
If your searching go with a db. You could split the xml files up into directories to ease seeking, but the managerial overhead easily gets quite heavy. You also get a lot more than just performance with a sql db...

What type of storage for some text in android?

I'm making a game to run on android. So I want to store player names and the winner, which I will also list up in a view. What is the best way to do this, use a database or write to a file (if so, what type, xml?). I have to be able to add data after every completed game, and the size won't be so large. What would be the best solution?
IMO, using a SQLite database would be the most straightforward. You don't have to worry about the xml parsing that goes along with an xml file. Additionally, the data your storing seems to have a natural relationship that would be conducive to a SQLite schema. For more information about how to use SQLite in Android, see the data storage documentation here.
SQLite is great if you have database concerns and want that sort of data lookup.
However, if you really want to do it Simply with XML then you can in Android.

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