What is different between MainActivity.this vs getApplicationContext()
I am trying ProgressDialog.But I am confuse.
1.pd=ProgressDialog.show(MainActivity.this, "", "Fething data");
when I do use (MainActivity.this) then it is ok. But
2.pd=ProgressDialog.show(getApplicationContext(), "", "Fething data");
When I do use (getApplicationContext()) it is ERROR.
What is problem for this progressDialog?
What is different between (MainActivity.this
) vs (getApplicationContext()
)
and when I use it perfect time?
For getApplicationContext()
Error is:
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): FATAL EXCEPTION: main
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): android.view.WindowManager$BadTokenException: Unable to add window -- token null is not for an application
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.view.ViewRootImpl.setView(ViewRootImpl.java:571)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.view.WindowManagerGlobal.addView(WindowManagerGlobal.java:246)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.view.WindowManagerImpl.addView(WindowManagerImpl.java:69)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.app.Dialog.show(Dialog.java:281)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.app.ProgressDialog.show(ProgressDialog.java:116)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.app.ProgressDialog.show(ProgressDialog.java:99)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.app.ProgressDialog.show(ProgressDialog.java:94)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at com.example.shikkok_services.MainActivity$2.onClick(MainActivity.java:27)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.view.View.performClick(View.java:4204)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.view.View$PerformClick.run(View.java:17355)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.os.Handler.handleCallback(Handler.java:725)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.os.Handler.dispatchMessage(Handler.java:92)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.os.Looper.loop(Looper.java:137)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at android.app.ActivityThread.main(ActivityThread.java:5041)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at java.lang.reflect.Method.invokeNative(Native Method)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:511)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at com.android.internal.os.ZygoteInit$MethodAndArgsCaller.run(ZygoteInit.java:793)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at com.android.internal.os.ZygoteInit.main(ZygoteInit.java:560)
04-09 15:05:37.453: E/AndroidRuntime(9980): at dalvik.system.NativeStart.main(Native Method)
Solution 1:
Which context to use?
There are two types of Context:
Application context is associated with the application and will always be the same throughout the life of application; it does not change. So if you are using Toast
, you can use application context or even activity context (both) because Toast
can be displayed from anywhere within your application and is not attached to a specific window. But there are many exceptions. One such exception is when you need to use or pass the activity context.
Activity context is associated with the activity and can be destroyed if the activity is destroyed; there may be multiple activities (more than likely) with a single application. Sometimes you absolutely need the activity context handle. For example, should you launch a new Activity
, you need to use activity context in its Intent
so that the newly-launched activity is connected to the current activity in terms of activity stack. However, you may also use application's context to launch a new activity, but then you need to set flag Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK
in intent to treat it as a new task.
Let's consider some cases:
MainActivity.this
refers to the MainActivity
context which extends Activity
class but the base class (Activity
) also extends Context
class, so it can be used to offer activity context.
getBaseContext()
offers activity context.
getApplication()
offers application context.
getApplicationContext()
also offers application context.
For more information please check this link.
Solution 2:
MainActivity.this
only works if you are in an inner class ofMainActivity
.If you are in
MainActivity
itself, just usethis
.If you are in
another class
entirely, you need to pass it aninstance
of acontext
from theActivity
you are in.
Hope this helps..
Solution 3:
This explanation is probably missing some subtle nuances but it should give you a better understanding of why one works but the other doesn't.
The difference is that MainActivity.this
refers to the current activity (context
) whereas the getApplicationContext()
refers to the Application class.
The important differences between the two are that the Application class never has any UI associations and as such has no window token.
Long story short: For UI items that need context, use the Activity.
Solution 4:
MainActivity.this refers to the the current activity (context) where the getApplicationContext() refers to the Application class.
The getApplicationContext() method return the context of the single, global Application object of the current process. This generally should only be used if you need a Context whose lifecycle is separate from the current context, that is tied to the lifetime of the process rather than the current component.
MainActivity.this will change when activity destroyed and re-created, getApplicationContext() will change when the application killed and re-started.