lol okay @iAnum from the very beginning i think that you are a guy but one day when you changed your SO dp which is the current one ,then this doubt comes in my mind :P
I have a quick question. I just want to know which one more makes sense. So, Running multiple heavy task (e.g., 5 tasks) in an AsyncTask VS creating one AsyncTask for each task and call them in turn.
@nida one more thing I just saw. TextUtils.split(serialized, ",") may be there is no comma in serialize string, so no array would have been created, raising exception
@CoKoder if your threads are going to run one after another, then first one is same as second. If you are going to run 5 operations in parallel, then second will give you speed, if your system can handle those threads simultaneously
I'm trying to run two AsyncTasks at the same time. (Platform is Android 1.5, HTC Hero.)
However, only the first gets executed. Here's a simple snippet to describe my problem:
public class AndroidJunk extends Activity {
class PrinterTask extends AsyncTask<String, Void, Void> {
protected Voi...
Create an AsyncTask and start your threads from doInBackground(). When they are done, collect, consolidate, etc. the data and return it. Then you can use it in onPostExecute to update the UI. Starting too many thread will consume memory, so you should consider whether they really need to run in ...
AsyncTasks use a fixed size queue internally for storing delayed tasks. Queue size is 10 by default. If you start 15 your custom tasks in a row, then first 5 will enter their doInBackground(), but the rest will wait in a queue for a free worker thread. As soon as any of the first 5 finishes, and thus releases a worker thread, a task from the queue will start execution. So in this case at most 5 tasks will run simultaneously.
However if you start 16 your custom tasks in a row, then first 5 will enter their doInBackground(), the rest 10 will get into the queue, but for the 16th a new worker thread will be created so it'll start execution immediatelly. So in this case at most 6 tasks will run simultaneously.
There is a limit of how many tasks can be run simultaneously. Since AsyncTask uses a thread pool executor with limited max number of worker threads (128) and the delayed tasks queue has fixed size 10, if you try to execute more than 138 your custom tasks the app will crash with java.util.concurrent.RejectedExecutionException.
and after 128 threads running and private static final int MAXIMUM_POOL_SIZE = CPU_COUNT * 2 + 1; waiting in queue only, you'll get java.util.concurrent.RejectedExecutionException and your app will crash
to put it simply: just run your AsyncTask using asyncTask.executeOnExecutor(AsyncTask.THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR, params); rather than asyncTask.execute(params);
and you won't need to worry about the threads running
@CoKoder actually, as I said, you can submit upto 128 threads to run in parallel. That's a very large number and if you ever get that exception, something is horribly done wrong in app. For the record: I have once dealt with this ;)
most of the apps don't use much of multi-threading
I haven't seen more than 10 threads running simultaneously, other then downloading images for list of items
but, usually, you use specific downloader libraries for images
which uses...again... ExecutorService
so, normally, your app has more than enough reserved worker threads to execute about 5 threads simultaneously :)
as to explain ExecutorService, what it does is limit the number of threads concurrently running and others submitted to service keep waiting in a queue
@MukeshRana as I told, I was writing my own image downloader library. I tried to run upto 1000 downloading threads in that and that was the time when I first got ThreadPoolExecution so I start reading about it. I solved the threads problem, but left development in UI updation part
@MukeshRana nope, there were libraries and I use one of them even now. But, I've never wanted to use a library, until not absolutely necessary, hence, I was just being stubborn and childish though ;)
@iAnum I now wanna know how to use observer pattern in Java, but got no time for that :(
@MukeshRana that just make the code redundant. If you are doing same thing in multiple AsyncTasks, then you are doing it wrong. Use a single for loop and execute tasks from that. Plus, AsyncTask also initiate a thread
so, that is just another thread, but with some more functionality, like UI updation and result passing
@MukeshRana I wasn't working with asyncs. I wrote asyncs above because it was the part of question and I needed to explain that AsyncTask also works with a thread pool
For downloading, I wrote a singleton class and passed it all the urls and imageviews
I used to limit it to at-most 5 threads and others were waiting in queue
I am currently using iBatis framework for my project. In here, I have a multiple tables whose names and even the column names are not revealed to me(Its dynamic). I can find the mapping of it in a
<DBMapper>
<table name="ACTMAPPING" tableName="ACTMAPPING">
<columns>
<column TableColumnName=...
private Bitmap getCircleBitmap(Bitmap bitmap) {
final Bitmap output = Bitmap.createBitmap(bitmap.getWidth(),
bitmap.getHeight(), Bitmap.Config.ARGB_8888);
final Canvas canvas = new Canvas(output);
final int color = Color.RED;
final Paint paint = new Paint();
final ...