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Is there any other alternative to SQLite in Android for persisting data in the phone? I am looking something like iOS coredata or something simpler like a key-value store. If we need to embed it with the apps, something that is relatively small in size is also great.

Thank you for your assistance.

7 Answers 7

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If you need just a simple store for a couple key/value pairs, SharedPreferences is the way to go. If you are looking for something more powerful, that compares to Core Data, you should give greenDAO a try. Like Core Data, greenDAO a layer between your objects and the data store (Core Data on iOS usually takes SQLite, too).

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I don't know anything about iOS but take a look at SharedPreferences

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  • Isn't that only for user preferences? May 22, 2011 at 4:34
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    You can take liberties with it - it's a fairly common practice to use it to store small amounts of persistent data.
    – Haphazard
    May 22, 2011 at 4:37
  • SharedPreferences is not a preference when it comes to storing bulk amounts of data. Feb 21, 2013 at 5:39
  • SharedPreferences is actually meant to be used for storing primitive data
    – akohout
    Nov 19, 2014 at 15:02
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There are a few different methods for persisting data in Android. Read this Android article about it.

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You could look at http://jdbm.sourceforge.net/: 78kb jar, transactions, will save to a file.

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You could serialize to xml. Take a look at Simple http://simple.sourceforge.net/ it's less then 500kb in size.

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There are three recommended methods to store data of your Android application ( according to Android docs).

  1. If you need to save settings, configurations, user credentials You could use SharedPreferences. Pros: The data saved in SharedPreferences are comparably better than static global variable. Because it is thread safe, data will not go away even after killing the app.

  2. If you need to save big data ( e.g. accelerometer data, gps data), which is frequent, you could use SQLite database.

  3. However if you just store big data but process them rarely, it would be better to save to a file. But make sure to cache data and save/append to a file at once ( Because I/O operations are CPU intensive and drains more power).

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Exist a alternative call REALM is a complete library to manage the database like objects, similar to ActiveRecord (in Ruby on Rails). And one of his advantage is the speed in transactions. But be carefull because is a new library maybe is a good idea first read the all documentation.

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