I need to check if the thread running a certain piece of code is the main (UI) thread or not. How can I achieve this?
15 Answers
Looper.myLooper() == Looper.getMainLooper()
if this returns true, then you're on the UI thread!
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@jackiszhp: I assume Looper.myLooper() returns null if no looper setup. I assume Looper.getMainLooper() never returns null so then the equality test will evaluate to false. And, that would be what you want. The current thread is not the main thread.– steveMar 7 at 18:06
you can use below code to know if current thread is UI/Main thread or not
if(Looper.myLooper() == Looper.getMainLooper()) {
// Current Thread is Main Thread.
}
or you can also use this
if(Looper.getMainLooper().getThread() == Thread.currentThread()) {
// Current Thread is Main Thread.
}
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10Should one consider the latter as the safer option as there is no guarantee that any arbitrary thread is associated with a Looper (assuming that the main thread is always associated with a looper)? Jan 7, 2016 at 16:58
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1
Looper.myLooper()
will return null if the thread is not associated with a Looper. So both are safe and have the same result but the first one is a little bit slower while it searches inside a map to find out the looper and its associated thread and do some other stuff . Nov 3, 2018 at 8:26
The best way is the clearest, most robust way: *
Thread.currentThread().equals( Looper.getMainLooper().getThread() )
Or, if the runtime platform is API level 23 (Marshmallow 6.0) or higher:
Looper.getMainLooper().isCurrentThread()
See the Looper API. Note that calling Looper.getMainLooper()
involves synchronization (see the source). You might want to avoid the overhead by storing the return value and reusing it.
* credit greg7gkb and 2cupsOfTech
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What do you mean by "under API 23 or higher"? That doesn't make much sense to me..Also the exact same answer was posted by AAnkit, below..– MikeDec 2, 2015 at 20:44
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1@Mike Thanks, I fixed the API bit. AAnkit actually favours
Looper.myLooper() == Looper.getMainLooper()
, which I think is less clear. I credit greg7gkb. Dec 2, 2015 at 21:00 -
2should this be a comparison with == or equals() as Android Studio is raising a warning ? Jul 28, 2017 at 14:19
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1@2cupsOfTech On 2nd thought, that’s good advice. Currently both tests are the same at runtime because Thread does not override
equals
, and so falls back to==
, but that could change in future. So I corrected the answer. Oct 9, 2018 at 1:10
Summarizing the solutions, I think that's the best one:
boolean isUiThread = VERSION.SDK_INT >= VERSION_CODES.M
? Looper.getMainLooper().isCurrentThread()
: Thread.currentThread() == Looper.getMainLooper().getThread();
And, if you wish to run something on the UI thread, you can use this:
new Handler(Looper.getMainLooper()).post(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
//this runs on the UI thread
}
});
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Other answers around Handler recommend using ".postDelayed()" rather than ".post()". What is the main difference and can you mention why you recommended using ".post()"?– AJWNov 10, 2021 at 21:26
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@AJW Sure, here are the docs: developer.android.com/reference/android/os/… developer.android.com/reference/android/os/… . You use the postDelayed if you wish for the runnable to run at least X ms fro now. Nov 10, 2021 at 23:13
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@androiddeveloper How can i run something not in the main thread??? Dec 4, 2021 at 13:15
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@KJEjava48 Many ways to do it. The basic one is to create a new
Thread
class and either implementrun
on it or provide aRunnable
instance to it, and then callstart()
on thisThread
instance. In Kotlin there is a very short way to do it, using justthread{ runCodeHere() }
. Dec 4, 2021 at 14:26
You can check
if(Looper.myLooper() == Looper.getMainLooper()) {
// You are on mainThread
}else{
// you are on non-ui thread
}
First of all check It is main Thread or not
In Kotlin
fun isRunningOnMainThread(): Boolean {
return Thread.currentThread() == Looper.getMainLooper().thread
}
In Java
static boolean isRunningOnMainThread() {
return Thread.currentThread().equals(Looper.getMainLooper().getThread());
}
Allow me to preface this with: I acknowledged this post has the 'Android' tag, however, my search had nothing to do with 'Android' and this was my top result. To that end, for the non-Android SO Java users landing here, don't forget about:
public static void main(String[] args{
Thread.currentThread().setName("SomeNameIChoose");
/*...the rest of main...*/
}
After setting this, elsewhere in your code, you can easily check if you're about to execute on the main thread with:
if(Thread.currentThread().getName().equals("SomeNameIChoose"))
{
//do something on main thread
}
A bit embarrassed I had searched before remembering this, but hopefully it will help someone else!
In addition to all previous answers
inline fun <T> ensureNotOnMainThread(block: () -> T): T {
check(Thread.currentThread() != Looper.getMainLooper().thread) { "This function cannot be called on main thread" }
return block()
}
allows to wrap any method with it, following example :
fun isInDataBase(id: String) = ensureNotOnMainThread { db.contains(id) }
you can verify it in android ddms logcat where process id will be same but thread id will be different.
Xamarin.Android
port: (C#
)
public bool IsMainThread => Build.VERSION.SdkInt >= BuildVersionCodes.M
? Looper.MainLooper.IsCurrentThread
: Looper.MyLooper() == Looper.MainLooper;
Usage:
if (IsMainThread) {
// you are on UI/Main thread
}
So another answer to join the company, for some extension file in kotlin:
import android.os.Looper.getMainLooper
import java.lang.Thread.currentThread
val Thread.isMain get() = getMainLooper().thread == this
val isThreadMain get() = getMainLooper().thread == currentThread()
A simple Toast message works also as a quick check.
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Toast.makeText(activity, "Hello main thread", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
Dec 21, 2021 at 12:44
A coroutines-based, Android-agnostic approach:
val onMainThread: Boolean
get() = Thread.currentThread() === try {
runBlocking(Dispatchers.Main.immediate) {
Thread.currentThread()
}
} catch (e: IllegalStateException) {
// No main dispatcher has been registered; not in an Android context?
null
}
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Care to elaborate @Renetik? Can you suggest a better solution in a non-Android context? Jun 24, 2023 at 21:56
You can try Thread.currentThread().isDaemon()
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I am not sure the UI thread is a daemon but I will believe you on this one. But how will you make the difference with a Daemon Thread that I could (but should not) create.– AxelHNov 29, 2016 at 13:43
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I tested in my web app, it shows that UI thread is a Daemon thread. I put some debug break points in eclipse environment and verified it. Thread detail shown as Thread[http-bio-8080-exec-7,5,main]. Clicked on some UI pages and checked the debug point. Dec 1, 2016 at 7:34
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Also, even if in the thread name details its showing 'main' but calling setDaemon(true) on thread object will make it daemon. Dec 1, 2016 at 7:37
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You didn't read the good part ... I wasn't doubting (completly) about it being a Daemon, I was telling that you can't make the differences with an other Daemon thread like this.– AxelHDec 1, 2016 at 7:43
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Put another way: a main thread may be a daemon thread, but not all daemon threads are the main thread. (Identifying the main thread is what is being asked here.)– user1531971May 18, 2017 at 16:09