2

I am unable to start MediaPlayer in Activity from a thread. I have sounds loaded in my Android activity, called Snakes, and played from a custom View class...

Activity Snakes()...
    void playSound(int i){
        if (sounds != null){
            sounds.play(sound_questions[i], 1.0f, 1.0f, 0, 0, 1.0f);
        }
    }


CustomView()...
    ((Snakes)getContext()).playSound();

This works.

I have music playback via MediaPlayer in my Activity class. To delay start, I want to use mediaPlayer.Start() called from the game control thread. I have approached this the same as the sound playback, and placed this into a simple method in my Activity class

    void startMusic(){
    mediaPlayer.start();
}

However, I cannot call this method from the thread.

How should I start MediaPlayer in the activity from a thread?

1
  • Use a Handler to send a message from thread to the activity telling it to start MediaPlayer Nov 24, 2013 at 21:46

1 Answer 1

1

Put a message handler in your activity.

public class MyActivity extends Activity {

    // Handler message constants
    public static final int PLAY_SOUND = 0;
    public static final int SOME_OTHER_MESSAGE = 1;
    ...

    private final MainHandler mMainHandler = new MainHandler(this);

    // Handler
    private static class MainHandler extends Handler {

        // Using a WeakReference is recommended to avoid memory leaks
        private final WeakReference<MainActivity> mActivity;
        public MainHandler(MainActivity activity) {
            mActivity = new WeakReference<MainActivity>(activity);
        }

        // The message handler
        @Override
        public void handleMessage(Message msg) {
            MainActivity activity = mActivity.get();
            if (activity != null) {
                final int index;
                switch (msg.what) {
                case PLAY_SOUND:
                    activity.playMySound();
                    break;
                case SOME_OTHER_MESSAGE:
                    ...
                    break;
                ...
                }   
            }           
        }
    };

    private void playMySound() {
    ...
    }
}

Get a reference to the handler in your thread and use it to send messages to the activity.

public class MyThread extends Thread {

    private Handler mParentHandler;

    // Constructor
    private MyThread(Handler parentHandler) {
        mParentHandler = parentHandler;
    }

    ...
    // When you want to start playback
    Message messageToMain = Message.obtain();
    messageToMain.what = MainActivity.PLAY_SOUND;
    mParentHandler.sendMessage(messageToMain);
    ...
}

Alternatively, if passing the main message handler to the thread through it's constructor is not suitable for your situation, you can create a static method in your thread to pass it the handler at a class level.

public class MyThread extends Thread {

    // make mHandler static so it can be defined at a class level.
    private static Handler mHandler;

    // Constructor
    private MyThread(...) {
        // no need to pass Handler in constructor now
    }

    // static method for setting mHandler
    public static void setHandler(Handler suppliedHandler) {
        mHandler = suppliedHandler;
    }

    ...
    // When you want to start playback
    Message messageToMain = Message.obtain();
    messageToMain.what = MainActivity.PLAY_SOUND;
    mHandler.sendMessage(messageToMain);
    ...
}

Then make sure you set the handler for the thread to use before any instances of the thread are created (for example do it in the onCreate() of the activity).

public class MyActivity extends Activity {

    // Handler message constants
    public static final int PLAY_SOUND = 0;
    public static final int SOME_OTHER_MESSAGE = 1;
    ...

    private final MainHandler mMainHandler = new MainHandler(this);

    // Handler
    private static class MainHandler extends Handler {

        // Using a WeakReference is recommended to avoid memory leaks
        private final WeakReference<MainActivity> mActivity;
        public MainHandler(MainActivity activity) {
            mActivity = new WeakReference<MainActivity>(activity);
        }

        // The message handler
        @Override
        public void handleMessage(Message msg) {
            MainActivity activity = mActivity.get();
            if (activity != null) {
                final int index;
                switch (msg.what) {
                case PLAY_SOUND:
                    activity.playMySound();
                    break;
                case SOME_OTHER_MESSAGE:
                    ...
                    break;
                ...
                }   
            }           
        }
    };

    @Override
    protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
        setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
        ...
        MyThread.setHandler(mMainHandler);
        // setting this at a class level means all future instances of MyThread
        // will have their mHandler set to mMainHandler
        ...
    }

    private void playMySound() {
    ...
    }
}
4
  • Thanks. How do I get a reference to the Handler though? My thread is called from my custom view and not the Activity, so my thread constructor is called... runThread = new SnakeThread(getHolder(), this, <handler?>); Nov 24, 2013 at 22:38
  • You can modify this same approach. Put the handler in your custom view instead of in the Activity. Then define an interface in your custom view, so you can set a listener to it in your main activity. I've recently done something similar myself. Nov 24, 2013 at 22:50
  • Actually, instead of passing the handler through the constructor of the thread, you could define a static setHandler method in your thread class. Then you'd be able to set the handler for your thread to use at a class level, before you create any instances of your thread class(In other words, you'd be able to useMyThread.setHandler(mMainHandler) from in your activities onCreate()). Nov 24, 2013 at 23:18
  • That's the most thorough, comprehensive answer I've ever seen on StackOverflow! Thanks. :D Nov 25, 2013 at 13:27

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.