You should do this with the help of AsyncTask (an intelligent backround thread) and ProgressDialog, as explained in the docs:
AsyncTask enables proper and easy use of the UI thread. This class
allows to perform background operations and publish results on the UI
thread without having to manipulate threads and/or handlers.
An asynchronous task is defined by a computation that runs on a
background thread and whose result is published on the UI thread. An
asynchronous task is defined by 3 generic types, called Params,
Progress and Result, and 4 steps, called begin, doInBackground,
processProgress and end.
The 4 steps
When an asynchronous task is executed, the task goes through 4 steps:
onPreExecute()
, invoked on the UI thread immediately after the task
is executed. This step is normally used to setup the task, for
instance by showing a progress bar in the user interface.
doInBackground(Params...)
, invoked on the background thread
immediately after onPreExecute() finishes executing. This step is used
to perform background computation that can take a long time. The
parameters of the asynchronous task are passed to this step. The
result of the computation must be returned by this step and will be
passed back to the last step. This step can also use
publishProgress(Progress...) to publish one or more units of progress.
These values are published on the UI thread, in the
onProgressUpdate(Progress...) step.
onProgressUpdate(Progress...)
, invoked on the UI thread after a call
to publishProgress(Progress...). The timing of the execution is
undefined. This method is used to display any form of progress in the
user interface while the background computation is still executing.
For instance, it can be used to animate a progress bar or show logs in
a text field.
onPostExecute(Result)
, invoked on the UI thread after the background
computation finishes. The result of the background computation is
passed to this step as a parameter. Threading rules
There are a few threading rules that must be followed for this class to work properly:
The task instance must be created on the UI thread. execute(Params...)
must be invoked on the UI thread. Do not call onPreExecute(),
onPostExecute(Result), doInBackground(Params...),
onProgressUpdate(Progress...) manually. The task can be executed only
once (an exception will be thrown if a second execution is attempted.)
Example code What the adapter does in this example is not important, more important to understand that you need to use AsyncTask to display a dialog for the progress.
private class PrepareAdapter1 extends AsyncTask<Void,Void,ContactsListCursorAdapter > {
ProgressDialog dialog;
@Override
protected void onPreExecute() {
dialog = new ProgressDialog(viewContacts.this);
dialog.setMessage(getString(R.string.please_wait_while_loading));
dialog.setIndeterminate(true);
dialog.setCancelable(false);
dialog.show();
}
/* (non-Javadoc)
* @see android.os.AsyncTask#doInBackground(Params[])
*/
@Override
protected ContactsListCursorAdapter doInBackground(Void... params) {
cur1 = objItem.getContacts();
startManagingCursor(cur1);
adapter1 = new ContactsListCursorAdapter (viewContacts.this,
R.layout.contact_for_listitem, cur1, new String[] {}, new int[] {});
return adapter1;
}
protected void onPostExecute(ContactsListCursorAdapter result) {
list.setAdapter(result);
dialog.dismiss();
}
}