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I understand that Content Providers are made to allow publicly sharing data between applications. However, I'm wondering if anyone has thoughts about making a Content Provider to use just within your own app. Would there be any advantages to doing this? Any disadvantages?

In the past I've just implemented the SQliteOpenHelper to access data from my database, but I'm considering creating a Content Provider. I feel like the URI approach to requesting data is clear and concise. On the other hand, will using a Content Provider just for my application be redundant ( since within it I will have a SQliteOpenHelper class ) and more work than I need?

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5 Answers

up vote 12 down vote accepted

If you are no planning to share data, won't think about Content Providers. They are powerful but hard to write and it will be just silly to implement them if you are going to use them internally.

However, I'm wondering if anyone has thoughts about making a Content Provider to use just within your own app.

Of course... for instance, for an old TODO list app I wrote, I had to write a content provider to allow other apps retrieve and access the tasks states. It was part of the requirements, but more than that it made sense and made the app nicer.

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I agree with your justification, but I also think it's important (especially for the beginners) that once the Content Provider is implemented you gain a lot of benefits. For example, you can use the CursorLoader to perform asynchronous queries... you have access to a singleton instance (the ContentResolver) to perform queries, etc. Of course you could implement your own Loader to use for your SQLite database... of course you could implement access to a single database instance across the entire application... and of course a ContentProvider isn't required unless you wish to share – Alex Lockwood Jun 27 '12 at 18:32
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data with other apps. That said, there are many benefits that come with implementing your own Content Provider, so you shouldn't drop it from consideration just because your app doesn't share its data. – Alex Lockwood Jun 27 '12 at 18:34
Yeah, you are completely right but I still think it does not worth the effort in most cases. I have done at least 12 different Android apps (published to the Play Store) and have never need a ContentProvider. In fact, the last app we were working on was initially made with a ContentProvider and we just deleted that since it is actually more a pain in the ass to use than it should (I even wrote a library to make it easier to implement basic ContentProviders: github.com/casidiablo/persistence but had never use it my self XD). – Cristian Jun 27 '12 at 22:25

I made a library to make content provider easy to write. Even easier than write plain SQLiteOpenHelper. https://github.com/coocood/VContentProvider

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I agree ContentProviders are a little difficult to grasp but they are definitely helpful, even if you want to use them internally for you own app. The best thing about it is that you can customize the contentproviders for suitable URIs.

Here's a scenario where you may have 5 tables in your database, but you need to join a few of them in certain orders before using them. And make a content URI for each of these joins. You could then each use these URIs as a table :)

I suggest you go ahead with Content Provider, you'll be amazed to see how powerful it is.

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I would argue it is definitely a good idea to use a ContentProvider even if you don't intend to make it public.

It's good practice to provide the extra level of abstraction over your data to make it easier to change internally. What if you decide to change the underlying database structure at a later time? If you use a ContentProvider you can contain all the structural changes within it, where as if you don't use one, you are forced to change all areas of the code that are affected by the structural changes. Besides, it's nice to be able to re-use the same standard API for accessing data rather than littering your code with low-level access to the database.

Also, there is always the chance that you might want to expose your data in the future. If you don't use a ContentProvider up front, it will be much harder to retrofit it in at a later date.

Then, there's the other parts of the Android where ContentProvider's are required/recommended such as when using SyncAdapters and if you want an App Widget that involves data access for instance.

In summary, there is very little overhead involved in writing a ContentProvider up front (once you have learned the API which is a good idea anyway) so it makes sense to do so, even for private data.

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Take a look at the MOTODEV Studio for Eclipse. It is a development environment that extends Eclipse. They have a tool where you can automatically generate a content provider for a database. If a content provider makes it easier to access your data and it doesn't have a significant impact on performance go ahead and use it. In most scenarios this will be the case.

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