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I've developed an application that receives a Broadcast and then launches an Activity, where that Activity queries a ContentProvider which pulls information out of the DNS in real-time.

I'd like to be able to shuffle this so that instead of going:

BroadcastReceiver.onReceive() {
  Intent intent = new Intent(...);
  intent.setData(...); // set a single String data
  context.startActivity(intent);
}

Activity.onCreate() {
  String value = intent.getData();  // get the String data
  Cursor = ContentProvider.query(search);
  ...
  setContentView(...);
}

it goes:

BroadcastReceiver.onReceive() {
  Cursor = ContentProvider.query(...);
  if (cursor != null) {
     Intent intent = new Intent(...);
     // how do I pass the cursor?
     getContext().startActivity(intent);
  }
}

Activity.onCreate() {
  // how do I retrieve the cursor?
  setContentView(...);
}

i.e. if the query() returns no data I want to miss out launching the activity, and allow the Broadcast message to fall through as normal.

If the query() does return data, I want that Cursor to be supplied to the Activity, so that I don't have to go and query for the data again.

In turn, the Activity has its own UI which the user needs to respond to.

Is this possible?

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2 Answers

vote up 1 vote down

What you want is somewhat difficult and to me, rather inefficient. I would propose that you use the first alternative, but when you load the Cursor in the activity, check if there is no data, and then exit the activity.

BroadcastReceiver.onReceive() {
  Intent intent = new Intent(...);
  intent.setData(...); // set a single String data
  context.startActivity(intent);
}

Activity.onCreate() {
  String value = intent.getData();  // get the String data
  Cursor = ContentProvider.query(search);

  if(cursor.isEmpty() ...){
    finish();
    return;
  }
  ...
  setContentView(...);
}

This will have the exact same effect, the cursor will only be loaded once, and the activity will only be displayed if something exists in the cursor. The only extra overhead is that the intent is fired no matter what, but that's not exactly taxing :)

Note that there won't be any flicker or anything either, Android handles the case of calling finish in onCreate() (I believe onStart and onResume as well) so that the user never knows it happened.

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ok, sounds good - but - when does the call to context.startActivity() return? – Alnitak Mar 19 at 18:19
and how do I let the BroadcastReceiver know whether the Activity did anything useful? AFAIK I can't use startActivityForResult() in a BroadcastReceiver. – Alnitak Mar 19 at 18:26
The call to context.startActivity returns immediately, essentially, all it does is schedule the activity to be started at a later time as soon as the main event thread is free. – Soonil Mar 19 at 22:03
Well, it depends on what you want the broadcast receiver to do. Without knowing, I would recommend doing whatever you were planning to have the broadcast reciever do with inside the Activity instead. – Soonil Mar 19 at 22:03
I'm catching the NEW_OUTGOING_CALL action, but if I launch the Activity I have to set the BroadcastReceiver's returnData to null otherwise the call progresses as normal. If I ultimately place the outbound call in the Activity then it makes it impossible for the user to chain BroadcastRecevers. – Alnitak Mar 21 at 9:44
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You'll need to find or make a Cursor that's Serializable or Parcelable (and then use intent.setExtra()). Or maybe it's possible to instead read all the data in as a parcel and pass that on to the Activity?

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that's sort of my thinking too - probably Parcelable, as the Activity is actually a ListActivity so I need to pass the data through a ListAdapter. – Alnitak Mar 19 at 15:36

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