vote up 4 vote down star

I'm developing a game for Android. It's got a lot going on but is running reasonably smoothly. That is, of course, until the user touches the screen.

While they're touching it, onTouchEvent is called (with action = ACTION_MOVE, x = 0 and y = 0) roughly once every ten milliseconds at what appears to be a fairly high priority, as it absolutely obliterates the framerate. As soon as the touch ends the framerate returns to its nice state.

I've tried

  • having onTouchEvent handle input for the game as usual
  • having onTouchEvent return true straight away
  • not having onTouchEvent implemented at all

The problem persists in all three situations.

Has anyone encountered this? Is there a way to reduce the rate at which ACTION_MOVE events are generated, or to ensure that they're only generated when there is actual movement, or use a polling method that just gets the current location of the touch? Or even just a way to disable it entirely?

flag

2 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

Read this thread. Basically you want to sleep the event thread since otherwise the system will pump a lot of events (between x,y and pressure there is always some movement going on) that you need to handle.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Perhaps a somewhat obvious solution, but... have you tried only handling about 1/10 of them? If you're doing processing that's triggered every 10ms on the UI thread, that's likely going to slow down the framerate, yes. So what if you just accumulate a counter somewhat instead and only do any processing once that's gotten past some minimal threshold?

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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