380

By background, I mean none of the application's activities are currently visible to the user?

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38 Answers 38

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0

Another way with no additional dependency is this one:

Simply add this method to your Application Class and call it in onCreate()

var isInBackground = true

private fun setupActivityLifecycleCallbacks() {
    registerActivityLifecycleCallbacks(object : ActivityLifecycleCallbacks {
        override fun onActivityCreated(activity: Activity, savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {}
        override fun onActivityStarted(activity: Activity) {}
        override fun onActivityResumed(activity: Activity) {
            isInBackground = false
        }
        override fun onActivityPaused(activity: Activity) {
            isInBackground = true
        }
        override fun onActivityStopped(activity: Activity) {}
        override fun onActivitySaveInstanceState(activity: Activity, outState: Bundle) {}
        override fun onActivityDestroyed(activity: Activity) {}
    })
}

AFAIK you can even make isInBackground static so you can access it without context using a companion object

0
0

How about something like this:

boolean isBackgrounded() {
    try {
        context.startService(new Intent(action));
        return false;
    }
    catch (IllegalStateException exc) {
        // "Not allowed to start service Intent: app is in background"
        return true;
    }
}
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  • Using exceptions to control application flow is, generally, a bad idea.
    – lubrum
    Feb 9, 2022 at 17:51
0

This is working as of 2023

1-Please go to your application class. ( if you havent any application class then please add a class that extends Application)

2-Then add private static variable in your application class to store the state.

3-Then implement LifecycleEventObserver in your application and its single method "onStateChanged"

4-Lastly, add static method to get the state of private variable from any activity or fragment in your application

public class MyApp extends Application implements LifecycleEventObserver{

    private static boolean activityVisible;

    @Override
    public void onStateChanged(@NonNull LifecycleOwner source, @NonNull Lifecycle.Event event)
    {
        if (event == Lifecycle.Event.ON_STOP) {
            activityVisible = false;
        }
        else if (event == Lifecycle.Event.ON_PAUSE){
            activityVisible = false;
        }
        else if (event == Lifecycle.Event.ON_RESUME){
            activityVisible = true;
        }
        else if (event == Lifecycle.Event.ON_START) {
            activityVisible = true;
        }
    }

    public static boolean checkIfActivityVisible(){
        return activityVisible;
    }

}
0

Here are multiple ways

  1. Using LifecycleEventObserver. Here ProcessLifecycleOwner provides lifecycle for the whole application process. So onStateChanged is called when app goes to foreground/background and not called between Activity Switches.
import android.app.Application
import android.util.Log
import androidx.lifecycle.Lifecycle
import androidx.lifecycle.LifecycleEventObserver
import androidx.lifecycle.LifecycleOwner
import androidx.lifecycle.ProcessLifecycleOwner

class TestApplication: Application(), LifecycleEventObserver {

    override fun onCreate() {
        super.onCreate()
        ProcessLifecycleOwner.get().lifecycle.addObserver(this);
    }

    override fun onStateChanged(source: LifecycleOwner, event: Lifecycle.Event) {
        Log.i("AppForegrounded", "Hello event ${event}")
        if (event == Lifecycle.Event.ON_RESUME) {
            isAppInForeground = true
        } else {
            isAppInForeground = false
        }
    }

    companion object {
        var isAppInForeground = false
    }
}

and then in Activity use it as

TestApplication.isAppInForeground

Make sure you mention this Application class in Manifest file

<manifest>
    <application
           android:name=".app.TestApplication"
    </application>
</manifest>

We can also make the field isAppInForeground observable so that we can listen to changes instead of checking if app is in foreground before making some operation.

  1. Using DefaultLifecycleObserver. Here ProcessLifecycleOwner provides lifecycle for the whole application process. So onResume or onPause is called when app goes to foreground/background and not called between Activity Switches.
class TestApplication: Application(), DefaultLifecycleObserver {

    override fun onCreate() {
        super<Application>.onCreate()
        ProcessLifecycleOwner.get().lifecycle.addObserver(this);
    }

    override fun onResume(owner: LifecycleOwner) {
        super.onResume(owner)
        isAppInForeground = true
    }

    override fun onPause(owner: LifecycleOwner) {
        super.onPause(owner)
        isAppInForeground = false
    }

    companion object {
        var isAppInForeground = false
    }
}
  1. Using ProcessLifecycleOwner's currentState field
val isAppInForeground = ProcessLifecycleOwner.get().lifecycle.currentState == Lifecycle.State.RESUMED
val isAppInBackground = ProcessLifecycleOwner.get().lifecycle.currentState == Lifecycle.State.CREATED

0

val activityManager = context.getSystemService(Context.ACTIVITY_SERVICE) as ActivityManager

            if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.LOLLIPOP) {
                val runningProcesses = activityManager.runningAppProcesses
                if (runningProcesses != null) {
                    for (processInfo in runningProcesses) {
                        if (processInfo.pkgList != null) {
                            for (pkg in processInfo.pkgList) {
                                if (pkg == packageName) {
                                    return true
                                }
                            }
                        }
                    }
                }
            } else {
                // For versions before Lollipop
                val taskInfo = activityManager.getRunningTasks(1)
                if (taskInfo != null && taskInfo.size > 0) {
                    val topActivity = taskInfo[0].topActivity
                    if (topActivity != null && topActivity.packageName == packageName) {
                        return true
                    }
                }
            }
-1

It might be too late to answer but if somebody comes visiting then here is the solution I suggest, The reason(s) an app wants to know it's state of being in background or coming to foreground can be many, a few are, 1. To show toasts and notifications when the user is in BG. 2.To perform some tasks for the first time user comes from BG, like a poll, redraw etc.

The solution by Idolon and others takes care of the first part, but does not for the second. If there are multiple activities in your app, and the user is switching between them, then by the time you are in second activity, the visible flag will be false. So it cannot be used deterministically.

I did something what was suggested by CommonsWare, "If the Service determines that there are no activities visible, and it remains that way for some amount of time, stop the data transfer at the next logical stopping point."

The line in bold is important and this can be used to achieve second item. So what I do is once I get the onActivityPaused() , don not change the visible to false directly, instead have a timer of 3 seconds (that is the max that the next activity should be launched), and if there is not onActivityResumed() call in the next 3 seconds, change visible to false. Similarly in onActivityResumed() if there is a timer then I cancel it. To sum up,the visible becomes isAppInBackground.

Sorry cannot copy-paste the code...

-2

In my activities onResume and onPause I write an isVisible boolean to SharedPrefences.

    SharedPreferences sharedPrefs = PreferenceManager.getDefaultSharedPreferences(this);
    Editor editor = sharedPrefs.edit();
    editor.putBoolean("visible", false);
    editor.commit();

And read it elsewhere when needed via,

    // Show a Toast Notification if App is not visible (ie in background. Not running, etc) 
    SharedPreferences sharedPrefs = PreferenceManager.getDefaultSharedPreferences(context);
    if(!sharedPrefs.getBoolean("visible", true)){...}

Maybe not elegant, but it works for me...

-3

I would like to recommend you to use another way to do this.

I guess you want to show start up screen while the program is starting, if it is already running in backend, don't show it.

Your application can continuously write current time to a specific file. While your application is starting, check the last timestamp, if current_time-last_time>the time range your specified for writing the latest time, it means your application is stopped, either killed by system or user himself.

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