None of the above solutions worked for me.
I needed a way for TextWatcher to not fire on every character I input inside my search view and show some progress, meaning I need to access the UI thread.
private final TextWatcher textWatcherSearchListener = new TextWatcher() {
final android.os.Handler handler = new android.os.Handler();
Runnable runnable;
public void onTextChanged(final CharSequence s, int start, final int before, int count) {
handler.removeCallbacks(runnable);
}
@Override
public void afterTextChanged(final Editable s) {
// Show some progress, because you can access UI here
runnable = new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
// Do some work with s.toString()
}
};
handler.postDelayed(runnable, 500);
}
@Override
public void beforeTextChanged(CharSequence s, int start, int count, int after) {}
};
Removing Handler on every onTextChanged (which is called when the user inputs a new character). afterTextChanged is called after the text has been changed inside the input field where we can start a new Runnable, but it will cancel it if the user types more characters (for more information, when these callback are called, see this). If the user doesn't input any more characters, the interval will pass in postDelayed and it will call work you should do with that text.
This code will run only once per interval, not for every key user inputs.