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If an Asynchronous thread is a thread that operates separately to the main thread and doesn't interfere with the main thread...

Does a new Activity not occupy the main thread after it has been started through startActivity(intent)?

The majority of what I have read on this says these are both asynchronous, however there are a fair few conflicting answers and the people that say this don't really give convincing arguments.

So if anyone who has this clear in their head and could explain why they are synchronous/asynchronous, I would be a very grateful man!

Cheers

EDIT: So the answer I have derived from these two good folk and some stuff online...

Bringing Activities into the mix of synchronous/asynchronous can cause a load of horse to come about. But it is still referring to the principles of...

Synchronous methods/commands must be completed before the call stack can continue.

Asynchronous methods/commands (commonly done in a thread/AsyncTask) continue in parallel allowing the main thread of execution to continue. (It can return in its own time)

The startActivity(intent) and startActivityForResult(intent) methods are Asynchronous as they are non-blocking and allow the thread of execution to continue whilst performing their corresponding task as well.

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    not exactly. startActivity schedules a new activity to be run on the UI Thread at some later point. It is asynchronous in that it doesn't start right away and the method returns immediately.
    – njzk2
    Dec 17, 2012 at 17:46
  • If you want to create an answer, I will accept it
    – mgibson
    Dec 17, 2012 at 22:51

2 Answers 2

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startActivity(intent) and startActivityForResult(intent) are asynchronous in the sense that these methods return immediately without starting an Activity. Actually, they schedule an Activity to start only after the lifecycle events of the current Activity is finished.

The takeaway is, if you have something, that takes some time to finish, in the onPause() method of the first activity , the new Activity will be slow to start.

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    The perfect & Compact answer! Sep 28, 2014 at 12:41
  • It still could be that startActivity(Intent) calls onPause() on itself. I'm speculating here, but from your answer asynchronousity does not follow. Actually I'm going to check if the call is synchronous.
    – ivy_the
    Nov 24, 2016 at 11:46
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When you startActivityForResult you still perform an asynchronous call. Your caller activity gets suspended and the new is started in another process (if it runs under a different user).

But when the called activity terminates setting a result, your activity is resumed and you get onActivityResult called as a callback containing the result.

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