84

Is there an easy way to print the contents of a Bundle to Logcat if you can't remember the names of all the keys (even being able to print just the key names would be cool)?

12 Answers 12

134

Bundle#keySet() should work.

for (String key: bundle.keySet())
{
  Log.d ("myApplication", key + " is a key in the bundle");
}

And if you want to get the Object, you can use Bundle#get(String key)(which is also in the same documentation I linked at the top of my answer). However, keep in mind using the generic get() call:

  • You're working with Object. If you're simply printing to a Log, toString() will be invoked and all will be fine. However, if you actually want to use the key's pair, you need to do instanceof checks to avoid calling the wrong method.
  • Since toString will be invoked, if you have a special Object (eg ArrayLists, or special Serializable/Parcelable extras) you're most likely not going to get anything useful from the printout.
2
  • 2
    I think you meant bundle.keySet() (since your docs link is fine); otherwise this is correct.
    – Cat
    Feb 19, 2013 at 2:20
  • 1
    @Eric gah, silly errors. At least I spelled it correctly when I linked to it.
    – A--C
    Feb 19, 2013 at 2:22
47

You can get more specific by printing the mapped value as follows:

for (String key : bundle.keySet())
{
    Log.d("Bundle Debug", key + " = \"" + bundle.get(key) + "\"");
}
27

Bundle-to-string converter:

public static String bundle2string(Bundle bundle) {
    if (bundle == null) {
        return null;
    }
    String string = "Bundle{";
    for (String key : bundle.keySet()) {
        string += " " + key + " => " + bundle.get(key) + ";";
    }
    string += " }Bundle";
    return string;
}

Example usage:

Log.d(TAG,"details="+bundle2string(details));

and output:

details=Bundle{ RESPONSE_CODE => 5; }Bundle

Note that the arrows => and semicolons ; let you mention spaces in the keys and values. One space before the arrow, one space after the arrow, no space before the semi-colon, one space after the semi-colon, one space after { and one space before }, and all other spaces are there because they are in the keys or values.

4
  • Good solution, but I would rather use a StringBuffer for better performance: public static String bundle2string(Bundle bundle) { StringBuffer buf = new StringBuffer("Bundle{"); for (String key : bundle.keySet()) buf.append(" " + key + " => " + bundle.get(key) + ";"); buf.append(" }Bundle"); return buf.toString(); }
    – Maurix
    Sep 5, 2014 at 9:09
  • 1
    IMO performance is irrelevant to the purpose of bundle2string(), but even if we assume the opposite, according to stackoverflow.com/a/4649160/755804 , String concatenation is translated into StringBuilder operations by the compiler. I did not check it myself for Android; if someone cares to check this, please confirm or disprove. Sep 5, 2014 at 9:35
  • 1
    @Maurix Since there are no threads involved, StringBuilder is better than StringBuffer : developer.android.com/reference/java/lang/StringBuffer.html Sep 29, 2016 at 9:53
  • Note that some values might contain multiple-lines, so it can get problematic to print all of them in a single log entry. Sep 19, 2017 at 15:26
15

Realize that this isn't answering the question exactly, but I see allot of developers trying to dump the contents to logcat/console because they are not aware that they can set up in Android Studio debugger to display customized object rendering at debug time, when you hit a break point. And in the case of Bundle, you can take the type of code shown in the other answers here, and apply that as a custom renderer, so that you don't need to pipe the dump to logcat and/or the console.

(These instructions are from Android Studio 3.1.3 (June 2018) ...

  1. Select the "File" and then the "Settings" menu option/suboption.
  2. In the 'Settings' dialog, on the left side, drill-down and select "Build, Execution, Deployment", "Debugger", "Data Views", "Java Type Renderers".
  3. Right side of the dialog, where it says "Renderer name" enter a name you wish to identify with the renderer you are creating.
  4. Right side of the dialog, where it says "Apply renderer to objects of type", enter 'android.os.Bundle'.
  5. Right side of the dialog, under the "When rendering a node" section, select the "Use following expression:" radio button.
  6. In the text field below that, type in the following ...
StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();
for (String key : ((android.os.Bundle)this).keySet()) {
    Object value = ((android.os.Bundle)this).get(key);
    builder.append("[");
    builder.append(key);
    builder.append("]=[");
    builder.append(value);
    builder.append("](");
    builder.append((value != null) ? value.getClass().getSimpleName() : "null");
    builder.append("), ");
}
return builder.toString();
  1. Press 'Apply'/'OK' button.

Now, when you run your app, and you hit a breakpoint that shows a variable that is of type android.os.Bundle, you'll see the output generated from the above code, on the variables section of the debugger window.

I'll also include a screenshot, showing what I described above ... screenshot

3
  • 1
    This is a really neat feature of Android Studio that I didn't know existed. Thank you!
    – Julian A.
    Dec 14, 2018 at 22:03
  • @Julian A. You're welcome. Yeah, I've always been surprised its not talked about more, and wish that pre-created expressions for used often classes are not included with Android Studio, would save some time. FYI, Eclipse also has a similar feature as well, for those who use that IDE. Dec 18, 2018 at 1:42
  • Great tip! And it turns out we can simplify the renderer expression to keySet(); toString() since accessing the Bundle's contents seems to reify it, letting toString() format all the elements. See my Answer.
    – Jerry101
    Mar 1, 2022 at 19:11
9

Simple Bundle to String implementation in Kotlin:

val bundleToString = bundle.keySet()
            .joinToString(", ", "{", "}") { key ->
                "$key=${bundle[key]}"
            }

Example of result {id=3, name="Jhon"}

1
  • 1
    Thanks, it works. The keys are arranged in alphabetical order (keySet() returns a sorted collection).
    – CoolMind
    Dec 23, 2020 at 15:35
6

In Kotlin, recursive for when it contains child bundles:

/**
 * Recursively logs the contents of a [Bundle] for debugging.
 */
fun Bundle.printDebugLog(parentKey: String = "") {
    if (keySet().isEmpty()) {
        Log.d("printDebugLog", "$parentKey is empty")
    } else {
        for (key in keySet()) {
        when (val value = this[key]) {
                is Bundle -> value.printDebugLog(key)
                is Array<*> -> Log.d("printDebugLog", "$parentKey.$key : ${value.joinToString()}")
                else -> Log.d("printDebugLog", "$parentKey.$key : $value")
            }
        }
    }
}

Usage: myBundle.printDebugLog()

1
  • 'get(String!): Any?' is deprecated. Deprecated in Java
    – norbDEV
    Apr 28, 2023 at 10:40
3

Trick: Access the Bundle's contents to reify it, then bundle.toString() will format its elements.

(I'd rely on this only for debugging purposes.)

Example in an AppWidgetProvider, call newOptions.keySet():

    @Override
    public void onAppWidgetOptionsChanged(Context context, AppWidgetManager appWidgetManager,
            int appWidgetId, Bundle newOptions) {
        super.onAppWidgetOptionsChanged(context, appWidgetManager, appWidgetId, newOptions);

        newOptions.keySet(); // <-- reify the Bundle so .toString() will elaborate
        Log.i(TAG, "*** WidgetOptionsChanged: " + newOptions);
    }

Result:

*** WidgetOptionsChanged: Bundle[{appWidgetMaxHeight=137, appWidgetCategory=1, appWidgetMaxWidth=603, appWidgetMinHeight=82, appWidgetMinWidth=338, appWidgetSizes=[338.0x137.5, 603.5x82.0]}]

Much better than:

*** WidgetOptionsChanged: Bundle[mParcelledData.dataSize=408]
3

Kotlin

If you have simple Bundles (without nested bundles) then the tip by Jerry101 will already get you very far (see their comment why this works). Here's a one-liner:

Log.d(TAG, "bundle: ${bundle?.also { it.keySet() }?: "N/A"}")

The above prints:

bundle: Bundle[{a=42, s=hello, ...}]

Or when the bundle is null:

bundle: N/A

In case you're not confident that the above will always work, with slightly more code almost the same thing (using the keySet function that others here have already pointed out) - also one line:

Log.d(TAG, "bundle: ${bundle?.keySet()?.associateWith { bundle[it] }?: "N/A"}")

This converts the bundle to a map and prints

bundle: {a=42, s=hello, ...}

2

Java 8 stream one liner:

bundle.keySet().stream().forEach(k -> Log.d(TAG, k + " = " + bundle.get(k)));
1

I have developed a library called pretty-print which annotation processor that prints the contents of the bundle in a nice table format. Do check it out https://github.com/NULLPointerGuy/pretty-print

1

A Kotlin solution:

val bundleFromNotifications: Bundle? = remoteMessage?.toIntent()?.extras
bundleFromNotifications?.keySet()?.forEach{
    Log.d(LOG_TAG, it + "=> \"" + bundleFromNotifications.get(it) + "\"")
}
0

Solution in Kotlin:

fun Bundle.toPrintableString(): String {
    val sb = StringBuilder("{")
    var isFirst = true
    for (key in keySet()) {
        if (!isFirst)
            sb.append(',')
        else
            isFirst = false
        when (val value = get(key)) {
            is Bundle -> sb.append(key).append(':').append(value.toPrintableString())
            else -> sb.append(key).append(':').append(value)
            //TODO handle special cases if you wish
        }
    }
    sb.append('}')
    return sb.toString()
}

Sample:

    val bundle = Bundle()
    bundle.putString("asd", "qwe")
    bundle.putInt("zxc", 123)
    Log.d("AppLog", "bundle:${bundle.toPrintableString()}")

Note that it doesn't handle all possible types of values. You should decide which are important to show and in which way.

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