896

I am trying to work on sending an object of my customer class from one Activity and displaying it in another Activity.

The code for the customer class:

public class Customer {

    private String firstName, lastName, address;
    int age;

    public Customer(String fname, String lname, int age, String address) {

        firstName = fname;
        lastName = lname;
        age = age;
        address = address;
    }

    public String printValues() {

        String data = null;

        data = "First Name :" + firstName + " Last Name :" + lastName
        + " Age : " + age + " Address : " + address;

        return data;
    }
}

I want to send its object from one Activity to another and then display the data on the other Activity.

How can I achieve that?

3
  • I used to set object to Pacelable or Serializable, but whenever I add other variables, I have to add it all to functions to get and set for Pacelable or Serializable. so I made DataCache to transfer between activities and fragments. github.com/kimkevin/AndroidDataCache It's super easy to transfer object.
    – kimkevin
    Oct 4, 2015 at 11:40
  • I've created a wrapper TrackedReference<Any> that is parcelable and serializable without requiring marshaling (serializing or parcelizing) for the underlying type: stackoverflow.com/a/64944753/3405387
    – Lukas
    Nov 21, 2020 at 19:07
  • why don't you just use static variables and access it from other activity, without recreating it in memory and also sterilization of object may consume resources.
    – nhCoder
    Dec 1, 2020 at 6:50

35 Answers 35

976

One option could be letting your custom class implement the Serializable interface and then you can pass object instances in the intent extra using the putExtra(Serializable..) variant of the Intent#putExtra() method.

Actual Code:

In Your Custom Model/Object Class:

public class YourClass implements Serializable {

At other class where using the Custom Model/Class:

//To pass:
intent.putExtra("KEY_NAME", myObject);

myObject is of type "YourClass". Then to retrieve from another activity, use getSerializableExtra get the object using same Key name. And typecast to YourClass is needed:

// To retrieve object in second Activity
myObject = (YourClass) getIntent().getSerializableExtra("KEY_NAME");

Note: Make sure each nested class of your main custom class has implemented Serializable interface to avoid any serialization exceptions. For example:

class MainClass implements Serializable {
    
    public MainClass() {}

    public static class ChildClass implements Serializable {
         
        public ChildClass() {}
    }
}
17
  • 129
    @OD: In my defense, I never said this was the best option; OP just asked for alternatives and I suggested one. Thanks anyways.
    – Samuh
    May 9, 2011 at 21:09
  • 84
    Why is Serializable not a good option? It's a well-known interface, there's a good chance that peoples' classes may already implement it (ArrayList, for example, is already Serializable). Why should you have to change your data objects to add extra code simply to pass them from one class to another? That seems like a bad design. I can imagine there may be some performance impact at some level, but I'd think that in 99% of cases, people are passing small amounts of data, and they won't care. Simpler and portable is sometimes better, too.
    – Nate
    Aug 21, 2011 at 23:48
  • 16
    @Sander: Is this answer (stackoverflow.com/questions/2139134/…) wrong then? He says that Parcelable IS specifically designed for that purpose (and much faster than Serializable). I am a confused.
    – Slauma
    Oct 2, 2011 at 16:26
  • 42
    Parcelable might be good for speed, but it is complicated to implement. What if you have 8 objects you need to pass between activities, are you going to make each one Parcelable? It would make more sense to use Serializable instead. When you implement Parcelable you have to add a lot of code to the class, and order fields in a very specific manner; Serializable you don't. Ultimately, I think it comes down to how many objects you are passing and what you are trying to do. Aug 14, 2012 at 2:41
  • 16
    Serializable is a standard Java interface. You simply mark a class Serializable by implenting the interface, and Java will automatically serialize it in certain situations. Parcelable is an Android specific interface where you implement the serialization yourself. It was created to be far more efficient that Serializable, and to get around some problems with the default Java serialization scheme Dec 6, 2012 at 7:41
343

Implement your class with Serializable. Let's suppose that this is your entity class:

import java.io.Serializable;

@SuppressWarnings("serial") //With this annotation we are going to hide compiler warnings
public class Deneme implements Serializable {

    public Deneme(double id, String name) {
        this.id = id;
        this.name = name;
    }

    public double getId() {
        return id;
    }

    public void setId(double id) {
        this.id = id;
    }

    public String getName() {
        return this.name;
    }

    public void setName(String name) {
        this.name = name;
    }

    private double id;
    private String name;
}

We are sending the object called dene from X activity to Y activity. Somewhere in X activity;

Deneme dene = new Deneme(4,"Mustafa");
Intent i = new Intent(this, Y.class);
i.putExtra("sampleObject", dene);
startActivity(i);

In Y activity we are getting the object.

Intent i = getIntent();
Deneme dene = (Deneme)i.getSerializableExtra("sampleObject");

That's it.

9
  • 1
    It was really helpfull for me. Thanks... But when receiving the passed object, the syntax Should be [ Deneme dene = (Deneme)i.getSerializableExtra("sampleObject"); ] ... Is it ???
    – JibW
    Feb 21, 2012 at 15:39
  • 1
    @MustafaGüven But i am getting classCastException: java.lang.Long by doing so. Can you please explain why? Jun 17, 2013 at 19:06
  • There is no any relation with my answer. It's very different thing you are getting. Could you share your codes? Jun 18, 2013 at 13:18
  • 1
    Serializable is too slow for large POJOs. Using a Bus is a much better pattern. Jul 24, 2014 at 23:35
  • 1
    Why should I have to prefix (Serializable) to the object?
    – Alston
    Sep 24, 2014 at 9:53
168

Use gson to convert your object to JSON and pass it through intent. In the new Activity convert the JSON to an object.

In your build.gradle, add this to your dependencies

implementation 'com.google.code.gson:gson:2.8.4'

In your Activity, convert the object to json-string:

Gson gson = new Gson();
String myJson = gson.toJson(vp);
intent.putExtra("myjson", myjson);

In your receiving Activity, convert the json-string back to the original object:

Gson gson = new Gson();
YourObject ob = gson.fromJson(getIntent().getStringExtra("myjson"), YourObject.class);

For Kotlin it's quite the same

Pass the data

val gson = Gson()
val intent = Intent(this, YourActivity::class.java)
intent.putExtra("identifier", gson.toJson(your_object))
startActivity(intent)

Receive the data

val gson = Gson()
val yourObject = gson.fromJson<YourObject>(intent.getStringExtra("identifier"), YourObject::class.java)
11
  • 6
    Its an overkill , gson is just a type of string serialization to json , its better to implement Serializable or Paracable . Dec 22, 2013 at 18:30
  • 22
    Theres no need to implement serializable in every object and in every project (waste of time) if you can use a library (gson) that handles that. And about overkill, theres dual and quadcore phones out there, they can handle even a list following this answer idea. Jan 22, 2015 at 14:03
  • 6
    I would also recommend using gson because gson can also serialize arraylists in addition to above. Feb 9, 2015 at 11:02
  • 4
    This is great! In my case, I am using a library that the objects do no implement serializable or parcelable. So this is my only option afaik Apr 16, 2016 at 20:42
  • 3
    This is the "best" option. Some classes are so simple, you don't need to over complicate their implementation by implementing serializable Aug 9, 2017 at 12:11
133
  • Using global static variables is not good software engineering practice.
  • Converting an object's fields into primitive data types can be a hectic job.
  • Using serializable is OK, but it's not performance-efficient on the Android platform.
  • Parcelable is specifically designed for Android and you should use it. Here is a simple example: Passing custom objects between Android activities

You can generate Parcelable code for you class using this site.

8
  • 4
    What if my object contains nested Arraylist? Mar 27, 2014 at 13:26
  • 11
    Well perhaps but one should really take ``performance'' with a grain of salt imo. If that comes at the price of implementing Parcelable then I'd rather keep my POJO classes Android-agnostic and use Serializable.
    – VH-NZZ
    May 13, 2014 at 10:43
  • I don't agree that you should use Parcelable. A simple BUS pattern is much more efficient at runtime and saves a heck of a lot of dev time. Jul 24, 2014 at 23:27
  • 17
    According to this benchmark bitbucket.org/afrishman/androidserializationtest Serializable is much faster than Parcelable. Please stop sharing this 5 year old nonsense about Parcelable.
    – afrish
    Mar 29, 2015 at 18:54
  • 8
    How are global static variables "not good software engineering practice"? You can make something like a singleton cache and/or data grid then pass around ID's or similar. When you pass around references in Java you're using global static variables in a sense anyway as they point to the same object.
    – breakline
    Feb 26, 2016 at 8:05
100

While calling an activity

Intent intent = new Intent(fromClass.this,toClass.class).putExtra("myCustomerObj",customerObj);

In toClass.java receive the activity by

Customer customerObjInToClass = getIntent().getExtras().getParcelable("myCustomerObj");

Please make sure that customer class implements parcelable

public class Customer implements Parcelable {

    private String firstName, lastName, address;
    int age;

    /* all your getter and setter methods */

    public Customer(Parcel in ) {
        readFromParcel( in );
    }

    public static final Parcelable.Creator CREATOR = new Parcelable.Creator() {
        public LeadData createFromParcel(Parcel in ) {
            return new Customer( in );
        }

        public Customer[] newArray(int size) {
            return new Customer[size];
        }
    };


    @Override
    public void writeToParcel(Parcel dest, int flags) {

        dest.writeString(firstName);
        dest.writeString(lastName);
        dest.writeString(address);
        dest.writeInt(age);
    }

    private void readFromParcel(Parcel in ) {

        firstName = in .readString();
        lastName  = in .readString();
        address   = in .readString();
        age       = in .readInt();
    }
5
  • Adhavan, I got a question. When you create the first Intent class, you pass in fromClass.this as the first argument. Is there a way to retrieve this object in the receiving activity class?
    – newman
    Sep 10, 2011 at 21:28
  • 1
    Miliu, fromClass fr = (fromClass) getParent(); is this what u needed?
    – Ads
    Sep 12, 2011 at 8:23
  • Adhava, I actually did this, but fr is null. Any idea why?
    – newman
    Sep 25, 2011 at 3:08
  • miliu,please share your exception trace by that we can look into it.
    – Ads
    Sep 26, 2011 at 8:06
  • Parcelable has a heck of a lot of unecessary boiler plate code and is quite frankly a waste of time. Rather use a Bus. See my post below. Jul 24, 2014 at 23:30
92

In my experience there are three main solutions, each with its disadvantages and advantages:

  1. Implementing Parcelable

  2. Implementing Serializable

  3. Using a light-weight event bus library of some sort (for example, Greenrobot's EventBus or Square's Otto)

Parcelable - fast and Android standard, but it has lots of boilerplate code and requires hard-coded strings for reference when pulling values out the intent (non-strongly typed).

Serializable - close to zero boilerplate, but it is the slowest approach and also requires hard-coded strings when pulling values out the intent (non-strongly typed).

Event Bus - zero boilerplate, fastest approach, and does not require hard-coded strings, but it does require an additional dependency (although usually lightweight, ~40  KB)

I posted a very detailed comparison of these three approaches, including efficiency benchmarks.

9
  • 4
    Link to the article is dead. Still available on webarchive : web.archive.org/web/20160917213123/http://…
    – OlivierH
    Apr 1, 2017 at 14:16
  • It's a shame that the link is down :(
    – Mauker
    Jun 28, 2017 at 19:04
  • The problem of usage of Event Bus is when target Activity is recreated due to rotation for example. In this case target Activity has not access to passed object because this object was consumed from the bus by earlier call.
    – JuliuszJ
    Feb 6, 2018 at 10:03
  • 1
    Parcelable is the fastest and with this generator (parcelabler.com), you can paste your class and it can generate the code for you. Simple.
    – ByWaleed
    Apr 16, 2019 at 10:36
  • 1
    @ByWaleed ... I absolutely agree, I always use this site, makes stuff without any hassels. However, I have had a lot of unsuccessful tries, when I try to use a POJO that is composed of another Object. For some reason its out put doesnt really work.
    – Yo Apps
    Jun 19, 2019 at 15:48
58

I found a simple & elegant method:

  • NO Parcelable
  • NO Serializable
  • NO Static Field
  • No Event Bus

Method 1

Code for the first activity:

    final Object objSent = new Object();
    final Bundle bundle = new Bundle();
    bundle.putBinder("object_value", new ObjectWrapperForBinder(objSent));
    startActivity(new Intent(this, SecondActivity.class).putExtras(bundle));
    Log.d(TAG, "original object=" + objSent);

Code for the second activity:

    final Object objReceived = ((ObjectWrapperForBinder)getIntent().getExtras().getBinder("object_value")).getData();
    Log.d(TAG, "received object=" + objReceived);

you will find objSent & objReceived have the same hashCode, so they are identical.

But why can we pass a Java object in this way?

Actually, an Android binder will create a global JNI reference for a Java object and release this global JNI reference when there aren't any reference for this Java object. The binder will save this global JNI reference in the Binder object.

Caution: this method only work unless the two activities run in the same process, otherwise throw ClassCastException at (ObjectWrapperForBinder)getIntent().getExtras().getBinder("object_value")

Class ObjectWrapperForBinder definition:

public class ObjectWrapperForBinder extends Binder {

    private final Object mData;

    public ObjectWrapperForBinder(Object data) {
        mData = data;
    }

    public Object getData() {
        return mData;
    }
}

Method 2

  • for the sender,
    1. use custom native method to add your Java object to JNI global reference table(via JNIEnv::NewGlobalRef)
    2. put the return integer (actually, JNIEnv::NewGlobalRef return jobject, which is a pointer, we can cast it to int safely) to your Intent(via Intent::putExtra)
  • for the receiver
    1. get integer from Intent(via Intent::getInt)
    2. use a custom native method to restore your Java object from JNI global reference table (via JNIEnv::NewLocalRef)
    3. remove item from JNI global reference table(via JNIEnv::DeleteGlobalRef),

But Method 2 has a little, but serious issue, if the receiver fail to restore the Java object (for example, some exception happen before restore the Java object, or the receiver Activity does not exist at all), then the Java object will become an orphan or memory leak. Method 1 don't have this issue, because android binder will handle this exception

##Method 3##

To invoke the Java object remotely, we will create a data contract/interface to describe the Java object. We will use the *.aidl file:

IDataContract.aidl

package com.example.objectwrapper;
interface IDataContract {
    int func1(String arg1);
    int func2(String arg1);
}

Code for the first activity

    final IDataContract objSent = new IDataContract.Stub() {

        @Override
        public int func2(String arg1) throws RemoteException {
            // TODO Auto-generated method stub
            Log.d(TAG, "func2:: arg1=" + arg1);
            return 102;
        }

        @Override
        public int func1(String arg1) throws RemoteException {
            // TODO Auto-generated method stub
            Log.d(TAG, "func1:: arg1=" + arg1);
            return 101;
        }
    };
    final Bundle bundle = new Bundle();
    bundle.putBinder("object_value", objSent.asBinder());
    startActivity(new Intent(this, SecondActivity.class).putExtras(bundle));
    Log.d(TAG, "original object=" + objSent);

Code for the second activity:

Change the android:process attribute in file AndroidManifest.xml to a non-empty process name to make sure the second

    final IDataContract objReceived = IDataContract.Stub.asInterface(getIntent().getExtras().getBinder("object_value"));
    try {
        Log.d(TAG, "received object=" + objReceived + ", func1()=" + objReceived.func1("test1") + ", func2()=" + objReceived.func2("test2"));
    } catch (RemoteException e) {
        // TODO Auto-generated catch block
        e.printStackTrace();
    }

In this way, we can pass an interface between two activities, even though they run in a different process, and call the interface method remotely.

Method 4

Method 3 seems not simple enough, because we must implement an aidl interface. If you just want to do a simple task and the method return value is unnecessary, we can use android.os.Messenger.

Code for the first activity (sender):

public class MainActivity extends Activity {
    private static final String TAG = "MainActivity";

    public static final int MSG_OP1 = 1;
    public static final int MSG_OP2 = 2;

    public static final String EXTRA_MESSENGER = "messenger";

    private final Handler mHandler = new Handler() {

        @Override
        public void handleMessage(Message msg) {
            // TODO Auto-generated method stub
            Log.e(TAG, "handleMessage:: msg=" + msg);
            switch (msg.what) {
            case MSG_OP1:

                break;
            case MSG_OP2:
                break;

            default:

                break;
            }
            super.handleMessage(msg);
        }

    };
    @Override
    protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
        setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);

        startActivity(new Intent(this, SecondActivity.class).putExtra(EXTRA_MESSENGER, new Messenger(mHandler)));
    }
}

Code for the second activity (receiver):

public class SecondActivity extends Activity {

    @Override
    protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
        setContentView(R.layout.activity_second);

        final Messenger messenger = getIntent().getParcelableExtra(MainActivity.EXTRA_MESSENGER);
        try {
            messenger.send(Message.obtain(null, MainActivity.MSG_OP1, 101, 1001, "10001"));
            messenger.send(Message.obtain(null, MainActivity.MSG_OP2, 102, 1002, "10002"));
        } catch (RemoteException e) {
            // TODO Auto-generated catch block
            e.printStackTrace();
        }

    }
}

All the Messenger.send will execute in a Handler asynchronously and sequentially.

Actually, android.os.Messenger is also an aidl interface. If you have the Android source code, you can find a file named IMessenger.aidl.

package android.os;

import android.os.Message;

/** @hide */
oneway interface IMessenger {
    void send(in Message msg);
}
4
  • Sorry I did not see that you had binding in your answer as well I feel that your answer is also very elegant.
    – SkidRunner
    Jul 13, 2016 at 19:57
  • Wow.... This man's 1st method is tremendous..... When you have very big/larger sized objects that works well
    – karan
    Apr 17, 2019 at 10:32
  • Thanks a lot for ObjectWrapperForBinder method, really helps! Dec 10, 2019 at 16:05
  • This methods are really excellent: light and straightforward. I just had to check the API level on runtime as putBinder needs level 18. I have done it with something like (android.os.Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.JELLY_BEAN_MR2) and it works like a charm. I am using method 1.
    – Gauthier
    Jul 10, 2020 at 16:34
40

You could also write the object's data into temporary Strings and ints, and pass them to the activity. Of course that way, you get the data transported, but not the object itself.

But if you just want to display them, and not use the object in another method or something like that, it should be enough. I did it the same way to just display data from one object in another activity.

String fName_temp   = yourObject.getFname();
String lName_temp   = yourObject.getLname();
String age_temp     = yourObject.getAge();
String address_temp = yourObject.getAddress();

Intent i = new Intent(this, ToClass.class);
i.putExtra("fname", fName_temp);
i.putExtra("lname", lName_temp);
i.putExtra("age", age_temp);
i.putExtra("address", address_temp);

startActivity(i);

You could also pass them in directly instead of the temp ivars, but this way it's clearer, in my opinion. Additionally, you can set the temp ivars to null so that they get cleaned by the GarbageCollector sooner.

Good luck!

On a side note: override toString() instead of writing your own print method.

As mentioned in the comments below, this is how you get your data back in another activity:

String fName = getIntent().getExtras().getInt("fname");
6
  • 10
    get your data back again with: String fName = getIntent().getExtras().getInt("fname");
    – Alister
    Oct 30, 2010 at 5:17
  • 2
    To get the data back: Bundle extras = getIntent().getExtras(); String val = extras.getString("fname"); Jan 1, 2012 at 1:00
  • 1
    This can quickly become infeasible for large POJOs. Rather use a Bus. See my post below. Jul 24, 2014 at 23:31
  • as I mentioned in my answer, this is for simple usecases where you don't need the object itself, but rather just some values of it. It's not ment to be a soslution for complex usecases.
    – MJVDM
    Jul 31, 2014 at 11:54
  • 1
    Good idea to pass a single object, but I'm trying to pass an array of unknown size of my object. Perhaps your solution is not for passing object arrays.
    – Saqib
    Aug 26, 2015 at 9:33
31

I made a singleton helper class that holds temporary objects.

public class IntentHelper {

    private static IntentHelper _instance;
    private Hashtable<String, Object> _hash;

    private IntentHelper() {
        _hash = new Hashtable<String, Object>();
    }

    private static IntentHelper getInstance() {
        if(_instance==null) {
            _instance = new IntentHelper();
        }
        return _instance;
    }

    public static void addObjectForKey(Object object, String key) {
        getInstance()._hash.put(key, object);
    }

    public static Object getObjectForKey(String key) {
        IntentHelper helper = getInstance();
        Object data = helper._hash.get(key);
        helper._hash.remove(key);
        helper = null;
        return data;
    }
}

Instead of putting your objects within Intent, use IntentHelper:

IntentHelper.addObjectForKey(obj, "key");

Inside your new Activity, you can get the object:

Object obj = (Object) IntentHelper.getObjectForKey("key");

Bear in mind that once loaded, the object is removed to avoid unnecessary references.

4
  • 1
    Good idea! Additionally may be you can create an additional class ObjectContainer { Object, obj; boolean permanent; ....} Idea is that, you may pass a boolean in add method if you need to keep object persistant and don't remove when we call get. It will help keeping some global objects. Like may be an open bluetooth connection etc.
    – Umair
    Sep 26, 2012 at 5:59
  • 1
    Cute but don't re-invent the wheel. Bus pattern is elegant and more powerful. See my post below. Jul 24, 2014 at 23:34
  • @StevenMarkFord so does Bus pattern still holds true til this day? I am trying to improve a codebase with a code like this accessing data between activities: BookActivity.getInstance().recommendationResponse in RoomsActivity
    – Woppi
    Dec 20, 2017 at 12:32
  • When the receiving Activity is recreated (eg on screen rotation) obj becomes null. To avoid this, obj should be stored somewhere to get it again. Indeed the Json solution stores object data in Intent.
    – Salvador
    Aug 7, 2018 at 13:46
26

There are a couple of ways by which you can access variables or objects in other classes or Activity.

A. Database

B. Shared preferences.

C. Object serialization.

D. A class which can hold common data can be named as Common Utilities. It depends on you.

E. Passing data through Intents and Parcelable Interface.

It depends upon your project needs.

A. Database

SQLite is an open source database which is embedded into Android. SQLite supports standard relational database features like SQL syntax, transactions and prepared statements.

Tutorials

B. Shared preferences

Suppose you want to store username. So there will now be two things, a key username, value value.

How to store

 // Create object of SharedPreferences.
 SharedPreferences sharedPref = PreferenceManager.getDefaultSharedPreferences(this);

 //Now get Editor
 SharedPreferences.Editor editor = sharedPref.edit();

 //Put your value
 editor.putString("userName", "stackoverlow");

 //Commits your edits
 editor.commit();

Using putString(), putBoolean(), putInt(), putFloat(), and putLong() you can save your desired dtatype.

How to fetch

SharedPreferences sharedPref = PreferenceManager.getDefaultSharedPreferences(this);
String userName = sharedPref.getString("userName", "Not Available");

http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/SharedPreferences.html

C. Object serialization

Object serlization is used if we want to save an object state to send it over a network or you can use it for your purpose also.

Use Java beans and store in it as one of his fields and use getters and setter for that.

JavaBeans are Java classes that have properties. Think of properties as private instance variables. Since they're private, the only way they can be accessed from outside of their class is through methods in the class. The methods that change a property's value are called setter methods, and the methods that retrieve a property's value are called getter methods.

public class VariableStorage implements Serializable  {

    private String inString;

    public String getInString() {
        return inString;
    }

    public void setInString(String inString) {
        this.inString = inString;
    }
}

Set the variable in your mail method by using

VariableStorage variableStorage = new VariableStorage();
variableStorage.setInString(inString);

Then use object serialzation to serialize this object and in your other class deserialize this object.

In serialization an object can be represented as a sequence of bytes that includes the object's data as well as information about the object's type and the types of data stored in the object.

After a serialized object has been written into a file, it can be read from the file and deserialized. That is, the type information and bytes that represent the object and its data can be used to recreate the object in memory.

If you want tutorial for this refer to:

D. CommonUtilities

You can make a class by yourself which can contain common data which you frequently need in your project.

Sample

public class CommonUtilities {

    public static String className = "CommonUtilities";

}

E. Passing data through intents

Please refer the tutorial Android – Parcel data to pass between Activities using Parcelable classes for this option of passing data.

25

Create your own class Customer as follows:

import import java.io.Serializable;
public class Customer implements Serializable
{
    private String name;
    private String city;

    public Customer()
    {
        
    }
    public Customer(String name, String city)
    {
        this.name= name;
        this.city=city;
    }
    public String getName() 
    {
        return name;
    }
    public void setName(String name) 
    {
        this.name = name;
    }
    public String getCity() 
    {
        return city;
    }
    public void setCity(String city) 
    {
        this.city= city;
    }
    
}

In your onCreate() method

@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) 
{
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState); 
    setContentView(R.layout.activity_top);
    
    Customer cust=new Customer();
    cust.setName("abc");
    cust.setCity("xyz");
    
    Intent intent=new Intent(abc.this,xyz.class);
    intent.putExtra("bundle",cust);
    startActivity(intent); 
}

In xyz activity class you need to use the following code:

Intent intent=getIntent();
Customer cust=(Customer)intent.getSerializableExtra("bundle");
textViewName.setText(cust.getName());
textViewCity.setText(cust.getCity());
2
  • ..Check your code you are passing "bundle" as key for put cust obj & getting from "class" ..pls use one key either "class" or "bundle" ..
    – AK Joshi
    Nov 21, 2014 at 6:18
  • I face Error: Parcelable encountered IOException writing serializable object
    – Arul
    Mar 29, 2019 at 9:52
16
public class MyClass implements Serializable{
    Here is your instance variable
}

Now you want to pass the object of this class in startActivity. Simply use this:

Bundle b = new Bundle();
b.putSerializable("name", myClassObject);
intent.putExtras(b);

This works here because MyClass implements Serializable.

3
  • can you please explain or elaborate more
    – Amitsharma
    Sep 30, 2016 at 7:05
  • HomeworkData homeworkData = homeWorksList.get(position); Intent intent = new Intent(c, HomeWorkActivitydetail.class); Bundle b = new Bundle(); b.putSerializable("CompleteData", homeworkData); intent.putExtras(b); c.startActivity(intent); at a time of object add gives me some error for adding object elements can we not pass complete object with this
    – Amitsharma
    Sep 30, 2016 at 7:07
  • inside of homeworkData i am having some values these are come to add
    – Amitsharma
    Sep 30, 2016 at 7:08
14

The best way is to have a class (call it Control) in your application that will hold a static variable of type 'Customer' (in your case). Initialize the variable in your Activity A.

For example:

Control.Customer = CustomerClass;

Then go to Activity B and fetch it from Control class. Don't forget to assign a null after using the variable, otherwise memory will be wasted.

2
  • 6
    @aez Because it's sloppy from a design viewpoint and will break horribly if the Intent is ever in another process.
    – user166390
    Jan 15, 2013 at 3:22
  • 9
    You will run into issues when resuming your app to Activity B. Since the Activity can be killed by Android and the object will not be saved.
    – Ryan R
    Jan 18, 2013 at 17:39
12

If you choose use the way Samuh describes, remember that only primitive values can be sent. That is, values that are parcable. So, if your object contains complex objects these will not follow. For example, variables like Bitmap, HashMap etc... These are tricky to pass by the intent.

In general I would advice you to send only primitive datatypes as extras, like String, int, boolean etc. In your case it would be: String fname, String lname, int age, and String address.

My opinion: More complex objects are better shared by implementing a ContentProvider, SDCard, etc. It's also possible to use a static variable, but this may fastly lead to error-prone code...

But again, it's just my subjective opinion.

8

I am using parcelable to send data from one activity to another acivity. Here is my code that works fine in my project.

public class Channel implements Serializable, Parcelable {

    /**  */
    private static final long serialVersionUID = 4861597073026532544L;

    private String cid;
    private String uniqueID;
    private String name;
    private String logo;
    private String thumb;


    /**
     * @return The cid
     */
    public String getCid() {
        return cid;
    }

    /**
     * @param cid
     *     The cid to set
     */
    public void setCid(String cid) {
        this.cid = cid;
    }

    /**
     * @return The uniqueID
     */
    public String getUniqueID() {
        return uniqueID;
    }

    /**
     * @param uniqueID
     *     The uniqueID to set
     */
    public void setUniqueID(String uniqueID) {
        this.uniqueID = uniqueID;
    }

    /**
     * @return The name
     */
    public String getName() {
        return name;
    }

    /**
     * @param name
     *            The name to set
     */
    public void setName(String name) {
        this.name = name;
    }

    /**
     * @return the logo
     */
    public String getLogo() {
        return logo;
    }

    /**
     * @param logo
     *     The logo to set
     */
    public void setLogo(String logo) {
        this.logo = logo;
    }

    /**
     * @return the thumb
     */
    public String getThumb() {
        return thumb;
    }

    /**
     * @param thumb
     *     The thumb to set
     */
    public void setThumb(String thumb) {
        this.thumb = thumb;
    }


    public Channel(Parcel in) {
        super();
        readFromParcel(in);
    }

    public static final Parcelable.Creator<Channel> CREATOR = new Parcelable.Creator<Channel>() {
        public Channel createFromParcel(Parcel in) {
            return new Channel(in);
        }

        public Channel[] newArray(int size) {

            return new Channel[size];
        }
    };

    public void readFromParcel(Parcel in) {
        String[] result = new String[5];
        in.readStringArray(result);

        this.cid = result[0];
        this.uniqueID = result[1];
        this.name = result[2];
        this.logo = result[3];
        this.thumb = result[4];
    }

    public int describeContents() {
        return 0;
    }

    public void writeToParcel(Parcel dest, int flags) {

        dest.writeStringArray(new String[] { this.cid, this.uniqueID,
                this.name, this.logo, this.thumb});
    }
}

In activityA use it like this:

Bundle bundle = new Bundle();
bundle.putParcelableArrayList("channel",(ArrayList<Channel>) channels);
Intent intent = new Intent(ActivityA.this,ActivityB.class);
intent.putExtras(bundle);
startActivity(intent);

In ActivityB use it like this to get data:

Bundle getBundle = this.getIntent().getExtras();
List<Channel> channelsList = getBundle.getParcelableArrayList("channel");
7

You can try to use that class. The limitation is that it can't be used outside of one process.

One activity:

 final Object obj1 = new Object();
 final Intent in = new Intent();
 in.putExtra(EXTRA_TEST, new Sharable(obj1));

Other activity:

final Sharable s = in.getExtras().getParcelable(EXTRA_TEST);
final Object obj2 = s.obj();

public final class Sharable implements Parcelable {

    private Object mObject;

    public static final Parcelable.Creator < Sharable > CREATOR = new Parcelable.Creator < Sharable > () {
        public Sharable createFromParcel(Parcel in ) {
            return new Sharable( in );
        }


        @Override
        public Sharable[] newArray(int size) {
            return new Sharable[size];
        }
    };

    public Sharable(final Object obj) {
        mObject = obj;
    }

    public Sharable(Parcel in ) {
        readFromParcel( in );
    }

    Object obj() {
        return mObject;
    }


    @Override
    public int describeContents() {
        return 0;
    }


    @Override
    public void writeToParcel(final Parcel out, int flags) {
        final long val = SystemClock.elapsedRealtime();
        out.writeLong(val);
        put(val, mObject);
    }

    private void readFromParcel(final Parcel in ) {
        final long val = in .readLong();
        mObject = get(val);
    }

    /////

    private static final HashMap < Long, Object > sSharableMap = new HashMap < Long, Object > (3);

    synchronized private static void put(long key, final Object obj) {
        sSharableMap.put(key, obj);
    }

    synchronized private static Object get(long key) {
        return sSharableMap.remove(key);
    }
}
6

This question is also discussed in another Stack Overflow question. Please have a look at a solution to Passing data through intent using Serializable. The main point is about using Bundle object which stores the necessary data inside Intent.

 Bundle bundle = new Bundle();

 bundle.putSerializable(key1, value1);
 bundle.putSerializable(key2, value2);
 bundle.putSerializable(key3, value3);

 intent.putExtras(bundle);

To extract values:

 Bundle bundle = new Bundle();

 for (String key : bundle.keySet()) {
 value = bundle.getSerializable(key));
 }

Advantage of Serializable is its simplicity. However, you should consider using Parcelable method if you need many data to be transferred, because Parcelable is specifically designed for Android and it is more efficient than Serializable. You can create Parcelable class using:

  1. an online tool - parcelabler
  2. a plugin for Android Studio - Android Parcelable code generator
6

Start another activity from this activity and pass parameters via Bundle Object

Intent intent = new Intent(getBaseContext(), YourActivity.class);
intent.putExtra("USER_NAME", "[email protected]");
startActivity(intent);

Retrieve data on another activity (YourActivity)

String s = getIntent().getStringExtra("USER_NAME");

This is ok for a simple kind of data type. But if u want to pass complex data in between activities. U need to serialize it first.

Here we have Employee Model

class Employee{
    private String empId;
    private int age;
    print Double salary;
    
    getters...
    setters...
}

You can use Gson lib provided by google to serialize the complex data like this

String strEmp = new Gson().toJson(emp);
Intent intent = new Intent(getBaseContext(), YourActivity.class);
intent.putExtra("EMP", strEmp);
startActivity(intent);

Bundle bundle = getIntent().getExtras();
String empStr = bundle.getString("EMP");
            Gson gson = new Gson();
            Type type = new TypeToken<Employee>() {
            }.getType();
            Employee selectedEmp = gson.fromJson(empStr, type);
0
5

Crete a class like bean class and implement the Serializable interface. Then we can pass it through the intent method, for example:

intent.putExtra("class", BeanClass);

Then get it from the other activity, for example:

BeanClass cb = intent.getSerializableExtra("class");
5

Create two methods in your custom Class like this

public class Qabir {

    private int age;
    private String name;

    Qabir(){
    }

    Qabir(int age,String name){
        this.age=age; this.name=name;
    }   

    // method for sending object
    public String toJSON(){
        return "{age:" + age + ",name:\"" +name +"\"}";
    }

    // method for get back original object
    public void initilizeWithJSONString(String jsonString){

        JSONObject json;        
        try {
            json =new JSONObject(jsonString );
            age=json.getInt("age");
            name=json.getString("name");
        } catch (JSONException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        } 
    }
}

Now in your sender Activity do like this

Qabir q= new Qabir(22,"KQ");    
Intent in=new Intent(this,SubActivity.class);
in.putExtra("obj", q.toJSON());
startActivity( in);

And in your receiver Activity

Qabir q =new Qabir();
q.initilizeWithJSONString(getIntent().getStringExtra("obj"));
3

Android Activity objects can be destroyed and reconstituted. So, you will need to use another approach to look them - or any object they create!!! - up. That is, you could pass as static class reference but then the object handle (Java calls these "references", as does SmallTalk; but they are not references in the sense of C or assembly) will be possibly invalid later because a "feature" of Android OE is any Activity can be annihilated and reconstituted later.

The original question asked "How to pass object from one activity to another in Android" and nobody has answered that. For sure, you can serialized (Serializable, Parcelable, to/from JSON) and pass a copy of the object's data and a new object having the same data could be created; but it will NOT have the same references/handles. Also, many others mentioned you can store the reference in a static store. And that will work unless Android decides to onDestroy your Activity.

So, to really solve the original question you would need a static lookup plus each object will update its reference when/if it is recreated. E.g. each Android Activity would relist itself if its onCreate is called. You can also see how some people use the task list to search out an Activity by name. (system is temporarily destroying this instance of the activity to save space..getRunningTasks, the task list is effectively a specialized listing of the most recent object instance of each Activity).

For reference:

Stopped: "The activity is completely obscured by another activity (the activity is now in the "background"). A stopped activity is also still alive (the Activity object is retained in memory, it maintains all state and member information, but is not attached to the window manager). However, it is no longer visible to the user and it can be killed by the system when memory is needed elsewhere."

onDestroy "system is temporarily destroying this instance of the activity to save space."

So, the Message Bus is a workable solution. It basically "punts". Rather than try to have references to objects; then you re-architect your design to use MessagePassing instead of SequentialCode. Exponentially harder to debug; but it lets you ignore these sort of OperatingEnvironment understandings. Effectively, each object method access is inverted so the caller posts a Message and the object itself defines a handler for that message. Lots more code but can make it robust with the Android OE restrictions.

If all you want is the top Activity (typical thing in Android apps due to "Context" being needed everywhere), then you can just have each Activity lists itself as "top" in the static global space whenever its onResume is called. Then your AlertDialog or whatever which needs a context can just grab it from there. Also, its a bit yucky to use a global but can simplifying passing a Context up and down everywhere and, for sure, when you use a MessageBus then IT IS global anyways.

1
  • Otto has pro of being able to run it externally in just a a plain old Java app. So, good for dev and testing without having to mess with Android. Otto has con of big learning curve and most of what it solves is already solved in Android ways (local broadcast etc) or in normal app dev approaches ( you can write a much simpler global lookup than the global lookup of Otto, normal approaches are much more approachable for vectoring/F3 through code and for stepping through debugging).
    – TimJowers2
    Sep 8, 2014 at 15:24
2

Yeah, using a static object is by far the easiest way of doing this with custom non-serialisable objects.

1
  • Yeah, I think I actually agree with you. Making those objects static is the better workaround if it's simply impractical to keep invoking putExtra() for every property you'd like to pass on. For example, right now, I want to pass an ArrayList that contains objects. I might as well make my ArrayList static instead.
    – MLQ
    Aug 18, 2011 at 6:21
2
  1. I know that static is bad, but it seems that we're forced to use it here. The problem with parceables/seriazables is that the two activities have duplicate instances of the same object = waste of memory and CPU.

    public class IntentMailBox {
        static Queue<Object> content = new LinkedList<Object>();
    }
    

Calling activity

IntentMailBox.content.add(level);
Intent intent = new Intent(LevelsActivity.this, LevelActivity.class);
startActivity(intent);

Called activity (note that onCreate() and onResume() may be called multiple times when the system destroys and recreates activities)

if (IntentMailBox.content.size()>0)
    level = (Level) IntentMailBox.content.poll();
else
    // Here you reload what you have saved in onPause()
  1. Another way is to declare a static field of the class that you want to pass in that very class. It will serve only for this purpose. Don't forget that it can be null in onCreate, because your app package has been unloaded from memory by system and reloaded later.

  2. Bearing in mind that you still need to handle activity lifecycle, you may want to write all the data straight to shared preferences, painful with complex data structures as it is.

2

Create your custom class like this:

public class Test implements Parcelable {
    String message;

    protected Test(Parcel in) {
        message = in.readString();
    }

    public static final Creator<Test> CREATOR = new Creator<Test>() {
        @Override
        public Test createFromParcel(Parcel in) {
            return new Test(in);
        }

        @Override
        public Test[] newArray(int size) {
            return new Test[size];
        }
    };

    public String getMessage() {
        return message;
    }

    @Override
    public int describeContents() {
        return 0;
    }

    @Override
    public void writeToParcel(Parcel dest, int flags) {
        dest.writeString(message);
    }

Send data using Intent like this: Before starting your activity must set some data

Intent intent = new Intent(context, PostDetailsActivity.class);
                intent.putExtra("data", (Parcelable) test);
                ((context)).startActivity(intent);

Get data from intent like this:

Test test = (Test) getIntent().getParcelableExtra("data");
2
  • 1
    Please use Parcelable, it's about 10x faster to pass through process boundaries than Serializable. Sep 25, 2021 at 3:08
  • 1
    Thank you for your support. I learn about it and upgrade it. Oct 25, 2021 at 10:00
1

The previous answers are almost all correct, but for those who don't understand those answers:

Android has a powerful class, Intent. With help of it, you share data between not only activity, but other components of Android (broadcast receiver, services for content provided we use ContetnResolver class no Intent).

In your activity you build intent:

Intent intent = new Intent(context,SomeActivity.class);
intent.putExtra("key",value);
startActivity(intent);

In your receiving activity, you have

public class SomeActivity extends AppCompactActivity {

    public void onCreate(...){
    ...
          SomeObject someObject = getIntent().getExtras().getParceable("key");
    }
}

You have to implement Parceable or Serializable interface on your object in order to share between activities. It is hard to implement Parcealbe rather than the Serializable interface on the object. That's why android has plugins, especially for this. Download it and use it.

0

I had always wondered why this can't be as simple as calling into a method of the other activity. I recently wrote a utility library that makes it almost as simple as that. You can check it out here(https://github.com/noxiouswinter/gnlib_android/wiki/gnlauncher).

GNLauncher makes sending objects/data to an Activity from another Activity etc as easy as calling a function in tha Activity with the required data as parameters. It introduces type safety and removes all the hastles of having to serialize, attaching to the intent using string keys and undoing the same at the other end.

Usage

Define an interface with the methods you want to call on the Activity to launch.

public interface IPayload {
    public void sayHello(String name, int age);
}

Implement the above interface on the Activity to launch into. Also notify GNLauncher when the activity is ready.

public class Activity_1 extends Activity implements IPayload {

    @Override
    protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
        //Notify GNLauncher when the Activity is ready. 
        GNLauncher.get().ping(this);
    }

    @Override
    public void sayHello(String name, int age) {
        Log.d("gnlib_test", "Hello " + name + "! \nYour age is: " + age);
    }
}

In the other Activity, get a proxy to the above Activity and call any method with the desired parameters.

public class Activity_2 extends Activity {
    public void onClick(View v) {
        ((IPayload)GNLauncher.get().getProxy(this, IPayload.class, Activity_1.class)).sayHello(name, age);
    }
}

The first activity will be launched and the method called into with the required parameters.

Prerequisites

Please refer to https://github.com/noxiouswinter/gnlib_android/wiki#prerequisites for information on how to add the dependencies.

0

Pass object from one activity to another activity.

(1) source activity

Intent ii = new Intent(examreport_select.this,
                    BarChartActivity.class);

            ii.putExtra("IntentExamResultDetail",
                    (Serializable) your List<ArraList<String>> object here);
            startActivity(ii);

(2) destination acitivity

List<ArrayList<String>> aa = (List<ArrayList<String>>) getIntent()
            .getSerializableExtra("IntentExamResultDetail");
0

I used to set object with Pacelable or Serializable to transfer, but whenever I add other variables to object(model), I have to register it all. It's so nconvenient.

It's super easy to transfer object between activities or fragments.

Android DataCache

0

We can pass the object from one activity to another activity:

SupplierDetails poSuppliersDetails = new SupplierDetails();

Inside poSuppliersDetails we have some values. Now I am sending this object to target activity:

Intent iPODetails = new Intent(ActivityOne.this, ActivityTwo.class);
iPODetails.putExtra("poSuppliersDetails", poSuppliersDetails);

How to get this in ACtivityTwo:

private SupplierDetails supplierDetails;
    supplierDetails =(SupplierDetails) getIntent().getSerializableExtra("poSuppliersDetails");
0

Pass one activity to another:

startActivity(new Intent(getBaseContext(),GetActivity.class).putExtra("passingkey","passingvalue"));

Get values:

String myvalue= getIntent().getExtras("passingkey");

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