How can I display Toast messages from a thread?
14 Answers
You can do it by calling an Activity's runOnUiThread method from your thread:
activity.runOnUiThread(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
Toast.makeText(activity, "Hello", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
});
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1I'm not sure I understand how to do this. I have my existing public void run(). I tried putting this code there. I know that's not right because it didn't work, but I am really stuck. Mar 4, 2012 at 6:04
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14Is "activity" passed to the non-ui-thread in its constructor? What is the right way to get the activity object that you are using from within the separate thread? Mar 15, 2012 at 17:26
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Set the
Threadobject's reference to theActivityin theActivity'sonResume. Unset it in theActivity'sonPause. Do both under asynchronizedlock that both theActivityandThreadrespect. Apr 24, 2012 at 5:55 -
5sometimes there is no access to
Activityinstance, you can use simple helper-class instead, see here: stackoverflow.com/a/18280318/1891118 Aug 28, 2013 at 9:27 -
6I've usually found that
MyActivity.this.runOnUiThread()works just fine from within an innerThread/AsyncTask. Apr 30, 2014 at 17:39
I like to have a method in my activity called showToast which I can call from anywhere...
public void showToast(final String toast)
{
runOnUiThread(() -> Toast.makeText(MyActivity.this, toast, Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show());
}
I then most frequently call it from within MyActivity on any thread like this...
showToast(getString(R.string.MyMessage));
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3
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1For TOAST, always use Application Context, not Activity Context! Sep 21, 2015 at 8:35
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1
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1@OneWorld, proofs: 1- For a toast message, the Google Dev Guide uses the application context and explicitly say's to use it. 2- stackoverflow.com/a/4128799/1429432 3- stackoverflow.com/a/10347346/1429432 4- groups.google.com/d/msg/android-developers/3i8M6-wAIwM/… Feb 16, 2016 at 17:30
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@YoushaAleayoub There is a lot of discussion and guessing in the links you provided. E.g. RomainGuy says there is no memory leak in your proof no. 4. Some of the links are from the early days of Android in 2009. Also people say in the other links that you can use both contexts. Activity and application. Maybe you have a more up to date real evidence based proof? Do you have a link for 1?– OneWorldFeb 22, 2016 at 10:36
This is similar to other answers, however updated for new available apis and much cleaner. Also, does not assume you're in an Activity Context.
public class MyService extends AnyContextSubclass {
public void postToastMessage(final String message) {
Handler handler = new Handler(Looper.getMainLooper());
handler.post(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
Toast.makeText(getContext(), message, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
});
}
}
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When the context you have is not an activity that is the perfect answer. Thanks a lot!– francasApr 3, 2020 at 18:43
One approach that works from pretty much anywhere, including from places where you don't have an Activity or View, is to grab a Handler to the main thread and show the toast:
public void toast(final Context context, final String text) {
Handler handler = new Handler(Looper.getMainLooper());
handler.post(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
Toast.makeText(context, text, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
});
}
The advantage of this approach is that it works with any Context, including Service and Application.
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What if your app is backgrounded, and a service thread calls this code, will the toast display when the app is foregrounded? I'm curios what happens to the main application thread when the app backgrounded. Does it pause, and not execute tasks in the event loop? And then resume? Oct 1, 2021 at 15:24
Like this or this, with a Runnable that shows the Toast.
Namely,
Activity activity = // reference to an Activity
// or
View view = // reference to a View
activity.runOnUiThread(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
showToast(activity);
}
});
// or
view.post(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
showToast(view.getContext());
}
});
private void showToast(Context ctx) {
Toast.makeText(ctx, "Hi!", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
Sometimes, you have to send message from another Thread to UI thread. This type of scenario occurs when you can't execute Network/IO operations on UI thread.
Below example handles that scenario.
- You have UI Thread
- You have to start IO operation and hence you can't run
Runnableon UI thread. So post yourRunnableto handler onHandlerThread - Get the result from
Runnableand send it back to UI thread and show aToastmessage.
Solution:
- Create a HandlerThread and start it
- Create a Handler with Looper from
HandlerThread:requestHandler - Create a Handler with Looper from Main Thread:
responseHandlerand overridehandleMessagemethod postaRunnabletask onrequestHandler- Inside
Runnabletask, callsendMessageonresponseHandler - This
sendMessageresult invocation ofhandleMessageinresponseHandler. - Get attributes from the
Messageand process it, update UI
Sample code:
/* Handler thread */
HandlerThread handlerThread = new HandlerThread("HandlerThread");
handlerThread.start();
Handler requestHandler = new Handler(handlerThread.getLooper());
final Handler responseHandler = new Handler(Looper.getMainLooper()) {
@Override
public void handleMessage(Message msg) {
//txtView.setText((String) msg.obj);
Toast.makeText(MainActivity.this,
"Runnable on HandlerThread is completed and got result:"+(String)msg.obj,
Toast.LENGTH_LONG)
.show();
}
};
for ( int i=0; i<5; i++) {
Runnable myRunnable = new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
try {
/* Add your business logic here and construct the
Messgae which should be handled in UI thread. For
example sake, just sending a simple Text here*/
String text = "" + (++rId);
Message msg = new Message();
msg.obj = text.toString();
responseHandler.sendMessage(msg);
System.out.println(text.toString());
} catch (Exception err) {
err.printStackTrace();
}
}
};
requestHandler.post(myRunnable);
}
Useful articles:
handlerthreads-and-why-you-should-be-using-them-in-your-android-apps
- Get UI Thread Handler instance and use
handler.sendMessage(); - Call
post()methodhandler.post(); runOnUiThread()view.post()
You can use Looper to send Toast message. Go through this link for more details.
public void showToastInThread(final Context context,final String str){
Looper.prepare();
MessageQueue queue = Looper.myQueue();
queue.addIdleHandler(new IdleHandler() {
int mReqCount = 0;
@Override
public boolean queueIdle() {
if (++mReqCount == 2) {
Looper.myLooper().quit();
return false;
} else
return true;
}
});
Toast.makeText(context, str,Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
Looper.loop();
}
and it is called in your thread. Context may be Activity.getContext() getting from the Activity you have to show the toast.
I made this approach based on mjaggard answer:
public static void toastAnywhere(final String text) {
Handler handler = new Handler(Looper.getMainLooper());
handler.post(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
Toast.makeText(SuperApplication.getInstance().getApplicationContext(), text,
Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
});
}
Worked well for me.
Kotlin Code with runOnUiThread
runOnUiThread(
object : Runnable {
override fun run() {
Toast.makeText(applicationContext, "Calling from runOnUiThread()", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT)
}
}
)
I encountered the same problem:
E/AndroidRuntime: FATAL EXCEPTION: Thread-4
Process: com.example.languoguang.welcomeapp, PID: 4724
java.lang.RuntimeException: Can't toast on a thread that has not called Looper.prepare()
at android.widget.Toast$TN.<init>(Toast.java:393)
at android.widget.Toast.<init>(Toast.java:117)
at android.widget.Toast.makeText(Toast.java:280)
at android.widget.Toast.makeText(Toast.java:270)
at com.example.languoguang.welcomeapp.MainActivity$1.run(MainActivity.java:51)
at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:764)
I/Process: Sending signal. PID: 4724 SIG: 9
Application terminated.
Before: onCreate function
Thread thread = new Thread(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
Toast.makeText(getBaseContext(), "Thread", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
});
thread.start();
After: onCreate function
runOnUiThread(new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
Toast.makeText(getBaseContext(), "Thread", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
});
it worked.
java 11:
var handler = new Handler(Looper.getMainLooper);
handler.post(() -> Toast.makeText(your_context, "Hi!", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show());
Lambdas are available in java 8 though. var is introduced in java 11.
Contrary to almost every answer here, Toast#makeText and Toast#show do NOT have to run on the UI thread. The only requirement is that it runs on a thread that has called Looper#prepare.
The reasons for this is because toasts are handled and rendered by the OS, not the application. Internally, Toast#show makes a call to a system service to enqueue the toast.
This means the following code is valid
private static class MyThread extends Thread {
public Handler handler;
@Override
public void run() {
Looper.prepare();
handler = new Handler(Looper.myLooper()) {
public void handleMessage(Message msg) {
super.handleMessage(msg);
}
};
Looper.loop()
}
}
final private MyThread t = new MyThread();
// start and wait for t to start looping
private void onClick() {
t.handler.post(() -> Toast.makeText(this, "this works", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show());
}
Method in onCreate :
private void toastPublic(final String message){
Handler handler = new Handler(Looper.getMainLooper());
handler.post(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
Toast.makeText(getBaseContext(),""+message,
4 /*Toast.LENGTH_SHORT*/).show();
}});
}
Next : use in inside Thread