172

Can anyone tell me if an equivalent for setInterval/setTimeout exists for Android? Does anybody have any example about how to do it?

12 Answers 12

286

As always with Android there's lots of ways to do this, but assuming you simply want to run a piece of code a little bit later on the same thread, I use this:

new android.os.Handler(Looper.getMainLooper()).postDelayed(
    new Runnable() {
        public void run() {
            Log.i("tag", "This'll run 300 milliseconds later");
        }
    }, 
300);

.. this is pretty much equivalent to

setTimeout( 
    function() {
        console.log("This will run 300 milliseconds later");
    },
300);
5
  • 1
    This is a very good solution for drawer selection and fragmentTransaction
    – Gonçalo
    May 26, 2015 at 14:48
  • 10
    How can I cancel it if I need to? Jun 9, 2016 at 8:30
  • How do you obtain the activity scope within the run() method?
    – Andy
    Aug 31, 2016 at 16:44
  • 1
    @Andy like this: MyActivityName.this.myFunctionOnActivity() Sep 1, 2016 at 11:43
  • 2
    @QuentinRoy: Handler timeout = new Handler(); final Runnable r = new Runnable{...}; timeout.postDelayed(r, 300); and if you want to cancel it: timeout.removeCallbacks(r); Dec 20, 2019 at 22:27
138

setInterval()

function that repeats itself in every n milliseconds

Javascript

 setInterval(function(){ Console.log("A Kiss every 5 seconds"); }, 5000);

Approximate java Equivalent

new Timer().scheduleAtFixedRate(new TimerTask(){
    @Override
    public void run(){
       Log.i("tag", "A Kiss every 5 seconds");
    }
},0,5000);

setTimeout()

function that works only after n milliseconds

Javascript

setTimeout(function(){ Console.log("A Kiss after 5 seconds"); },5000);

Approximate java Equivalent

new android.os.Handler().postDelayed(
    new Runnable() {
        public void run() {
            Log.i("tag","A Kiss after 5 seconds");
        }
}, 5000);
2
  • 6
    For the scheduleAtFixedRate method, how do you cancel the timer within the activity once that activity has finished?
    – auroranil
    Dec 27, 2015 at 5:06
  • 3
    @user824294 you can save your Timer instance in a variable and call "cancel()" when you want to stop the scheduled tasks - Timer t = new Timer(); t.scheduleAtFixedRate(...); - And then call t.cancel(); whenever you wish.
    – Aebsubis
    Feb 1, 2017 at 14:24
18

If you're not worried about waking your phone up or bringing your app back from the dead, try:

// Param is optional, to run task on UI thread.     
Handler handler = new Handler(Looper.getMainLooper());
Runnable runnable = new Runnable() {
    @Override
    public void run() {
        // Do the task...
        handler.postDelayed(this, milliseconds) // Optional, to repeat the task.
    }
};
handler.postDelayed(runnable, milliseconds);

// Stop a repeating task like this.
handler.removeCallbacks(runnable);
1
13

Depending on what you actually want to achieve, you should take a look at Android Handlers:

http://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/Handler.html

If you previously used javascript setTimeout() etc to schedule a task to run in the future, this is the Android way of doing it (postDelayed / sendMessageDelayed).

Note that neither Handlers or Timers makes an Android phone wake up from sleep mode. In other words, if you want to schedule something to actually happen even though the screen is off / cpu is sleeping, you need to check out the AlarmManager too.

7

The first answer is definitely the correct answer and is what I based this lambda version off of, which is much shorter in syntax. Since Runnable has only 1 override method "run()", we can use a lambda:

this.m_someBoolFlag = false;
new android.os.Handler().postDelayed(() -> this.m_someBoolFlag = true, 300);
0
5

I do not know much about JavaScript, but I think Timers may be what you are looking for.

http://developer.android.com/reference/java/util/Timer.html

From the link:

One-shot are scheduled to run at an absolute time or after a relative delay. Recurring tasks are scheduled with either a fixed period or a fixed rate.

2
  • Note: It calls you on a background thread, not on the main/UI thread.
    – Pang
    Jan 29, 2013 at 5:28
  • This isn't an answer, but a reference to external information that may or may not even contain OPs solution. Please paste in the relevant code OP can use!
    – SikoSoft
    Nov 3, 2014 at 14:29
5
import java.util.Timer;
import java.util.TimerTask;

class Clock {
    private Timer mTimer = new Timer();

    private int mSecondsPassed = 0;
    private TimerTask mTask = new TimerTask() {
        @Override
        public void run() {
            mSecondsPassed++;
            System.out.println("Seconds passed: " + mSecondsPassed);
        }
    };

    private void start() {
        mTimer.scheduleAtFixedRate(mTask, 1000, 1000);
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        Clock c = new Clock();
        c.start();
    }
}
0
5

I was creating a mp3 player for android, I wanted to update the current time every 500ms so I did it like this

setInterval

private void update() {
    new android.os.Handler().postDelayed(new Runnable() {
        @Override
        public void run() {
            long cur = player.getCurrentPosition();
            long dur = player.getDuration();
            currentTime = millisecondsToTime(cur);
            currentTimeView.setText(currentTime);
            if (cur < dur) {
                updatePlayer();
            }

            // update seekbar
            seekBar.setProgress( (int) Math.round((float)cur / (float)dur * 100f));
        }
    }, 500);
}

which calls the same method recursively

4

Here's a setTimeout equivalent, mostly useful when trying to update the User Interface after a delay.

As you may know, updating the user interface can only by done from the UI thread. AsyncTask does that for you by calling its onPostExecute method from that thread.

new AsyncTask<Void, Void, Void>() {
        @Override
        protected Void doInBackground(Void... params) {
            try {
                Thread.sleep(5000);
            } catch (InterruptedException e) {
            }

            return null;
        }

        @Override
        protected void onPostExecute(Void result) {
            // Update the User Interface
        }

    }.execute();
2
  • 3
    1. Similarly, onProgressUpdate() can also be used to simulate setInterval(). 2. AsyncTask runs on a thread pool (or just a single thread), so a. it may have to wait until another AsyncTask finishes; b. it will take up one thread from the pool.
    – Pang
    Jan 29, 2013 at 5:34
  • There are a lot of issues using async task in this context (only one thread and the locking of a thread for no reason) - the other solutions are much better.
    – Elemental
    Feb 28, 2018 at 14:29
1

As always with Android there's lots of ways to do this, but assuming you simply want to run a piece of code on the same thread, I use this:

new Timer().scheduleAtFixedRate(new TimerTask(){
    @Override
    public void run(){
       Log.i("tag", "Hai Codemaker");
    }
},0,1000);

This code will log Hai Codemaker text every one second.

0

Kotlin:

You can also use CountDownTimer:

class Timer {
    companion object {
        @JvmStatic
        fun call(ms: Long, f: () -> Unit) {
            object : CountDownTimer(ms,ms){
                override fun onFinish() { f() }
                override fun onTick(millisUntilFinished: Long) {}
            }.start()
        }
    }
}

And in your code:

Timer.call(5000) { /*Whatever you want to execute after 5000 ms*/ }
0

In case someone wants -

Kotlin equivalent to JavaScript setInterval/setTimeout

IMPORTANT: Remember to import android.os.Handler. Don't get mistaken by java.util.logging.Handler

Timeout equivalent

Javascript: setTimeout()

setTimeout(function(){
   // something that can be run.
}, 1500);

Kotlin: runOnTimeout()

inline fun runOnTimeout(crossinline block: () -> Unit, timeoutMillis: Long) {
    Handler(Looper.getMainLooper()).postDelayed({
        block()
    }, timeoutMillis)
}

Kotlin: Calling

runOnTimeout({
   // something that can be run.
}, 1500)

Timeinterval equivalent

Javascript: setInterval()

setInterval(function(){
   // something that can be run.
}, 1500);

Kotlin: runOnInterval()

inline fun runOnInterval(crossinline block: () -> Unit, interval: Long) {
    val runnable = object : Runnable {
        override fun run() {
            block()
            handler.postDelayed(this, interval)
        }
    }
    handler.post(runnable)
}

Kotlin: Calling

runOnInterval({
   // something that can be run.
}, 1500)



Cancellable timeout and interval

If you want to use custom handler so that you can cancel the runnable, then you can use following codes.

Timeout

inline fun runOnTimeout(crossinline block: () -> Unit, timeoutMillis: Long) {
    runOnTimeout(Handler(Looper.getMainLooper()), block, timeoutMillis)
}

inline fun runOnTimeout(handler: Handler, crossinline block: () -> Unit, timeoutMillis: Long): Runnable {
    val runnable = Runnable { block() }
    handler.postDelayed(runnable, timeoutMillis)
    return runnable
}

Timeout: Calling

runOnTimeout({
    // something that can be run.
}, 1500)

// OR

val runnable = runOnTimeout(mHandler, {
    // something that can be run.
}, 1500)
// to cancel
mHandler.removeCallbacks(runnable)

Interval

inline fun runOnInterval(crossinline block: () -> Unit, interval: Long) {
    runOnInterval(Handler(Looper.getMainLooper()), block, interval)
}

inline fun runOnInterval(handler: Handler, crossinline block: () -> Unit, interval: Long): Runnable {
    val runnable = object : Runnable {
        override fun run() {
            block()
            handler.postDelayed(this, interval)
        }
    }
    handler.post(runnable)
    return runnable
}

Interval: Calling

runOnInterval({
    // something that can be run.
}, 1500)

// OR

val runnable = runOnInterval(mHandler, {
    // something that can be run.
}, 1500)
// to cancel
mHandler.removeCallbacks(runnable)

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