According to the Android Developer Guide,
Note: A provider isn't required to have a primary key, and it isn't
required to use _ID as the column name of a primary key if one is
present. However, if you want to bind data from a provider to a
ListView, one of the column names has to be _ID. This requirement is
explained in more detail in the section Displaying query results.
The Guide continues on to explain the basics of why you need a unique value provided by the primary key
,
Table data should always have a "primary key" column that the provider
maintains as a unique numeric value for each row. You can use this
value to link the row to related rows in other tables (using it as a
"foreign key"). Although you can use any name for this column, using
BaseColumns._ID is the best choice, because linking the results of a
provider query to a ListView requires one of the retrieved columns to
have the name _ID.
[emphasis mine]
To answer your questions in the order that you provided them:
- Having the
_ID
Column is a best practice for versatility. It doesn't have to be displayed, but works terrific as the primary key (and foreign key!) Required for cursors and queries.
- Having it identified by BaseColumns automatically identifies this column as the primary key, unique (obviously), and instructs it to autoincrement.
- Presumably, implementing BaseColumns is easier than typing out these properties for your private fields.
_COUNT
is just the count of the number of rows in a directory. If your table's rows are being deleted and added, there is no reason to believe that an item's _ID
integer has anything to do with when it was added or its sort properties. In other words, last_insert_rowid()
DOES NOT EQUAL Count()
. The _COUNT column just provides a way to show how many results are returned on a query, IN EVERY LINE of that query. For a visual reference, see linuxtopia.org