I did something like this: I catch the error only for try to scale down the image until it works. Eventually it can not work at all; then returns null; otherwise, in success, returns the bitmap.
Outside I decide what to do with the bitmap whether it's null or not.
// Let w and h the width and height of the ImageView where we will place the Bitmap. Then:
// Get the dimensions of the original bitmap
BitmapFactory.Options bmOptions= new BitmapFactory.Options();
bmOptions.inJustDecodeBounds= true;
BitmapFactory.decodeFile(path, bmOptions);
int photoW= bmOptions.outWidth;
int photoH= bmOptions.outHeight;
// Determine how much to scale down the image.
int scaleFactor= (int) Math.max(1.0, Math.min((double) photoW / (double)w, (double)photoH / (double)h)); //1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, ...
scaleFactor= (int) Math.pow(2.0, Math.floor(Math.log((double) scaleFactor) / Math.log(2.0))); //1, 2, 4, 8, ...
// Decode the image file into a Bitmap sized to fill the View
bmOptions.inJustDecodeBounds= false;
bmOptions.inSampleSize= scaleFactor;
bmOptions.inPurgeable= true;
do
{
try
{
Log.d("tag", "scaleFactor: " + scaleFactor);
scaleFactor*= 2;
bitmap= BitmapFactory.decodeFile(path, bmOptions);
}
catch(OutOfMemoryError e)
{
bmOptions.inSampleSize= scaleFactor;
Log.d("tag", "OutOfMemoryError: " + e.toString());
}
}
while(bitmap == null && scaleFactor <= 256);
if(bitmap == null)
return null;
For example, with an image of 3264x2448, the loop iterates 2 times on my phone, and then it works.