Some people have asked: how can the singleton return a null pointer?
I'm answering that question. (I cannot answer in a comment because I need to post code.)
It may return null in between two events: (1) the class is loaded, and (2) the object of this class is created. Here's an example:
class X {
static X xinstance;
static Y yinstance = Y.yinstance;
X() {xinstance=this;}
}
class Y {
static X xinstance = X.xinstance;
static Y yinstance;
Y() {yinstance=this;}
}
public class A {
public static void main(String[] p) {
X x = new X();
Y y = new Y();
System.out.println("x:"+X.xinstance+" y:"+Y.yinstance);
System.out.println("x:"+Y.xinstance+" y:"+X.yinstance);
}
}
Let's run the code:
$ javac A.java
$ java A
x:X@a63599 y:Y@9036e
x:null y:null
The second line shows that Y.xinstance and X.yinstance are null; they are null because the variables X.xinstance ans Y.yinstance were read when they were null.
Can this be fixed? Yes,
class X {
static Y y = Y.getInstance();
static X theinstance;
static X getInstance() {if(theinstance==null) {theinstance = new X();} return theinstance;}
}
class Y {
static X x = X.getInstance();
static Y theinstance;
static Y getInstance() {if(theinstance==null) {theinstance = new Y();} return theinstance;}
}
public class A {
public static void main(String[] p) {
System.out.println("x:"+X.getInstance()+" y:"+Y.getInstance());
System.out.println("x:"+Y.x+" y:"+X.y);
}
}
and this code shows no anomaly:
$ javac A.java
$ java A
x:X@1c059f6 y:Y@152506e
x:X@1c059f6 y:Y@152506e
BUT this is not an option for the Android Application
object: the programmer does not control the time when it is created.
Once again: the difference between the first example and the second one is that the second example creates an instance if the static pointer is null. But a programmer cannot create the Android application object before the system decides to do it.
UPDATE
One more puzzling example where initialized static fields happen to be null
.
Main.java:
enum MyEnum {
FIRST,SECOND;
private static String prefix="<", suffix=">";
String myName;
MyEnum() {
myName = makeMyName();
}
String makeMyName() {
return prefix + name() + suffix;
}
String getMyName() {
return myName;
}
}
public class Main {
public static void main(String args[]) {
System.out.println("first: "+MyEnum.FIRST+" second: "+MyEnum.SECOND);
System.out.println("first: "+MyEnum.FIRST.makeMyName()+" second: "+MyEnum.SECOND.makeMyName());
System.out.println("first: "+MyEnum.FIRST.getMyName()+" second: "+MyEnum.SECOND.getMyName());
}
}
And you get:
$ javac Main.java
$ java Main
first: FIRST second: SECOND
first: <FIRST> second: <SECOND>
first: nullFIRSTnull second: nullSECONDnull
Note that you cannot move the static variable declaration one line upper, the code will not compile.
<application>
node of your AndroidManifest.xml file to include the following attribute definition:android:name="MyApp"
. MyApp needs to be under the same package that your manifest references. – PillionContext
to do certain tasks. For example, listening for volume changes initiated by the hardware volume keys. I suppose, in this instance, if the app has already been killed by the GC, then there won't be anyContext
available to use is there? The only solution, then, would be to check for nullContext
and respond appropriately. – Ziwotsuper()
from your constructor. – McclintockXamarin
Android, this is built in asglobal::Android.App.Application.Context
. – Pneumatic