What is the difference between getContext()
, getApplicationContext()
, getBaseContext()
, and "this
"?
Though this is simple question I am unable to understand the basic difference between them. Please give some easy examples if possible.
What is the difference between getContext()
, getApplicationContext()
, getBaseContext()
, and "this
"?
Though this is simple question I am unable to understand the basic difference between them. Please give some easy examples if possible.
View.getContext()
: Returns the context the view is currently running in. Usually the currently active Activity.
Activity.getApplicationContext()
: Returns the context for the entire application (the process all the Activities are running inside
of). Use this instead of the current Activity context if you need a
context tied to the lifecycle of the entire application, not just the
current Activity.
ContextWrapper.getBaseContext()
: If you need access to a Context from within another context, you use a ContextWrapper. The
Context referred to from inside that ContextWrapper is accessed via
getBaseContext().
Context
s so that the forum and I can get a clearer understanding of how they're used. And maybe what object requires which of the Context
s. –
Plagioclase this
and getContext()
are not always same e.g. in Activity class, you can use this
because Activity
inherits from Context
but method getContext()
is not in Activity
class. @mikedroid @Strained –
Zaid this
gives an instance of the class it's in, which could be any class, not necessarily a context. If you use it in an Activity class, then this
will be an instance of a Context
. –
Cantor this
in an inner class of an Activity
, but you can use getContext()
. –
Fetish YourActivity.this.getApplicationContext()
will qualify your context from instance of YourActivity
. Otherwise above answer is great - it is all about the lifecycle of code you are writing - out living the activity/fragment or not. –
Sharpen getBaseContext()
needs more explaination perhaps with an example. –
Nonentity Most answers already cover getContext()
and getApplicationContext()
but getBaseContext() is rarely explained.
The method getBaseContext()
is only relevant when you have a ContextWrapper
.
Android provides a ContextWrapper
class that is created around an existing Context
using:
ContextWrapper wrapper = new ContextWrapper(context);
The benefit of using a ContextWrapper
is that it lets you “modify behavior without changing the original Context”. For example, if you have an activity called myActivity
then can create a View
with a different theme than myActivity
:
ContextWrapper customTheme = new ContextWrapper(myActivity) {
@Override
public Resources.Theme getTheme() {
return someTheme;
}
}
View myView = new MyView(customTheme);
ContextWrapper
is really powerful because it lets you override most functions provided by Context
including code to access resources (e.g. openFileInput()
, getString()
), interact with other components (e.g. sendBroadcast()
, registerReceiver()
), requests permissions (e.g. checkCallingOrSelfPermission()
) and resolving file system locations (e.g. getFilesDir()
). ContextWrapper
is really useful to work around device/version specific problems or to apply one-off customizations to components such as Views that require a context.
The method getBaseContext() can be used to access the “base” Context that the ContextWrapper
wraps around. You might need to access the “base” context if you need to, for example, check whether it’s a Service
, Activity
or Application
:
public class CustomToast {
public void makeText(Context context, int resId, int duration) {
while (context instanceof ContextWrapper) {
context = context.baseContext();
}
if (context instanceof Service)) {
throw new RuntimeException("Cannot call this from a service");
}
...
}
}
Or if you need to call the “unwrapped” version of a method:
class MyCustomWrapper extends ContextWrapper {
@Override
public Drawable getWallpaper() {
if (BuildInfo.DEBUG) {
return mDebugBackground;
} else {
return getBaseContext().getWallpaper();
}
}
}
ContextWrapper
is one of the worst decisions ever made by developers of Android framework. When they realized that they created an entire family of God Objects, instead of doing the right thing and refactoring the code toward Single Responsibility, they added an ugly hack that allowed to change Context behavior by deepening the inheritance tree. Bad software engineering at its ugliest. As for us, developers, IMHO no one should ever use getBaseContext()
or ContextWrapper
. If you do - it is a huge "code smell". –
Treehopper CustomToast
code. THANKS:))) –
Meenen The question "what is Context" is one of the most difficult questions in the Android universe.
Context defines methods that access system resources, retrieve application's static assets, check permissions, perform UI manipulations and many more. In essence, Context
is an example of God Object anti-pattern in production.
When it comes to which kind of Context
should we use, it becomes very complicated because except for being God Object, the hierarchy tree of Context
subclasses violates Liskov Substitution Principle brutally.
This blog post (now from Wayback Machine) attempts to summarize Context
classes applicability in different situations.
Let me copy the main table from that post for completeness:
+----------------------------+-------------+----------+---------+-----------------+-------------------+ | | Application | Activity | Service | ContentProvider | BroadcastReceiver | +----------------------------+-------------+----------+---------+-----------------+-------------------+ | Show a Dialog | NO | YES | NO | NO | NO | | Start an Activity | NO¹ | YES | NO¹ | NO¹ | NO¹ | | Layout Inflation | NO² | YES | NO² | NO² | NO² | | Start a Service | YES | YES | YES | YES | YES | | Bind to a Service | YES | YES | YES | YES | NO | | Send a Broadcast | YES | YES | YES | YES | YES | | Register BroadcastReceiver | YES | YES | YES | YES | NO³ | | Load Resource Values | YES | YES | YES | YES | YES | +----------------------------+-------------+----------+---------+-----------------+-------------------+
- An application CAN start an Activity from here, but it requires that a new task be created. This may fit specific use cases, but can create non-standard back stack behaviors in your application and is generally not recommended or considered good practice.
- This is legal, but inflation will be done with the default theme for the system on which you are running, not what’s defined in your application.
- Allowed if the receiver is null, which is used for obtaining the current value of a sticky broadcast, on Android 4.2 and above.
getApplicationContext() - Returns the context for all activities running in application.
getBaseContext() - If you want to access Context from another context within application you can access.
getContext() - Returns the context view only current running activity.
Context
provides information about the Actvity
or Application
to newly created components.
Relevant Context
should be provided to newly created components (whether application context or activity context)
Since Activity
is a subclass of Context
, one can use this
to get that activity's context
getApplicationContext()
this is used for application level and refer to all activities.
getContext() and getBaseContext()
is most probably same .these are reffered only current activity which is live.
this
is refer current class object always.
this: current class object
getContext(): return context for current live activity
getApplicationContext(): return all activities which are running in application
getApplicationContext() - it's Returns the context for all activities running in application.
getBaseContext() - when you want to access Context from another context within application you can access.
getContext() - it's Returns the context view only current running activity.
this - it's refers to the current class object
This refers to the current activity class object, and activity inherits context, so this must be used where context or activity can be used.
From this docs
I understood that you should use:
Try using the context-application instead of a context-activity
A Context
is:
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