Android hourglass
Asked Answered
R

2

22

How can I programmatically display an hourglass in an Android application?

Resiniferous answered 26/1, 2010 at 14:35 Comment(0)
U
45

You can use a ProgressDialog:

ProgressDialog dialog = new ProgressDialog(this);
dialog.setMessage("Thinking...");
dialog.setIndeterminate(true);
dialog.setCancelable(false);
dialog.show();

The above code will show the following dialog on top of your Activity:

alt text

Alternatively (or additionally) you can display a Progress indicator in the title bar of your Activity.

alt text

You need to request this as a feature near the top of the onCreate() method of your Activity using the following code:

requestWindowFeature(Window.FEATURE_INDETERMINATE_PROGRESS);

Then turn it on like this:

setProgressBarIndeterminateVisibility(true);

and turn it off like this:

setProgressBarIndeterminateVisibility(false);
Unionist answered 26/1, 2010 at 15:11 Comment(6)
The problem is that after displaying the dialog box I ran a relatively long treatment which prevents the display of the dialog box that appears at the end of treatment when I no longer need !Resiniferous
Have a look at AsyncTask. You display and hide the ProgressDialog in onPreExecute() and onPostExecute and do your work in doInBackground. android-developers.blogspot.com/2009/05/painless-threading.htmlUnionist
Might also be worth reading the Android Developer Guide "Designing For Responsiveness" developer.android.com/guide/practices/design/…Pilcomayo
The constructor ProgressDialog() is undefined . How to solve or what to replaced the "this" ?Fortunio
@Fortunio Set "this" to the context that you want to display the Progress Dialog to.Magnetoelectricity
every Android post older than 2 years should be wipedTraci
C
3

Here is a simple example of doing it using AsyncTask:

public class MyActivity extends Activity {

    protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {

        ...

        new MyLoadTask(this).execute(); //If you have parameters you can pass them inside execute method

    }

    private class MyLoadTask extends AsyncTask <Object,Void,String>{        

        private ProgressDialog dialog;

        public MyLoadTask(MyActivity act) {
            dialog = new ProgressDialog(act);
        }       

        protected void onPreExecute() {
            dialog.setMessage("Loading...");
            dialog.show();
        }       

        @Override
        protected String doInBackground(Object... params) {         
            //Perform your task here.... 
            //Return value ... you can return any Object, I used String in this case

            try {
                Thread.sleep(6000);
            } catch (InterruptedException e) {
                e.printStackTrace();
            }
            return(new String("test"));
        }

        @Override
        protected void onPostExecute(String str) {          
            //Update your UI here.... Get value from doInBackground ....
            if (dialog.isShowing()) {
                dialog.dismiss();
            }           
        }
    }
Carrefour answered 4/12, 2014 at 16:44 Comment(0)

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