From the Activity, I am creating a Handler to fire off my AsyncTask every 45 seconds in order to refresh the content of my ListView’s DataAdapter. The AsyncTask works great and keeps the user informed on the progress through ProgressUpdates and Toast messages.
Since the thread’s doInBackground is fire and forget and not re-usable, I am having to create a new instance of the AsyncTask from my Hander that is firing off every 45 seconds. The problem is when the screen is rotated and and then I get concurrent messages going off because the Hander was recreated and created a new instance of the AsyncTask, so the friendly user progress through ProgressUpdates and Toast messages is overwhelming and makes utilizing the ListView difficult.
And please don’t suggest this as a solution: android:screenOrientation=”portrait” is not an option.
For something that has to run so frequently, should I just be using a custom Thread and not the AsyncTask class? ToDo: Not shown, I have to update the Adapter later from the Sensor’s onSensorChanged event to update bearings on for each location in the ListView, I was going to run that on a separate AsyncTask class because I don’t need to notify the user everytime the device bearing has changed.
Since the AsyncThread cannot be reused, am I doing this all wrong? In short, what is the best way to have the Activity refresh the ListView and keeping off the UI thread when doing so?
Reason quoting from API Activity – Configuration Changes:
So every object has a activity-scope life cycle (i.e. Handler, AsyncTask and etc. defined within your activity class) is suffered by this activity recreation. However, you can bypass this activity recreation, as stated in the later paragraph of Activity – Configuration Changes section:
Not related to topic, but as a good practice, you should always destroy used object (Handler, AsyncTask and etc.) properly when activity is about to finish (i.e. in onDestroy() method).
AsyncTask is pretty handy but not suit for periodic task, I would use ScheduledExecutorService or TimerTask in this case, check out my answer here for sample code.