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Home/ Questions/Q 6111723
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T14:39:49+00:00 2026-05-23T14:39:49+00:00

I have a class: public class DbAdapter { private DbHelper dbHelper; private SQLiteDatabase db;

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I have a class:

public class DbAdapter {
    private DbHelper dbHelper;
    private SQLiteDatabase db;
    private final Context context;
    ...
}

and i want have it available in all activities. The class provides access to my sqlite database.

What is the most elegant and neat way to do it? I thought about creating object in each activity (it should “connect” me to the same database, right?).

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T14:39:49+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 2:39 pm

    You can achieve it extending the Application class. Google has this to say about it:

    Base class for those who need to
    maintain global application state. You
    can provide your own implementation by
    specifying its name in your
    AndroidManifest.xml’s
    tag, which will cause that class to be
    instantiated for you when the process
    for your application/package is
    created.

    There is normally no need to subclass
    Application. In most situation, static
    singletons can provide the same
    functionality in a more modular way.
    If your singleton needs a global
    context (for example to register
    broadcast receivers), the function to
    retrieve it can be given a Context
    which internally uses
    Context.getApplicationContext() when
    first constructing the singleton.

    I have done it myself like this:

    public class App extends Application {
    
        private DbHelper dbHelper;
    
        @Override
        public void onCreate() {
            super.onCreate(); 
            dbHelper = new DbHelper(this);
    
        }
    
        public SQLiteDatabase getDatabase(){
            return dbHelper.getWritableDatabase();
        }
    
        @Override
        public void onTerminate() {
            super.onTerminate();
            dbHelper.close();
        }   
    }
    

    Then you just access it calling getApplicationContext.getDatabase()

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