Exploring the world of Android :: Part 2

September 17th, 2009 by Tom van Zummeren

|

And I’m back!
Reporting live on the glorious adventures in the exciting world of
Android. This blog post is the second one in the Android series. This
time with code samples! Yeah!

In my first blog post about Android I talked about setting up a project using Android. This time I want to discuss a more “advanced” topic: ListView
performance. A ListView is a view component which allows you to display
and scroll through a list of items. It can display simple text in each
row, but is also able to display a more complicated structure. In the
latter case you will need to make sure your ListView still performs well
(read: renders fast and scrolls smoothly). I am going to provide
solutions to a few different performance problems when using a ListView

The ListAdapter

If you want to use a ListView, you will have to supply it with a ListAdapter to allow it to display any content. A few simple implementations of that adapter are already available in the SDK:

These implementations are perfect for displaying very simple lists.
But if your list is just a little more complicated than that, you will
need to write your own custom ListAdapter implementation. In most cases it’s useful to subclass ArrayAdapter
which already takes care of managing a list of objects. Now you only
have to tell it how to render each object in the list. Do this by
overriding the getView(int, View, ViewGroup) method of the ArrayAdapter class.

A simple example

To give you a simple example of a case in which you need to write your own ListAdapter: displaying a list of images with some text next to it.


Example of a ListView containing Youtube search results in the form of images and text

The images need to be on-the-fly downloaded from the internet. Let’s create a class which represents items in the list:

public class ImageAndText {
    private String imageUrl;
    private String text;

    public ImageAndText(String imageUrl, String text) {
        this.imageUrl = imageUrl;
        this.text = text;
    }
    public String getImageUrl() {
        return imageUrl;
    }
    public String getText() {
        return text;
    }
}

Now, let’s create an implementation of a ListAdapter that is able to display a list of these ImageAndTexts.

public class ImageAndTextListAdapter extends ArrayAdapter<ImageAndText> {

    public ImageAndTextListAdapter(Activity activity, List<ImageAndText> imageAndTexts) {
        super(activity, 0, imageAndTexts);
    }

    @Override
    public View getView(int position, View convertView, ViewGroup parent) {
        Activity activity = (Activity) getContext();
        LayoutInflater inflater = activity.getLayoutInflater();

        // Inflate the views from XML
        View rowView = inflater.inflate(R.layout.image_and_text_row, null);
        ImageAndText imageAndText = getItem(position);

        // Load the image and set it on the ImageView
        ImageView imageView = (ImageView) rowView.findViewById(R.id.image);
        imageView.setImageDrawable(loadImageFromUrl(imageAndText.getImageUrl()));

        // Set the text on the TextView
        TextView textView = (TextView) rowView.findViewById(R.id.text);
        textView.setText(imageAndText.getText());

        return rowView;
    }

    public static Drawable loadImageFromUrl(String url) {
        InputStream inputStream;
        try {
            inputStream = new URL(url).openStream();
        } catch (IOException e) {
            throw new RuntimeException(e);
        }
        return Drawable.createFromStream(inputStream, "src");
    }
}

The views are inflated from an XML file called “image_and_text_row.xml”:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<LinearLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
              android:orientation="horizontal"
              android:layout_width="fill_parent"
              android:layout_height="wrap_content">

        <ImageView android:id="@+id/image"
                   android:layout_width="wrap_content"
                   android:layout_height="wrap_content"
                   android:src="@drawable/default_image"/>

        <TextView android:id="@+id/text"
                  android:layout_width="wrap_content"
                  android:layout_height="wrap_content"/>

</LinearLayout>

This ListAdapter implementation renders the ImageAndTexts in the ListView like you would expect. The only thing is that this only works for a very small list which doesn’t require scrolling to see all items. If the list of ImageAndTexts gets bigger you will notice that scrolling isn’t as smooth as it should be (in fact, it’s far off!).

Improving performance

The biggest bottleneck in the above example is the fact that the images have to be downloaded from the internet. Because we execute all our code in the same thread as the UI, the UI will get stuck each time an image is being downloaded. If you run the same application using a 3G internet connection instead of WiFi, the performance will even be worse.

To avoid this we want the image to be loaded in a separate thread to not disturb the UI thread too much. To make this happen, we could use an AsyncTask which is designed for cases like this. But in practice, you will notice that the AsyncTask is limited to 10 threads. This number is hardcoded somewhere in the Android SDK so we cannot change this. In this case it’s a limitation we cannot live with, because often more than 10 images are loaded at the same time.

AsyncImageLoader

An alternative is to manually spawn a new Thread for each image. In addition we should use Handlers to deliver the downloaded images to the UI thread. We want to do this because only from the UI thread you are allowed to modify the UI (read: draw an image on the screen). I created a class called AsyncImageLoader which takes care of loading images using Threads and Handlers like I just described. Also it caches images to avoid a single image to be downloaded multiple times.

public class AsyncImageLoader {
    private HashMap<String, SoftReference<Drawable>> imageCache;

    public AsyncImageLoader() {
    	drawableMap = new HashMap<String, SoftReference<Drawable>>();
    }

    public Drawable loadDrawable(final String imageUrl, final ImageCallback imageCallback) {
    	if (drawableMap.containsKey(imageUrl)) {
            SoftReference<Drawable> softReference = imageCache.get(imageUrl);
            Drawable drawable = softReference.get();
            if (drawable != null) {
                return drawable;
            }
    	}
    	final Handler handler = new Handler() {
    		@Override
    		public void handleMessage(Message message) {
                imageCallback.imageLoaded((Drawable) message.obj, imageUrl);
    		}
    	};
    	new Thread() {
    		@Override
    		public void run() {
                Drawable drawable = loadImageFromUrl(imageUrl);
                imageCache.put(imageUrl, new SoftReference<Drawable>(drawable));
                Message message = handler.obtainMessage(0, drawable);
                handler.sendMessage(message);
    		}
    	}.start();
        return null;
    }

    public static Drawable loadImageFromUrl(String url) {
        // ...
    }

    public interface ImageCallback {
        public void imageLoaded(Drawable imageDrawable, String imageUrl);
    }
}

Notice that I used a SoftReference for caching images, to allow the garbage collector to clean the images from the cache when needed. How it works:

  • Call loadDrawable(imageUrl, imageCallback) providing an anonymous implementation of the ImageCallback interface
  • If the image doesn’t exist in the cache yet, the image is downloaded in a separate thread and the ImageCallback is called as soon as the download is complete.
  • If the image DOES exist in the cache, it is immediately returned and the ImageCallback is never called.

Only one instance of AsyncImageLoader should exist in your application, or else the caching won’t work. If we take the example ImageAndTextListAdapter class we can now replace:

ImageView imageView = (ImageView) rowView.findViewById(R.id.image);
imageView.setImageDrawable(loadImageFromUrl(imageAndText.getImageUrl()));

with:

final ImageView imageView = (ImageView) rowView.findViewById(R.id.image);
Drawable cachedImage = asyncImageLoader.loadDrawable(imageAndText.getImageUrl(), new ImageCallback() {
    public void imageLoaded(Drawable imageDrawable, String imageUrl) {
        imageView.setImageDrawable(imageDrawable);
    }
});
imageView.setImageDrawable(cachedImage);

Using this approach, the ListView performs a lot better and feels much more smooth because the UI thread is no longer blocked by the loading of images.

Improve the performance even more

If you tried the solution described above you will notice that the ListView is still not a 100% smooth. You will still notice some little disruptions that make it a little less smooth than it could be. There are two things remaining that can be improved:

  • the expensive call to findViewById()
  • inflating the entire row from XML every time

The solution is obvious: we should cache/reuse these things! Mark Murphy did a very nice job on writing a few blog entries describing how this can be done. To reuse the views which are inflated from XML read this blog entry:
http://www.androidguys.com/2008/07/17/fancy-listviews-part-two/

To cache the views returned by findViewById() read this blog entry:
http://www.androidguys.com/2008/07/22/fancy-listviews-part-three/

If we apply the strategies described in Mark Murphy’s blog entries our ImageAndTextListAdapter could look like the following:

public class ImageAndTextListAdapter extends ArrayAdapter<ImageAndText> {

    private ListView listView;
    private AsyncImageLoader asyncImageLoader;

    public ImageAndTextListAdapter(Activity activity, List<ImageAndText> imageAndTexts, ListView listView) {
        super(activity, 0, imageAndTexts);
        this.listView = listView;
        asyncImageLoader = new AsyncImageLoader();
    }

    @Override
    public View getView(int position, View convertView, ViewGroup parent) {
        Activity activity = (Activity) getContext();

        // Inflate the views from XML
        View rowView = convertView;
        ViewCache viewCache;
        if (rowView == null) {
            LayoutInflater inflater = activity.getLayoutInflater();
            rowView = inflater.inflate(R.layout.image_and_text_row, null);
            viewCache = new ViewCache(rowView);
            rowView.setTag(viewCache);
        } else {
            viewCache = (ViewCache) rowView.getTag();
        }
        ImageAndText imageAndText = getItem(position);

        // Load the image and set it on the ImageView
        String imageUrl = imageAndText.getImageUrl();
        ImageView imageView = viewCache.getImageView();
        imageView.setTag(imageUrl);
        Drawable cachedImage = asyncImageLoader.loadDrawable(imageUrl, new ImageCallback() {
            public void imageLoaded(Drawable imageDrawable, String imageUrl) {
                ImageView imageViewByTag = (ImageView) listView.findViewWithTag(imageUrl);
                if (imageViewByTag != null) {
                    imageViewByTag.setImageDrawable(imageDrawable);
                }
            }
        });
        imageView.setImageDrawable(cachedImage);

        // Set the text on the TextView
        TextView textView = viewCache.getTextView();
        textView.setText(imageAndText.getText());

        return rowView;
    }
}

There are two things to notice. The first thing is that the drawable is not directly set to the ImageView anymore after loading. Instead, the right ImageView is looked up through it’s tag. This is done because we’re now reusing views and the images might end up on the wrong rows. We need a reference to the ListView to lookup ImageViews by tag.

The other thing to notice, is that this implementation uses an object called ViewCache. This is what the class for that object looks like:

public class ViewCache {

    private View baseView;
    private TextView textView;
    private ImageView imageView;

    public ViewCache(View baseView) {
        this.baseView = baseView;
    }

    public TextView getTextView() {
        if (textView == null) {
            textView = (TextView) baseView.findViewById(R.id.text);
        }
        return titleView;
    }

    public ImageView getImageView() {
        if (imageView == null) {
            imageView = (ImageView) baseView.findViewById(R.id.image);
        }
        return imageView;
    }
}

This ViewCache is the same as what Mark Murphy calls a “ViewWrapper” and takes care of caching individual views which normally would have to be looked up every time using the expensive call to findViewById().

To summarize

I’ve shown you how to improve performance of a ListView in three different ways:

  • By loading images in a seperate thread
  • By reusing rows in the list
  • By caching views within a row

It took me quite some time to figure this stuff out, especially the image loading part. So I thought it is all worth mentioning to avoid you having to waste too much time on it.

Next time I will discuss other interesting challenges in the world of Android!

TO BE CONTINUED …

Tags: Android, Java, Performance Posted in: Custom Development

时间: 2024-08-26 10:31:59

Exploring the world of Android :: Part 2的相关文章

Exploring the world of Android :: Part 1

This blog is accidentally find out, it tells the story of one of our friends about the exploration of the Android world, also inspired my Android's interest for learning, exclamation unexpectedly have so many people are learning android, hope this ar

使用calabash测试开源中国Android客户端

Calabash-android是支持android的UI自动化测试框架,前面已经介绍过<中文Win7下成功安装calabash-android步骤>,这篇博文尝试测试一个真实应用:开源中国客户端.目的是和大家一起学习calabash测试工具. 测试环境与源码准备 先介绍一下oschina.net oschina除了有网站,还有三大平台手机客户端: http://www.oschina.net/app 客户端已经开源! 那么开源可以用来做什么呢? 我正在学用calabash-android,得

Android.mk

Android.mk This page describes the syntax of the Android.mk build file, which glues your C and C++ source files to the Android NDK. Overview The Android.mk file resides in a subdirectory of your project's jni/ directory, and describes your sources an

Own your Android! Yet Another Universal Root(二)

利用 目标 直到现在我们已经看出这是一个典型的UAF漏洞并且一个位于用户空间迷途的文件描述符指向内核中的PING 套接字可以被攻击者获得.接下来我们要填充套接字对象,重新使用这个对象.之后我们可以执行内核中任意代码,最终完成Android设备的提权. 实际上,我们使用套接字对象的close函数.当close(sockfd)调用时,内核最终会进入如下代码 int inet_release(struct socket *sock) { struct sock *sk = sock->sk; if (

Android DDMS应用

具体可见http://developer.android.com/tools/debugging/ddms.html. DDMS为IDE和emultor.真正的android设备架起来了一座桥梁.开发人员可以通过DDMS看到目标机器上运行的进程/现成状态,可以 android的屏幕到开发机上,可以看进程的heap信息,可以查看logcat信息,可以查看进程分配内存情况,可以像目标机发送短信以及打电话,可 以像android开发发送地理位置信息.可以像gdb一样attach某一个进程调试. SDK

[share]How to Become a Lazy but Productive Android Developer

How to Become a Lazy but Productive Android Developer How can we optimize throughput time for writing the business logic for the app and avoid lazy code to write? by Paresh Mayani · Dec. 16, 13 · Mobile Zone Like (1) Comment (3) Save Tweet 21.63k Vie

android studio教学视频资源(点开即看)

自从Google推出android studio之后.包含github在内的非常多第三方代码库项目很多其它的採用的android studio编译的.越来越多的项目使用android studio也变成了大势所趋,所以赶紧放下你的eclipse,開始学习android studio吧. 下面是网上搜集的android studio的教学视频.讲的非常具体,全英文中字幕.点开即看. Android Studio Essential Training 内容包含: - Android Studio安装

Android无线测试之—UiAutmator运行命令介绍与快速调试

一.运行命令介绍: #Test.java package com.uiautomatortest; import android.os.Bundle; import android.os.RemoteException; import com.android.uiautomator.core.UiDevice; import com.android.uiautomator.testrunner.UiAutomatorTestCase; public class Test extends UiAu

Introducing Visual Studio&rsquo;s Emulator for Android

原文地址 Microsoft released Visual Studio 2015 Preview this week and with it you now have options for Android development: C++, Cordova, and C# with Xamarin. When choosing one of those Android development options, Visual Studio will also install the bran