最近研究nullnull,稍微总结一下,以后继续补充:
The BitmapFactory.decode*
methods, should not be executed on the main UI thread if the source data is read from disk or a network location (or really any source other than memory). The time this data takes to load is unpredictable and depends on a variety of factors (speed of reading from disk or network, size of image, power of CPU, etc.). If one of these tasks blocks the UI thread, the system flags your application as non-responsive and the user has the option of closing it (seeDesigning for Responsiveness for more information). http://blog.csdn.net/sergeycao
This lesson walks you through processing bitmaps in a background thread using AsyncTask
and shows you how to handle concurrency issues.
The AsyncTask
class provides an easy way to execute some work in a background thread and publish the results back on the UI thread. To use it, create a subclass and override the provided methods. Here’s an example of loading a large image into an ImageView
using AsyncTask
anddecodeSampledBitmapFromResource()
:
class BitmapWorkerTask extends AsyncTask<Integer, Void, Bitmap> { private final WeakReference<ImageView> imageViewReference; private int data = 0; public BitmapWorkerTask(ImageView imageView) { // Use a WeakReference to ensure the ImageView can be garbage collected imageViewReference = new WeakReference<ImageView>(imageView); } // Decode image in background. @Override protected Bitmap doInBackground(Integer... params) { data = params[0]; return decodeSampledBitmapFromResource(getResources(), data, 100, 100)); } // Once complete, see if ImageView is still around and set bitmap. @Override protected void onPostExecute(Bitmap bitmap) { if (imageViewReference != null && bitmap != null) { final ImageView imageView = imageViewReference.get(); if (imageView != null) { imageView.setImageBitmap(bitmap); } } } }
The WeakReference
to the ImageView
ensures that theAsyncTask
does not prevent the ImageView
and anything it references from being garbage collected. There’s no guarantee theImageView
is still around when the task finishes, so you must also check the reference inonPostExecute()
. The ImageView
may no longer exist, if for example, the user navigates away from the activity or if a configuration change happens before the task finishes.
To start loading the bitmap asynchronously, simply create a new task and execute it:
public void loadBitmap(int resId, ImageView imageView) { BitmapWorkerTask task = new BitmapWorkerTask(imageView); task.execute(resId); }
Common view components such as ListView
and GridView
introduce another issue when used in conjunction with theAsyncTask
as demonstrated in the previous section. In order to be efficient with memory, these components recycle child views as the user scrolls. If each child view triggers anAsyncTask
, there is no guarantee that when it completes, the associated view has not already been recycled for use in another child view. Furthermore, there is no guarantee that the order in which asynchronous tasks are started is the order that they complete.
The blog post Multithreading for Performance further discusses dealing with concurrency, and offers a solution where theImageView
stores a reference to the most recent AsyncTask
which can later be checked when the task completes. Using a similar method, theAsyncTask
from the previous section can be extended to follow a similar pattern.
Create a dedicated Drawable
subclass to store a reference back to the worker task. In this case, aBitmapDrawable
is used so that a placeholder image can be displayed in theImageView
while the task completes:
static class AsyncDrawable extends BitmapDrawable { private final WeakReference<BitmapWorkerTask> bitmapWorkerTaskReference; public AsyncDrawable(Resources res, Bitmap bitmap, BitmapWorkerTask bitmapWorkerTask) { super(res, bitmap); bitmapWorkerTaskReference = new WeakReference<BitmapWorkerTask>(bitmapWorkerTask); } public BitmapWorkerTask getBitmapWorkerTask() { return bitmapWorkerTaskReference.get(); } }
Before executing the BitmapWorkerTask
, you create anAsyncDrawable
and bind it to the target ImageView
:
public void loadBitmap(int resId, ImageView imageView) { if (cancelPotentialWork(resId, imageView)) { final BitmapWorkerTask task = new BitmapWorkerTask(imageView); final AsyncDrawable asyncDrawable = new AsyncDrawable(getResources(), mPlaceHolderBitmap, task); imageView.setImageDrawable(asyncDrawable); task.execute(resId); } }
The cancelPotentialWork
method referenced in the code sample above checks if another running task is already associated with theImageView
. If so, it attempts to cancel the previous task by callingcancel()
. In a small number of cases, the new task data matches the existing task and nothing further needs to happen. Here is the implementation ofcancelPotentialWork
:
public static boolean cancelPotentialWork(int data, ImageView imageView) { final BitmapWorkerTask bitmapWorkerTask = getBitmapWorkerTask(imageView); if (bitmapWorkerTask != null) { final int bitmapData = bitmapWorkerTask.data; if (bitmapData != data) { // Cancel previous task bitmapWorkerTask.cancel(true); } else { // The same work is already in progress return false; } } // No task associated with the ImageView, or an existing task was cancelled return true; }
A helper method, getBitmapWorkerTask()
, is used above to retrieve the task associated with a particularImageView
:
private static BitmapWorkerTask getBitmapWorkerTask(ImageView imageView) { if (imageView != null) { final Drawable drawable = imageView.getDrawable(); if (drawable instanceof AsyncDrawable) { final AsyncDrawable asyncDrawable = (AsyncDrawable) drawable; return asyncDrawable.getBitmapWorkerTask(); } } return null; }
The last step is updating onPostExecute()
in BitmapWorkerTask
so that it checks if the task is cancelled and if the current task matches the one associated with theImageView
:
class BitmapWorkerTask extends AsyncTask<Integer, Void, Bitmap> { ... @Override protected void onPostExecute(Bitmap bitmap) {
if (isCancelled()) { bitmap = null; }
if (imageViewReference != null && bitmap != null) { final ImageView imageView = imageViewReference.get();
final BitmapWorkerTask bitmapWorkerTask = getBitmapWorkerTask(imageView);
if (
this == bitmapWorkerTask &&
imageView != null) { imageView.setImageBitmap(bitmap); } } } }
This implementation is now suitable for use in ListView
andGridView
components as well as any other components that recycle their child views. Simply callloadBitmap
where you normally set an image to your ImageView
. For example, in aGridView
implementation this would be in the getView()
method of the backing adapter.
文章结束给大家分享下程序员的一些笑话语录: 很多所谓的牛人也不过如此,离开了你,微软还是微软,Google还是Google,苹果还是苹果,暴雪还是暴雪,而这些牛人离开了公司,自己什么都不是。