How to find where a LiveData is observed - java

I am studying a project with LiveDatas on Android Studio (Java). I would like to know if it exists an Android Studio option to see where a particular LiveData is observed in the project, to see all the objects that are been notified and in which method.

you can access by typing .observe into Find in Path(cmd + shift + f in Mac):
sample live data observing:
viewModel.liveData.observe(this, Observer {})

You can't do that. Android studio can't give you such "runtime" information. The best you can do, is to call LiveData's hasActiveObservers() returns true if there are active observers, or hasObservers() returns true if there are any observer.

It seems that the best solution, to me, is to find usages of the particular
LiveData's getter method of viewModel, then see when the LiveData is observed after get.

Related

Xamarin c# Loader example?

This problem is for Xamarin Android C# , but if someone can help in java I'm sure I can convert the code over ..
I'm trying to get some sort of automatic notification on a db that data has been inserted / deleted / etc.
There is outside apps that have access to the db in question, that insert / etc..
I've tried a file observer but it misses most of the inserts.
I've tried using content observer but it never fires a onchange
I've tried using the content observer inside a cursor but no onchange happens either.
(if I understand correctly they will only fire if I register a change occurred which is what I don't want)
Now I've discovered that loaders might be a solution..
They seem to have their own observer that fires when the data changes.
If this is also not an answer then perhaps a database trigger of some kind to notify my app the data was modified ?
I really need guidance here.. no idea how to properly implement a loader..
or if the content observer can be sufficient somehow with some sort of auto trigger as such..
OK, So!
The reason that file Observer was missing db inserts is because a SQLite DB is actually a 2 - 3 file object .. if you watch "Example.DB" then you can miss insert that can happen on Example.DB-shm or Example.DB-wal..
The fix to this, and its not a great fix, is to instead watch the folder ..
doing this will catch all inserts/deletes ..
The problem with this is that it will cause multiple OnChange() 's to execute..
So when coding a file observer like this, you have to either call the stopwatch() while you process the call and switch it on afterwards
OR
Have a "Global Variable" (C# guys are gonna swear at me for calling it that)
or static var
that lets the app know that you are already busy on the event so don't execute the code till the previous call has been completed ..

CGRectIntersectsRect for cocos2d Android

I'm currently trying to test for collisions between two CGRects. Usually in Objective C I'd use the CGRectIntersectsRect method, but in Coso2d Android the only method available seems to be CGRect.containsRect which doesn't work as desired. Is there another way this must be done for Android?
I found intersects method in CGRect at github repo use that function to check intersect of two rect.
I also found one issue logged with the same and there is also a solution mention.
Downloaded an updated version of the .jar file which contains a CGRect.intersects method

Understanding Android's webview addjavascriptinterface

I know that to interact from Javascript to Java you have to inject a Java object using the addjavascriptInterface method in webview.
Here is the problem I am facing.
I register a java object using addJavascriptInterface method to be available in my JS.
I inject few JS in the webview using webview.loadURL("javascript:XXX");
I send a JS event when I am done with injecting the JS.
The problem is that if immediately after step 1, if I execute the following Javascript:
mWebView.loadUrl("javascript:if(window.myobject) console.log('myobject found---------'); else {console.log('myobject not found----');}");
I get "myobject not found" in my console's log.
I want to know that if there is some time before I can access my object and if so, how do I get to know how much time should I wait to call my object?
I want to know that if there is some time before i can access my object
Yes, I think there is a delay, because WebView.addJavascriptInterface will run in the WebView's internal worker thread. Perhaps you've thought about this, and realized that WebView has to maintain at least one worker thread to do asynchronous network IO. Maybe you also noticed these threads in DDMS while using a WebView.
It turns out that it also uses a thread to do work for a number of other public methods. I really wish the docs from Google made this clearer! But I hope I can help and show you how I tried to confirm this for myself.
Follow me as I take a look at the source for WebView. It's reasonably readable, even if you can't follow exactly what's going on, it's possible to trace through answer some questions with respect to threads.
You can download the Android framework source through the SDK manager tool, but it's also mirrored on Github, so that's what I've linked to here. I guessed and picked a tag that's close to some version of ICS. It's not hard to find WebView.addJavascriptInterface. I just Googled "WebView.java site:github.com/android".
The method WebView.addJavascriptInterface sends a message to an instance of WebViewCore:
mWebViewCore.sendMessage(EventHub.ADD_JS_INTERFACE, arg);
In WebViewCore.java there are a bunch of overloaded methods called sendMessage, but we don't really need to know which exactly is being called, since they do pretty much the same thing. There's even a nice comment to give us a hint that we're in the right place! All of them are delegating to an instance of EventHub which is some inner class. This method turns out to be synchronized, and is sending a message to an instance of Handler, which is a good indication that this is probably running in another thread, but for completeness sake, let's find out!
That Handler is instantiated in EventHub.transferMessages which is called from WebViewCore.initialize. There are a few more hops here, but eventually I found out that this is called from run in WebCoreThread (subclass of Runnable), which is instantiated along with a new Thread right here.
What an adventure! So, even though I really can't say for sure what's going on with all these moving parts, I am pretty confident to say that this method is not synchronous, and sends a message to the WebView's worker thread. I hope that makes sense!
if so, how do i get to know how much time should i wait to call my object?
Unfortunately, I don't know the answer to this. I was researching this exact issue and found this question on StackOverflow in the course of my Googling. I think you have the following options, some of which are nicer or easier than others:
1) Just Thread.sleep for 100 ms or something between addJavascriptInterface and loadUrl("javascript:..."). Blech, I don't like this, but it is potentially the easiest.
2) Another possibility is that you could call WebView.loadUrl with a snippet of JavaScript that specifically tests if the interface is set, and catches the ReferenceError that is thrown if it's not set yet. However, as you might have guessed, this kind of involves adding a JavaScript interface to the WebView!
3) Call WebView.setWebChromeClient instead, and catch JavaScript's alert() or console.log instead. From my experiments, this method is synchronous, so there is no delay. (I have confirmed this in source, but I'll leave details as an exercise for the reader) You should probably come up with some special string to call alert with and check for it inside onJsAlert, so you aren't just catching all alert()s.
Sorry for the length of this answer, I hope that helps. Good luck!
Ensure your Javascript objects declared in your HTML / Javascript that you need to access from Java are declared global otherwise they will most likely be collected. I have code that does this (where Android is my interface added with addJavascriptInterface):
<script>
var cb = function(location) {
alert('location is ' + location);
}
Android.getLocation('cb');
</script>
The getLocation method invokes Android's LocationManager.requestSingleUpdate which then invokes the callback when the LocationListener fires.
Without the "var" I find that by the time the location lookup invokes the callback the callback function has been garbage collected.
(copied from my response on a similar question)
I've taken Jason Shah's and Mr S's implementation as the building block for my fix and improved upon it greatly.
There's just far too much code to put into this comment I'll just link to it.
Details: http://twigstechtips.blogspot.com/2013/09/android-webviewaddjavascriptinterface.html
Source: https://github.com/twig/twigstechtips-snippets/blob/master/GingerbreadJSFixExample.java
Key points are:
Applies to all versions of Gingerbread (2.3.x)
Calls from JS to Android are now synchronous
No longer have to map out interface methods manually
Fixed possibility of string separators breaking code
Much easier to change JS signature and interface names

How to Listen Value Change in Primitive Data Type (in this case: boolean)

I want to make some code which its execution is triggered by value change of a boolean in my Android project. does that means creating a listener? Would you mind showing a sample to me?
Without knowing anything of your application, I will suggest an implementation of the Observer pattern. There are examples for a Java implementation on the Wikipedia page.

java android create event

I wish to create event which will react on change of int/ eventually Integer variable.
When the variable reaches some special value I wish to run some method (e.g. stopservice method). Can anyone help me?
Look into the observer pattern. This can be adapted and used for your situation.
There are great resources for this already available on the internet.

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