Updating GUI: Runnables vs Messages

AndroidUser InterfaceMessageRunnable

Android Problem Overview


To update the GUI from other threads, there are basically two main approaches:

  1. Use java.lang.Runnable with any of these methods:

    Activity.runOnUiThread(Runnable)
    View.post(Runnable)
    View.postDelayed(Runnable, long)
    Handler.post(Runnable)
    
  2. Use android.os.Message:

    Handler.sendMessage(Message) / Handler.handleMessage(Message)
    

You can also use AsyncTask, but my question is more focused on the use case of updating a very simple component. Let's see how it would be done using both approaches:

  1. Using Runnables:

    TextViev tv = ...;
    final String data = "hello";
    Runnable r = new Runnable() {
    
    	@Override
    	public void run(){
    		tv.setText(data);
    	}
    
    };
    //Now call Activity.runOnUiThread(r) or handler.post(r), ...
    
  2. Using messages:

    Message m = handler.obtainMessage(UPDATE_TEXT_VIEW, "hello");
    handler.sendMessage(m);
    
    //Now on handler implementation:
    	@Override
    	public void handleMessage(Message msg) {
    		if(msg.what == UPDATE_TEXT_VIEW){
    			String s = (String) msg.obj;
    			tv.setText(data);
    		} ... //other IFs?
    	}
    

IMHO, Messages are not the way to go because:

  • Not easy to understand for new non-android programmers (handler hooks to its thread during construction).
  • Object payload should be Parcellable if the message crosses process boundaries.
  • Messages are reused (error prone if not properly cleaned up?)
  • The handler has a dual role (it sends messages, but also handles them)
  • Message attributes are public, but also offer getter/setter.

On the other hand, Runnables follow the well known command pattern, and are more programmer-friendly and readable.

So what are the advantages of using Messages over Runnables? Are Messages pushed into the background in modern day Android programming? Is there anything you can do with Messages that can't be done with Runnables?

Thanks in advance.

Android Solutions


Solution 1 - Android

I would say there is little difference between using a Message vs a Runnable. It'll mostly boil down to personal preference. Why? Looking at the source code you'll find that posting a Runnable uses the same exact messaging mechanism. It simply attaches the Runnable to a Message and sends that.

4.4.2 Source Code

public final boolean post(Runnable r) {
    return  sendMessageDelayed(getPostMessage(r), 0);
}

private static Message getPostMessage(Runnable r) {
    Message m = Message.obtain();
    m.callback = r;
    return m;
}

Ref: Grep Code - Handler

Solution 2 - Android

Messages can be reused, so it results in fewer objects created and less GC. You also end up with fewer classes and anonymous types.

One big advantage is that a class sending a Message to a Handler doesn't need to know anything about the implementation of that Message. That can aid in encapsulation depending on where it's used.

Lastly consider the difference in cleanliness between

mHandler.obtainMessage(DO_STUFF, foo).sendToTarget();

vs

final Foo tempFoo = foo;
mHandler.post(new Runnable(){
    @Override
    public void run(){
        doStuff(tempFoo);
    }
};

If you have several places where you would have to doStuff(), the former is MUCH more readable and you'll have less code duplication.

Solution 3 - Android

Handler interface provides much more functionality than runOnUiThread(), according to docs:

> There are two main uses for a Handler:
> (1) to schedule messages and runnables to be executed as some point in the future
> (2) to enqueue an action to be performed on a different thread than your own.

runOnUiThread does only a subset of (2). ie "enqueue an action to be performed on UI thread"

So IMO unless you need those extra features runOnUiThread is sufficient and preferred way.

Solution 4 - Android

I prefer Runnable to Message. I think code using Runnable is much clearer than Message, because the event handling code is very close to the event. Also, You can avoid the overhead of defining constants and switch cases.

And I don't think using Runnable violates encapsulation. You can extract the code in Runnable.run() into another method in the outer class, for example on...Event(), or even wrap it into an EventHandler object. Both ways are much clearer than using Message, especially when you need store references in Message, because using Runnable avoids downcasting msg.obj. And the nameless field msg.obj is also error prone and sometimes inefficient to understand.

And Runnable can also be reused by storing it as a field.

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionMister SmithView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - AndroidJay SoyerView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - AndroidkeyboardrView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - AndroidCanerView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - AndroidProtossShuttleView Answer on Stackoverflow