| java.lang.Object | ||||
| ↳ | android.content.Context | |||
| ↳ | android.content.ContextWrapper | |||
| ↳ | android.view.ContextThemeWrapper | |||
| ↳ | android.app.Activity | |||
|  Known Direct Subclasses | 
|  Known Indirect Subclasses | 
An activity is a single, focused thing that the user can do.  Almost all
 activities interact with the user, so the Activity class takes care of
 creating a window for you in which you can place your UI with
 setContentView(View).  While activities are often presented to the user
 as full-screen windows, they can also be used in other ways: as floating
 windows (via a theme with windowIsFloating set)
 or embedded inside of another activity (using ActivityGroup).
 There are two methods almost all subclasses of Activity will implement:
 
 
onCreate(Bundle) is where you initialize your activity.  Most
     importantly, here you will usually call setContentView(int)
     with a layout resource defining your UI, and using findViewById(int)
     to retrieve the widgets in that UI that you need to interact with
     programmatically.
 
     onPause() is where you deal with the user leaving your
     activity.  Most importantly, any changes made by the user should at this
     point be committed (usually to the
     ContentProvider holding the data).
 To be of use with Context.startActivity(), all
 activity classes must have a corresponding
 <activity>
 declaration in their package's AndroidManifest.xml.
Topics covered here:
The Activity class is an important part of an application's overall lifecycle, and the way activities are launched and put together is a fundamental part of the platform's application model. For a detailed perspective on the structure of an Android application and how activities behave, please read the Application Fundamentals and Tasks and Back Stack developer guides.
You can also find a detailed discussion about how to create activities in the Activities developer guide.
Starting with HONEYCOMB, Activity
 implementations can make use of the Fragment class to better
 modularize their code, build more sophisticated user interfaces for larger
 screens, and help scale their application between small and large screens.
 
 
Activities in the system are managed as an activity stack. When a new activity is started, it is placed on the top of the stack and becomes the running activity -- the previous activity always remains below it in the stack, and will not come to the foreground again until the new activity exits.
An activity has essentially four states:
The following diagram shows the important state paths of an Activity. The square rectangles represent callback methods you can implement to perform operations when the Activity moves between states. The colored ovals are major states the Activity can be in.

There are three key loops you may be interested in monitoring within your activity:
onCreate(Bundle) through to a single final call
 to onDestroy().  An activity will do all setup
 of "global" state in onCreate(), and release all remaining resources in
 onDestroy().  For example, if it has a thread running in the background
 to download data from the network, it may create that thread in onCreate()
 and then stop the thread in onDestroy().
 
 onStart() until a corresponding call to
 onStop().  During this time the user can see the
 activity on-screen, though it may not be in the foreground and interacting
 with the user.  Between these two methods you can maintain resources that
 are needed to show the activity to the user.  For example, you can register
 a BroadcastReceiver in onStart() to monitor for changes
 that impact your UI, and unregister it in onStop() when the user no
 longer sees what you are displaying.  The onStart() and onStop() methods
 can be called multiple times, as the activity becomes visible and hidden
 to the user.
 
 onResume() until a corresponding call to
 onPause().  During this time the activity is
 in front of all other activities and interacting with the user.  An activity
 can frequently go between the resumed and paused states -- for example when
 the device goes to sleep, when an activity result is delivered, when a new
 intent is delivered -- so the code in these methods should be fairly
 lightweight.
 The entire lifecycle of an activity is defined by the following
 Activity methods.  All of these are hooks that you can override
 to do appropriate work when the activity changes state.  All
 activities will implement onCreate(Bundle)
 to do their initial setup; many will also implement
 onPause() to commit changes to data and
 otherwise prepare to stop interacting with the user.  You should always
 call up to your superclass when implementing these methods.
 public class Activity extends ApplicationContext {
     protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState);
     protected void onStart();
     
     protected void onRestart();
     protected void onResume();
     protected void onPause();
     protected void onStop();
     protected void onDestroy();
 }
 
 In general the movement through an activity's lifecycle looks like this:
| Method | Description | Killable? | Next | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| onCreate() | Called when the activity is first created.
             This is where you should do all of your normal static set up:
             create views, bind data to lists, etc.  This method also
             provides you with a Bundle containing the activity's previously
             frozen state, if there was one. Always followed by  | No | onStart() | ||
| onRestart() | Called after your activity has been stopped, prior to it being
             started again. Always followed by  | No | onStart() | ||
| onStart() | Called when the activity is becoming visible to the user. Followed by  | No | onResume()oronStop() | ||
| onResume() | Called when the activity will start
             interacting with the user.  At this point your activity is at
             the top of the activity stack, with user input going to it. Always followed by  | No | onPause() | ||
| onPause() | Called when the system is about to start resuming a previous
             activity.  This is typically used to commit unsaved changes to
             persistent data, stop animations and other things that may be consuming
             CPU, etc.  Implementations of this method must be very quick because
             the next activity will not be resumed until this method returns. Followed by either  | Pre- HONEYCOMB | onResume()oronStop() | ||
| onStop() | Called when the activity is no longer visible to the user, because
             another activity has been resumed and is covering this one.  This
             may happen either because a new activity is being started, an existing
             one is being brought in front of this one, or this one is being
             destroyed. Followed by either  | Yes | onRestart()oronDestroy() | ||
| onDestroy() | The final call you receive before your
             activity is destroyed.  This can happen either because the
             activity is finishing (someone called finish()on
             it, or because the system is temporarily destroying this
             instance of the activity to save space.  You can distinguish
             between these two scenarios with theisFinishing()method. | Yes | nothing | ||
Note the "Killable" column in the above table -- for those methods that
 are marked as being killable, after that method returns the process hosting the
 activity may killed by the system at any time without another line
 of its code being executed.  Because of this, you should use the
 onPause() method to write any persistent data (such as user edits)
 to storage.  In addition, the method
 onSaveInstanceState(Bundle) is called before placing the activity
 in such a background state, allowing you to save away any dynamic instance
 state in your activity into the given Bundle, to be later received in
 onCreate(Bundle) if the activity needs to be re-created.  
 See the Process Lifecycle
 section for more information on how the lifecycle of a process is tied
 to the activities it is hosting.  Note that it is important to save
 persistent data in onPause() instead of onSaveInstanceState(Bundle)
 because the latter is not part of the lifecycle callbacks, so will not
 be called in every situation as described in its documentation.
Be aware that these semantics will change slightly between
 applications targeting platforms starting with HONEYCOMB
 vs. those targeting prior platforms.  Starting with Honeycomb, an application
 is not in the killable state until its onStop() has returned.  This
 impacts when onSaveInstanceState(Bundle) may be called (it may be
 safely called after onPause() and allows and application to safely
 wait until onStop() to save persistent state.
For those methods that are not marked as being killable, the activity's
 process will not be killed by the system starting from the time the method
 is called and continuing after it returns.  Thus an activity is in the killable
 state, for example, between after onPause() to the start of
 onResume().
If the configuration of the device (as defined by the
 Resources.Configuration class) changes,
 then anything displaying a user interface will need to update to match that
 configuration.  Because Activity is the primary mechanism for interacting
 with the user, it includes special support for handling configuration
 changes.
Unless you specify otherwise, a configuration change (such as a change
 in screen orientation, language, input devices, etc) will cause your
 current activity to be destroyed, going through the normal activity
 lifecycle process of onPause(),
 onStop(), and onDestroy() as appropriate.  If the activity
 had been in the foreground or visible to the user, once onDestroy() is
 called in that instance then a new instance of the activity will be
 created, with whatever savedInstanceState the previous instance had generated
 from onSaveInstanceState(Bundle).
This is done because any application resource, including layout files, can change based on any configuration value. Thus the only safe way to handle a configuration change is to re-retrieve all resources, including layouts, drawables, and strings. Because activities must already know how to save their state and re-create themselves from that state, this is a convenient way to have an activity restart itself with a new configuration.
In some special cases, you may want to bypass restarting of your
 activity based on one or more types of configuration changes.  This is
 done with the android:configChanges
 attribute in its manifest.  For any types of configuration changes you say
 that you handle there, you will receive a call to your current activity's
 onConfigurationChanged(Configuration) method instead of being restarted.  If
 a configuration change involves any that you do not handle, however, the
 activity will still be restarted and onConfigurationChanged(Configuration)
 will not be called.
The startActivity(Intent)
 method is used to start a
 new activity, which will be placed at the top of the activity stack.  It
 takes a single argument, an Intent,
 which describes the activity
 to be executed.
Sometimes you want to get a result back from an activity when it
 ends.  For example, you may start an activity that lets the user pick
 a person in a list of contacts; when it ends, it returns the person
 that was selected.  To do this, you call the
 startActivityForResult(Intent, int) 
 version with a second integer parameter identifying the call.  The result 
 will come back through your onActivityResult(int, int, Intent)
 method.
When an activity exits, it can call
 setResult(int)
 to return data back to its parent.  It must always supply a result code,
 which can be the standard results RESULT_CANCELED, RESULT_OK, or any
 custom values starting at RESULT_FIRST_USER.  In addition, it can optionally
 return back an Intent containing any additional data it wants.  All of this
 information appears back on the
 parent's Activity.onActivityResult(), along with the integer
 identifier it originally supplied.
If a child activity fails for any reason (such as crashing), the parent activity will receive a result with the code RESULT_CANCELED.
 public class MyActivity extends Activity {
     ...
     static final int PICK_CONTACT_REQUEST = 0;
     protected boolean onKeyDown(int keyCode, KeyEvent event) {
         if (keyCode == KeyEvent.KEYCODE_DPAD_CENTER) {
             // When the user center presses, let them pick a contact.
             startActivityForResult(
                 new Intent(Intent.ACTION_PICK,
                 new Uri("content://contacts")),
                 PICK_CONTACT_REQUEST);
            return true;
         }
         return false;
     }
     protected void onActivityResult(int requestCode, int resultCode,
             Intent data) {
         if (requestCode == PICK_CONTACT_REQUEST) {
             if (resultCode == RESULT_OK) {
                 // A contact was picked.  Here we will just display it
                 // to the user.
                 startActivity(new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW, data));
             }
         }
     }
 }
 
 
 There are generally two kinds of persistent state than an activity
 will deal with: shared document-like data (typically stored in a SQLite
 database using a content provider)
 and internal state such as user preferences.
For content provider data, we suggest that activities use a "edit in place" user model. That is, any edits a user makes are effectively made immediately without requiring an additional confirmation step. Supporting this model is generally a simple matter of following two rules:
When creating a new document, the backing database entry or file for it is created immediately. For example, if the user chooses to write a new e-mail, a new entry for that e-mail is created as soon as they start entering data, so that if they go to any other activity after that point this e-mail will now appear in the list of drafts.
When an activity's onPause() method is called, it should
             commit to the backing content provider or file any changes the user
             has made.  This ensures that those changes will be seen by any other
             activity that is about to run.  You will probably want to commit
             your data even more aggressively at key times during your
             activity's lifecycle: for example before starting a new
             activity, before finishing your own activity, when the user
             switches between input fields, etc.
This model is designed to prevent data loss when a user is navigating between activities, and allows the system to safely kill an activity (because system resources are needed somewhere else) at any time after it has been paused. Note this implies that the user pressing BACK from your activity does not mean "cancel" -- it means to leave the activity with its current contents saved away. Canceling edits in an activity must be provided through some other mechanism, such as an explicit "revert" or "undo" option.
See the content package for
 more information about content providers.  These are a key aspect of how
 different activities invoke and propagate data between themselves.
The Activity class also provides an API for managing internal persistent state associated with an activity. This can be used, for example, to remember the user's preferred initial display in a calendar (day view or week view) or the user's default home page in a web browser.
Activity persistent state is managed
 with the method getPreferences(int),
 allowing you to retrieve and
 modify a set of name/value pairs associated with the activity.  To use
 preferences that are shared across multiple application components
 (activities, receivers, services, providers), you can use the underlying
 Context.getSharedPreferences() method
 to retrieve a preferences
 object stored under a specific name.
 (Note that it is not possible to share settings data across application
 packages -- for that you will need a content provider.)
Here is an excerpt from a calendar activity that stores the user's preferred view mode in its persistent settings:
 public class CalendarActivity extends Activity {
     ...
     static final int DAY_VIEW_MODE = 0;
     static final int WEEK_VIEW_MODE = 1;
     private SharedPreferences mPrefs;
     private int mCurViewMode;
     protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
         super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
         SharedPreferences mPrefs = getSharedPreferences();
         mCurViewMode = mPrefs.getInt("view_mode", DAY_VIEW_MODE);
     }
     protected void onPause() {
         super.onPause();
 
         SharedPreferences.Editor ed = mPrefs.edit();
         ed.putInt("view_mode", mCurViewMode);
         ed.commit();
     }
 }
 
 
 
 The ability to start a particular Activity can be enforced when it is
 declared in its
 manifest's <activity>
 tag.  By doing so, other applications will need to declare a corresponding
 <uses-permission>
 element in their own manifest to be able to start that activity.
 
When starting an Activity you can set Intent.FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION and/or Intent.FLAG_GRANT_WRITE_URI_PERMISSION on the Intent.  This will grant the
 Activity access to the specific URIs in the Intent.  Access will remain
 until the Activity has finished (it will remain across the hosting
 process being killed and other temporary destruction).  As of
 GINGERBREAD, if the Activity
 was already created and a new Intent is being delivered to
 onNewIntent(Intent), any newly granted URI permissions will be added
 to the existing ones it holds.
 
See the Security and Permissions document for more information on permissions and security in general.
The Android system attempts to keep application process around for as long as possible, but eventually will need to remove old processes when memory runs low. As described in Activity Lifecycle, the decision about which process to remove is intimately tied to the state of the user's interaction with it. In general, there are four states a process can be in based on the activities running in it, listed here in order of importance. The system will kill less important processes (the last ones) before it resorts to killing more important processes (the first ones).
The foreground activity (the activity at the top of the screen that the user is currently interacting with) is considered the most important. Its process will only be killed as a last resort, if it uses more memory than is available on the device. Generally at this point the device has reached a memory paging state, so this is required in order to keep the user interface responsive.
A visible activity (an activity that is visible to the user but not in the foreground, such as one sitting behind a foreground dialog) is considered extremely important and will not be killed unless that is required to keep the foreground activity running.
A background activity (an activity that is not visible to
 the user and has been paused) is no longer critical, so the system may
 safely kill its process to reclaim memory for other foreground or
 visible processes.  If its process needs to be killed, when the user navigates
 back to the activity (making it visible on the screen again), its
 onCreate(Bundle) method will be called with the savedInstanceState it had previously
 supplied in onSaveInstanceState(Bundle) so that it can restart itself in the same
 state as the user last left it.
 
An empty process is one hosting no activities or other
 application components (such as Service or
 BroadcastReceiver classes).  These are killed very
 quickly by the system as memory becomes low.  For this reason, any
 background operation you do outside of an activity must be executed in the
 context of an activity BroadcastReceiver or Service to ensure that the system
 knows it needs to keep your process around.
 
Sometimes an Activity may need to do a long-running operation that exists
 independently of the activity lifecycle itself.  An example may be a camera
 application that allows you to upload a picture to a web site.  The upload
 may take a long time, and the application should allow the user to leave
 the application will it is executing.  To accomplish this, your Activity
 should start a Service in which the upload takes place.  This allows
 the system to properly prioritize your process (considering it to be more
 important than other non-visible applications) for the duration of the
 upload, independent of whether the original activity is paused, stopped,
 or finished.
| Constants | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| int | DEFAULT_KEYS_DIALER | Use with setDefaultKeyMode(int)to launch the dialer during default
 key handling. | |||||||||
| int | DEFAULT_KEYS_DISABLE | Use with setDefaultKeyMode(int)to turn off default handling of
 keys. | |||||||||
| int | DEFAULT_KEYS_SEARCH_GLOBAL | Use with setDefaultKeyMode(int)to specify that unhandled keystrokes
 will start a global search (typically web search, but some platforms may define alternate
 methods for global search)See  | |||||||||
| int | DEFAULT_KEYS_SEARCH_LOCAL | Use with setDefaultKeyMode(int)to specify that unhandled keystrokes
 will start an application-defined search. | |||||||||
| int | DEFAULT_KEYS_SHORTCUT | Use with setDefaultKeyMode(int)to execute a menu shortcut in
 default key handling. | |||||||||
| int | RESULT_CANCELED | Standard activity result: operation canceled. | |||||||||
| int | RESULT_FIRST_USER | Start of user-defined activity results. | |||||||||
| int | RESULT_OK | Standard activity result: operation succeeded. | |||||||||
| [Expand] Inherited Constants | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|  From class
android.content.Context | |||||||||||
|  From interface
android.content.ComponentCallbacks2 | |||||||||||
| Fields | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FOCUSED_STATE_SET | |||||||||||
| Public Constructors | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Public Methods | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Add an additional content view to the activity. | |||||||||||
| Programmatically closes the most recently opened context menu, if showing. | |||||||||||
| Progammatically closes the options menu. | |||||||||||
| Create a new PendingIntent object which you can hand to others 
 for them to use to send result data back to your 
  onActivityResult(int, int, Intent)callback. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new  DialogFragmentclass withFragmentManagerinstead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package. | |||||||||||
| Called to process generic motion events. | |||||||||||
| Called to process key events. | |||||||||||
| Called to process a key shortcut event. | |||||||||||
| Called to process population of  AccessibilityEvents. | |||||||||||
| Called to process touch screen events. | |||||||||||
| Called to process trackball events. | |||||||||||
| Print the Activity's state into the given stream. | |||||||||||
| Finds a view that was identified by the id attribute from the XML that
 was processed in  onCreate(Bundle). | |||||||||||
| Call this when your activity is done and should be closed. | |||||||||||
| Force finish another activity that you had previously started with
  startActivityForResult(Intent, int). | |||||||||||
| This is called when a child activity of this one calls its
 finishActivity(). | |||||||||||
| Finish this activity as well as all activities immediately below it
 in the current task that have the same affinity. | |||||||||||
| Reverses the Activity Scene entry Transition and triggers the calling Activity
 to reverse its exit Transition. | |||||||||||
| Call this when your activity is done and should be closed and the task should be completely
 removed as a part of finishing the Activity. | |||||||||||
| This is called when a child activity of this one calls its 
  finish()method. | |||||||||||
| Retrieve a reference to this activity's ActionBar. | |||||||||||
| Return the application that owns this activity. | |||||||||||
| Return the name of the activity that invoked this activity. | |||||||||||
| Return the name of the package that invoked this activity. | |||||||||||
| If this activity is being destroyed because it can not handle a
 configuration parameter being changed (and thus its
  onConfigurationChanged(Configuration)method is
 not being called), then you can use this method to discover
 the set of changes that have occurred while in the process of being
 destroyed. | |||||||||||
| Returns complete component name of this activity. | |||||||||||
| Retrieve the  Scenerepresenting this window's current content. | |||||||||||
| Retrieve the  TransitionManagerresponsible for default transitions in this window. | |||||||||||
| Calls  getCurrentFocus()on the
 Window of this Activity to return the currently focused view. | |||||||||||
| Return the FragmentManager for interacting with fragments associated
 with this activity. | |||||||||||
| Return the intent that started this activity. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new  FragmentAPIsetRetainInstance(boolean)instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package. | |||||||||||
| Convenience for calling
  getLayoutInflater(). | |||||||||||
| Return the LoaderManager for this activity, creating it if needed. | |||||||||||
| Returns class name for this activity with the package prefix removed. | |||||||||||
| Returns a  MenuInflaterwith this context. | |||||||||||
| Return the parent activity if this view is an embedded child. | |||||||||||
| Obtain an  Intentthat will launch an explicit target activity specified by
 this activity's logical parent. | |||||||||||
| Retrieve a  SharedPreferencesobject for accessing preferences
 that are private to this activity. | |||||||||||
| Return the current requested orientation of the activity. | |||||||||||
| Return the handle to a system-level service by name. | |||||||||||
| Return the identifier of the task this activity is in. | |||||||||||
| Retrieve the active  VoiceInteractorthat the user is going through to
 interact with this activity. | |||||||||||
| Gets the suggested audio stream whose volume should be changed by the
 hardware volume controls. | |||||||||||
| Retrieve the current  Windowfor the activity. | |||||||||||
| Retrieve the window manager for showing custom windows. | |||||||||||
| Returns true if this activity's main window currently has window focus. | |||||||||||
| Declare that the options menu has changed, so should be recreated. | |||||||||||
| Check to see whether this activity is in the process of being destroyed in order to be
 recreated with a new configuration. | |||||||||||
| Is this activity embedded inside of another activity?  | |||||||||||
| Returns true if the final  onDestroy()call has been made
 on the Activity, so this instance is now dead. | |||||||||||
| Check to see whether this activity is in the process of finishing,
 either because you called  finish()on it or someone else
 has requested that it finished. | |||||||||||
| Bit indicating that this activity is "immersive" and should not be
 interrupted by notifications if possible. | |||||||||||
| Return whether this activity is the root of a task. | |||||||||||
| Check whether this activity is running as part of a voice interaction with the user. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 11.
    Use  CursorLoaderinstead. | |||||||||||
| Move the task containing this activity to the back of the activity
 stack. | |||||||||||
| Navigate from this activity to the activity specified by upIntent, finishing this activity
 in the process. | |||||||||||
| This is called when a child activity of this one calls its
  navigateUpTo(Intent)method. | |||||||||||
| Notifies the activity that an action mode has finished. | |||||||||||
| Notifies the Activity that an action mode has been started. | |||||||||||
| Called when a Fragment is being attached to this activity, immediately
 after the call to its  Fragment.onAttach()method and beforeFragment.onCreate(). | |||||||||||
| Called when the main window associated with the activity has been
 attached to the window manager. | |||||||||||
| Called when the activity has detected the user's press of the back
 key. | |||||||||||
| Called by the system when the device configuration changes while your
 activity is running. | |||||||||||
| This hook is called whenever the content view of the screen changes
 (due to a call to
  Window.setContentVieworWindow.addContentView). | |||||||||||
| This hook is called whenever an item in a context menu is selected. | |||||||||||
| This hook is called whenever the context menu is being closed (either by
 the user canceling the menu with the back/menu button, or when an item is
 selected). | |||||||||||
| Called when a context menu for the  viewis about to be shown. | |||||||||||
| Generate a new description for this activity. | |||||||||||
| Define the synthetic task stack that will be generated during Up navigation from
 a different task. | |||||||||||
| Initialize the contents of the Activity's standard options menu. | |||||||||||
| Default implementation of
  onCreatePanelMenu(int, Menu)for activities. | |||||||||||
| Default implementation of
  onCreatePanelView(int)for activities. | |||||||||||
| Generate a new thumbnail for this activity. | |||||||||||
| Standard implementation of
  onCreateView(View, String, Context, AttributeSet)used when inflating with the LayoutInflater returned bygetSystemService(String). | |||||||||||
| Standard implementation of
  onCreateView(String, Context, AttributeSet)used when
 inflating with the LayoutInflater returned bygetSystemService(String). | |||||||||||
| Called when the main window associated with the activity has been
 detached from the window manager. | |||||||||||
| Called when a generic motion event was not handled by any of the
 views inside of the activity. | |||||||||||
| Called when a key was pressed down and not handled by any of the views
 inside of the activity. | |||||||||||
| Default implementation of  KeyEvent.Callback.onKeyLongPress(): always returns false (doesn't handle
 the event). | |||||||||||
| Default implementation of  KeyEvent.Callback.onKeyMultiple(): always returns false (doesn't handle
 the event). | |||||||||||
| Called when a key shortcut event is not handled by any of the views in the Activity. | |||||||||||
| Called when a key was released and not handled by any of the views
 inside of the activity. | |||||||||||
| This is called when the overall system is running low on memory, and
 actively running processes should trim their memory usage. | |||||||||||
| Default implementation of
  onMenuItemSelected(int, MenuItem)for activities. | |||||||||||
| Called when a panel's menu is opened by the user. | |||||||||||
| This method is called whenever the user chooses to navigate Up within your application's
 activity hierarchy from the action bar. | |||||||||||
| This is called when a child activity of this one attempts to navigate up. | |||||||||||
| This hook is called whenever an item in your options menu is selected. | |||||||||||
| This hook is called whenever the options menu is being closed (either by the user canceling
 the menu with the back/menu button, or when an item is selected). | |||||||||||
| Default implementation of
  onPanelClosed(int, Menu)for
 activities. | |||||||||||
| Prepare the synthetic task stack that will be generated during Up navigation
 from a different task. | |||||||||||
| Prepare the Screen's standard options menu to be displayed. | |||||||||||
| Default implementation of
  onPreparePanel(int, View, Menu)for activities. | |||||||||||
| This is called when the user is requesting an assist, to build a full
  ACTION_ASSISTIntent with all of the context of the current
 application. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new  FragmentAPIsetRetainInstance(boolean)instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package. | |||||||||||
| This hook is called when the user signals the desire to start a search. | |||||||||||
| Called when a touch screen event was not handled by any of the views
 under it. | |||||||||||
| Called when the trackball was moved and not handled by any of the
 views inside of the activity. | |||||||||||
| Called when the operating system has determined that it is a good
 time for a process to trim unneeded memory from its process. | |||||||||||
| Called whenever a key, touch, or trackball event is dispatched to the
 activity. | |||||||||||
| This is called whenever the current window attributes change. | |||||||||||
| Called when a window is dismissed. | |||||||||||
| Called when the current  Windowof the activity gains or loses
 focus. | |||||||||||
| Give the Activity a chance to control the UI for an action mode requested
 by the system. | |||||||||||
| Programmatically opens the context menu for a particular  view. | |||||||||||
| Programmatically opens the options menu. | |||||||||||
| Call immediately after one of the flavors of  startActivity(Intent)orfinish()to specify an explicit transition animation to
 perform next. | |||||||||||
| Postpone the entering activity transition when Activity was started with
  makeSceneTransitionAnimation(Activity, android.util.Pair[]). | |||||||||||
| Cause this Activity to be recreated with a new instance. | |||||||||||
| Registers a context menu to be shown for the given view (multiple views
 can show the context menu). | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new  DialogFragmentclass withFragmentManagerinstead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package. | |||||||||||
| Report to the system that your app is now fully drawn, purely for diagnostic
 purposes (calling it does not impact the visible behavior of the activity). | |||||||||||
| Enable extended window features. | |||||||||||
| Runs the specified action on the UI thread. | |||||||||||
| Set the  TransitionManagerto use for default transitions in this window. | |||||||||||
| Set the activity content to an explicit view. | |||||||||||
| Set the activity content from a layout resource. | |||||||||||
| Set the activity content to an explicit view. | |||||||||||
| Select the default key handling for this activity. | |||||||||||
| When  makeSceneTransitionAnimation(Activity, android.view.View, String)was used to start an Activity, listener
 will be called to handle shared elements on the launched Activity. | |||||||||||
| When  makeSceneTransitionAnimation(Activity, android.view.View, String)was used to start an Activity, listener
 will be called to handle shared elements on the launching Activity. | |||||||||||
| Convenience for calling
  setFeatureDrawable(int, Drawable). | |||||||||||
| Convenience for calling
  setFeatureDrawableAlpha(int, int). | |||||||||||
| Convenience for calling
  setFeatureDrawableResource(int, int). | |||||||||||
| Convenience for calling
  setFeatureDrawableUri(int, Uri). | |||||||||||
| Sets whether this activity is finished when touched outside its window's
 bounds. | |||||||||||
| Adjust the current immersive mode setting. | |||||||||||
| Change the intent returned by  getIntent(). | |||||||||||
| Sets the progress for the progress bars in the title. | |||||||||||
| Sets whether the horizontal progress bar in the title should be indeterminate (the circular
 is always indeterminate). | |||||||||||
| Sets the visibility of the indeterminate progress bar in the title. | |||||||||||
| Sets the visibility of the progress bar in the title. | |||||||||||
| Change the desired orientation of this activity. | |||||||||||
| Call this to set the result that your activity will return to its
 caller. | |||||||||||
| Call this to set the result that your activity will return to its
 caller. | |||||||||||
| Sets the secondary progress for the progress bar in the title. | |||||||||||
| Sets information describing the task with this activity for presentation inside the Recents
 System UI. | |||||||||||
| Change the title associated with this activity. | |||||||||||
| Change the title associated with this activity. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method is deprecated.
    Use action bar styles instead.
 | |||||||||||
| Control whether this activity's main window is visible. | |||||||||||
| Suggests an audio stream whose volume should be changed by the hardware
 volume controls. | |||||||||||
| Returns true if the app should recreate the task when navigating 'up' from this activity
 by using targetIntent. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new  DialogFragmentclass withFragmentManagerinstead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new  DialogFragmentclass withFragmentManagerinstead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package. | |||||||||||
| Start an action mode. | |||||||||||
| Launch a new activity. | |||||||||||
| Same as  startActivities(Intent[], Bundle)with no options
 specified. | |||||||||||
| Launch a new activity. | |||||||||||
| Same as  startActivity(Intent, Bundle)with no options
 specified. | |||||||||||
| Same as calling  startActivityForResult(Intent, int, Bundle)with no options. | |||||||||||
| Launch an activity for which you would like a result when it finished. | |||||||||||
| This is called when a child activity of this one calls its 
  startActivity(Intent)orstartActivityForResult(Intent, int)method. | |||||||||||
| Same as calling  startActivityFromChild(Activity, Intent, int, Bundle)with no options. | |||||||||||
| This is called when a Fragment in this activity calls its 
  startActivity(Intent)orstartActivityForResult(Intent, int)method. | |||||||||||
| Same as calling  startActivityFromFragment(Fragment, Intent, int, Bundle)with no options. | |||||||||||
| A special variation to launch an activity only if a new activity
 instance is needed to handle the given Intent. | |||||||||||
| Same as calling  startActivityIfNeeded(Intent, int, Bundle)with no options. | |||||||||||
| Like  startActivity(Intent, Bundle), but taking a IntentSender
 to start; seestartIntentSenderForResult(IntentSender, int, Intent, int, int, int, Bundle)for more information. | |||||||||||
| Same as calling  startIntentSender(IntentSender, Intent, int, int, int, Bundle)with no options. | |||||||||||
| Same as calling  startIntentSenderForResult(IntentSender, int, Intent, int, int, int, Bundle)with no options. | |||||||||||
| Like  startActivityForResult(Intent, int), but allowing you
 to use a IntentSender to describe the activity to be started. | |||||||||||
| Same as calling  startIntentSenderFromChild(Activity, IntentSender, int, Intent, int, int, int, Bundle)with no options. | |||||||||||
| Like  startActivityFromChild(Activity, Intent, int), but
 taking a IntentSender; seestartIntentSenderForResult(IntentSender, int, Intent, int, int, int)for more information. | |||||||||||
| Put this Activity in a mode where the user is locked to the
 current task. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 11.
    Use the new  CursorLoaderclass withLoaderManagerinstead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package. | |||||||||||
| Same as calling  startNextMatchingActivity(Intent, Bundle)with
 no options. | |||||||||||
| Special version of starting an activity, for use when you are replacing
 other activity components. | |||||||||||
| Begin postponed transitions after  postponeEnterTransition()was called. | |||||||||||
| This hook is called to launch the search UI. | |||||||||||
| Allow the user to switch away from the current task. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 11.
    Use the new  CursorLoaderclass withLoaderManagerinstead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package. | |||||||||||
| Request that key events come to this activity. | |||||||||||
| Similar to  startSearch(String, boolean, Bundle, boolean), but actually fires off the search query after invoking
 the search dialog. | |||||||||||
| Prevents a context menu to be shown for the given view. | |||||||||||
| Protected Methods | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Called when an activity you launched with an activity transition exposes this
 Activity through a returning activity transition, giving you the resultCode
 and any additional data from it. | |||||||||||
| Called when an activity you launched exits, giving you the requestCode
 you started it with, the resultCode it returned, and any additional
 data from it. | |||||||||||
| Called by  setTheme(int)andgetTheme()to apply a theme
 resource to the current Theme object. | |||||||||||
| Called when the activity is starting. | |||||||||||
| Same as  onCreate(android.os.Bundle)but called for those activities created with
 the attributepersistableset true. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new  DialogFragmentclass withFragmentManagerinstead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 8.
    Old no-arguments version of  onCreateDialog(int, Bundle). | |||||||||||
| Perform any final cleanup before an activity is destroyed. | |||||||||||
| This is called for activities that set launchMode to "singleTop" in
 their package, or if a client used the  FLAG_ACTIVITY_SINGLE_TOPflag when callingstartActivity(Intent). | |||||||||||
| Called as part of the activity lifecycle when an activity is going into
 the background, but has not (yet) been killed. | |||||||||||
| Called when activity start-up is complete (after  onStart()andonRestoreInstanceState(Bundle)have been called). | |||||||||||
| This is the same as  onPostCreate(Bundle)but is called for activities
 created with the attributepersistable. | |||||||||||
| Called when activity resume is complete (after  onResume()has
 been called). | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new  DialogFragmentclass withFragmentManagerinstead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package. | |||||||||||
| 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 8.
    Old no-arguments version of
  onPrepareDialog(int, Dialog, Bundle). | |||||||||||
| Called after  onStop()when the current activity is being
 re-displayed to the user (the user has navigated back to it). | |||||||||||
| This is the same as  onRestoreInstanceState(Bundle)but is called for activities
 created with the attributepersistable. | |||||||||||
| This method is called after  onStart()when the activity is
 being re-initialized from a previously saved state, given here in
 savedInstanceState. | |||||||||||
| Called after  onRestoreInstanceState(Bundle),onRestart(), oronPause(), for your activity to start interacting with the user. | |||||||||||
| Called to retrieve per-instance state from an activity before being killed
 so that the state can be restored in  onCreate(Bundle)oronRestoreInstanceState(Bundle)(theBundlepopulated by this method
 will be passed to both). | |||||||||||
| This is the same as  onSaveInstanceState(Bundle)but is called for activities
 created with the attributepersistable. | |||||||||||
| Called after  onCreate(Bundle)— or afteronRestart()when  
 the activity had been stopped, but is now again being displayed to the 
 user. | |||||||||||
| Called when you are no longer visible to the user. | |||||||||||
| Called as part of the activity lifecycle when an activity is about to go
 into the background as the result of user choice. | |||||||||||
| [Expand] Inherited Methods | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|  From class
  android.view.ContextThemeWrapper | |||||||||||
|  From class
  android.content.ContextWrapper | |||||||||||
|  From class
  android.content.Context | |||||||||||
|  From class
  java.lang.Object | |||||||||||
|  From interface
  android.content.ComponentCallbacks | |||||||||||
|  From interface
  android.content.ComponentCallbacks2 | |||||||||||
|  From interface
  android.view.KeyEvent.Callback | |||||||||||
|  From interface
  android.view.LayoutInflater.Factory | |||||||||||
|  From interface
  android.view.LayoutInflater.Factory2 | |||||||||||
|  From interface
  android.view.View.OnCreateContextMenuListener | |||||||||||
|  From interface
  android.view.Window.Callback | |||||||||||
Use with setDefaultKeyMode(int) to launch the dialer during default
 key handling.
Use with setDefaultKeyMode(int) to turn off default handling of
 keys.
Use with setDefaultKeyMode(int) to specify that unhandled keystrokes
 will start a global search (typically web search, but some platforms may define alternate
 methods for global search)
 
 
See android.app.SearchManager for more details.
Use with setDefaultKeyMode(int) to specify that unhandled keystrokes
 will start an application-defined search.  (If the application or activity does not
 actually define a search, the the keys will be ignored.)
 
 
See android.app.SearchManager for more details.
Use with setDefaultKeyMode(int) to execute a menu shortcut in
 default key handling.
 
 
That is, the user does not need to hold down the menu key to execute menu shortcuts.
Standard activity result: operation canceled.
Start of user-defined activity results.
Standard activity result: operation succeeded.
Add an additional content view to the activity. Added after any existing ones in the activity -- existing views are NOT removed.
| view | The desired content to display. | 
|---|---|
| params | Layout parameters for the view. | 
Programmatically closes the most recently opened context menu, if showing.
Progammatically closes the options menu. If the options menu is already closed, this method does nothing.
Create a new PendingIntent object which you can hand to others 
 for them to use to send result data back to your 
 onActivityResult(int, int, Intent) callback.  The created object will be either 
 one-shot (becoming invalid after a result is sent back) or multiple 
 (allowing any number of results to be sent through it).
| requestCode | Private request code for the sender that will be associated with the result data when it is returned. The sender can not modify this value, allowing you to identify incoming results. | 
|---|---|
| data | Default data to supply in the result, which may be modified by the sender. | 
| flags | May be PendingIntent.FLAG_ONE_SHOT,PendingIntent.FLAG_NO_CREATE,PendingIntent.FLAG_CANCEL_CURRENT,PendingIntent.FLAG_UPDATE_CURRENT,
 or any of the flags as supported byIntent.fillIn()to control which unspecified parts
 of the intent that can be supplied when the actual send happens. | 
PendingIntent.FLAG_NO_CREATE has been
 supplied.
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new DialogFragment class with
 FragmentManager instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package.
  
Dismiss a dialog that was previously shown via showDialog(int).
| id | The id of the managed dialog. | 
|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if the id was not previously shown via showDialog(int). | 
|---|
Called to process generic motion events. You can override this to intercept all generic motion events before they are dispatched to the window. Be sure to call this implementation for generic motion events that should be handled normally.
| ev | The generic motion event. | 
|---|
Called to process key events. You can override this to intercept all key events before they are dispatched to the window. Be sure to call this implementation for key events that should be handled normally.
| event | The key event. | 
|---|
Called to process a key shortcut event. You can override this to intercept all key shortcut events before they are dispatched to the window. Be sure to call this implementation for key shortcut events that should be handled normally.
| event | The key shortcut event. | 
|---|
Called to process population of AccessibilityEvents.
| event | The event. | 
|---|
Called to process touch screen events. You can override this to intercept all touch screen events before they are dispatched to the window. Be sure to call this implementation for touch screen events that should be handled normally.
| ev | The touch screen event. | 
|---|
Called to process trackball events. You can override this to intercept all trackball events before they are dispatched to the window. Be sure to call this implementation for trackball events that should be handled normally.
| ev | The trackball event. | 
|---|
Print the Activity's state into the given stream. This gets invoked if you run "adb shell dumpsys activity <activity_component_name>".
| prefix | Desired prefix to prepend at each line of output. | 
|---|---|
| fd | The raw file descriptor that the dump is being sent to. | 
| writer | The PrintWriter to which you should dump your state. This will be closed for you after you return. | 
| args | additional arguments to the dump request. | 
Finds a view that was identified by the id attribute from the XML that
 was processed in onCreate(Bundle).
Call this when your activity is done and should be closed. The ActivityResult is propagated back to whoever launched you via onActivityResult().
Force finish another activity that you had previously started with
 startActivityForResult(Intent, int).
| requestCode | The request code of the activity that you had given to startActivityForResult(). If there are multiple activities started with this request code, they will all be finished. | 
|---|
This is called when a child activity of this one calls its finishActivity().
| child | The activity making the call. | 
|---|---|
| requestCode | Request code that had been used to start the activity. | 
Finish this activity as well as all activities immediately below it in the current task that have the same affinity. This is typically used when an application can be launched on to another task (such as from an ACTION_VIEW of a content type it understands) and the user has used the up navigation to switch out of the current task and in to its own task. In this case, if the user has navigated down into any other activities of the second application, all of those should be removed from the original task as part of the task switch.
Note that this finish does not allow you to deliver results to the previous activity, and an exception will be thrown if you are trying to do so.
Reverses the Activity Scene entry Transition and triggers the calling Activity
 to reverse its exit Transition. When the exit Transition completes,
 finish() is called. If no entry Transition was used, finish() is called
 immediately and the Activity exit Transition is run.
Call this when your activity is done and should be closed and the task should be completely removed as a part of finishing the Activity.
Retrieve a reference to this activity's ActionBar.
Return the application that owns this activity.
Return the name of the activity that invoked this activity.  This is
 who the data in setResult() will be sent to.  You
 can use this information to validate that the recipient is allowed to
 receive the data.
 
 
Note: if the calling activity is not expecting a result (that is it
 did not use the startActivityForResult(Intent, int) 
 form that includes a request code), then the calling package will be 
 null.
Return the name of the package that invoked this activity.  This is who
 the data in setResult() will be sent to.  You can
 use this information to validate that the recipient is allowed to
 receive the data.
 
 
Note: if the calling activity is not expecting a result (that is it
 did not use the startActivityForResult(Intent, int) 
 form that includes a request code), then the calling package will be 
 null.
Note: prior to JELLY_BEAN_MR2,
 the result from this method was unstable.  If the process hosting the calling
 package was no longer running, it would return null instead of the proper package
 name.  You can use getCallingActivity() and retrieve the package name
 from that instead.
If this activity is being destroyed because it can not handle a
 configuration parameter being changed (and thus its
 onConfigurationChanged(Configuration) method is
 not being called), then you can use this method to discover
 the set of changes that have occurred while in the process of being
 destroyed.  Note that there is no guarantee that these will be
 accurate (other changes could have happened at any time), so you should
 only use this as an optimization hint.
Configuration
 class.
Returns complete component name of this activity.
Retrieve the Scene representing this window's current content.
 Requires FEATURE_CONTENT_TRANSITIONS.
 
This method will return null if the current content is not represented by a Scene.
Retrieve the TransitionManager responsible for default transitions in this window.
 Requires FEATURE_CONTENT_TRANSITIONS.
 
This method will return non-null after content has been initialized (e.g. by using
 setContentView(View)) if FEATURE_CONTENT_TRANSITIONS has been granted.
Calls getCurrentFocus() on the
 Window of this Activity to return the currently focused view.
Return the FragmentManager for interacting with fragments associated with this activity.
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new Fragment API
 setRetainInstance(boolean) instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package.
  
Retrieve the non-configuration instance data that was previously
 returned by onRetainNonConfigurationInstance().  This will
 be available from the initial onCreate(Bundle) and
 onStart() calls to the new instance, allowing you to extract
 any useful dynamic state from the previous instance.
 
 
Note that the data you retrieve here should only be used
 as an optimization for handling configuration changes.  You should always
 be able to handle getting a null pointer back, and an activity must
 still be able to restore itself to its previous state (through the
 normal onSaveInstanceState(Bundle) mechanism) even if this
 function returns null.
onRetainNonConfigurationInstance().Convenience for calling
 getLayoutInflater().
Return the LoaderManager for this activity, creating it if needed.
Returns class name for this activity with the package prefix removed. This is the default name used to read and write settings.
Returns a MenuInflater with this context.
Return the parent activity if this view is an embedded child.
Obtain an Intent that will launch an explicit target activity specified by
 this activity's logical parent. The logical parent is named in the application's manifest
 by the parentActivityName attribute.
 Activity subclasses may override this method to modify the Intent returned by
 super.getParentActivityIntent() or to implement a different mechanism of retrieving
 the parent intent entirely.
Retrieve a SharedPreferences object for accessing preferences
 that are private to this activity.  This simply calls the underlying
 getSharedPreferences(String, int) method by passing in this activity's
 class name as the preferences name.
| mode | Operating mode.  Use MODE_PRIVATEfor the default 
             operation,MODE_WORLD_READABLEandMODE_WORLD_WRITEABLEto control permissions. | 
|---|
Return the current requested orientation of the activity.  This will
 either be the orientation requested in its component's manifest, or
 the last requested orientation given to
 setRequestedOrientation(int).
ActivityInfo.screenOrientation.
Return the handle to a system-level service by name. The class of the returned object varies by the requested name. Currently available names are:
WINDOW_SERVICE ("window")
  WindowManager.
  LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE ("layout_inflater")
  LayoutInflater for inflating layout resources
  in this context.
  ACTIVITY_SERVICE ("activity")
  ActivityManager for interacting with the
  global activity state of the system.
  POWER_SERVICE ("power")
  PowerManager for controlling power
  management.
  ALARM_SERVICE ("alarm")
  AlarmManager for receiving intents at the
  time of your choosing.
  NOTIFICATION_SERVICE ("notification")
  NotificationManager for informing the user
   of background events.
  KEYGUARD_SERVICE ("keyguard")
  KeyguardManager for controlling keyguard.
  LOCATION_SERVICE ("location")
  LocationManager for controlling location
   (e.g., GPS) updates.
  SEARCH_SERVICE ("search")
  SearchManager for handling search.
  VIBRATOR_SERVICE ("vibrator")
  Vibrator for interacting with the vibrator
  hardware.
  CONNECTIVITY_SERVICE ("connection")
  ConnectivityManager for
  handling management of network connections.
  WIFI_SERVICE ("wifi")
  WifiManager for management of
 Wi-Fi connectivity.
  WIFI_P2P_SERVICE ("wifip2p")
  WifiP2pManager for management of
 Wi-Fi Direct connectivity.
 INPUT_METHOD_SERVICE ("input_method")
 InputMethodManager
 for management of input methods.
 UI_MODE_SERVICE ("uimode")
 UiModeManager for controlling UI modes.
 DOWNLOAD_SERVICE ("download")
 DownloadManager for requesting HTTP downloads
 BATTERY_SERVICE ("batterymanager")
 BatteryManager for managing battery state
 JOB_SCHEDULER_SERVICE ("taskmanager")
 JobScheduler for managing scheduled tasks
 Note: System services obtained via this API may be closely associated with the Context in which they are obtained from. In general, do not share the service objects between various different contexts (Activities, Applications, Services, Providers, etc.)
| name | The name of the desired service. | 
|---|
Return the identifier of the task this activity is in. This identifier will remain the same for the lifetime of the activity.
Retrieve the active VoiceInteractor that the user is going through to
 interact with this activity.
Gets the suggested audio stream whose volume should be changed by the hardware volume controls.
Retrieve the current Window for the activity.
 This can be used to directly access parts of the Window API that
 are not available through Activity/Screen.
Retrieve the window manager for showing custom windows.
Returns true if this activity's main window currently has window focus. Note that this is not the same as the view itself having focus.
Declare that the options menu has changed, so should be recreated.
 The onCreateOptionsMenu(Menu) method will be called the next
 time it needs to be displayed.
Check to see whether this activity is in the process of being destroyed in order to be
 recreated with a new configuration. This is often used in
 onStop() to determine whether the state needs to be cleaned up or will be passed
 on to the next instance of the activity via onRetainNonConfigurationInstance().
Is this activity embedded inside of another activity?
Returns true if the final onDestroy() call has been made
 on the Activity, so this instance is now dead.
Check to see whether this activity is in the process of finishing,
 either because you called finish() on it or someone else
 has requested that it finished.  This is often used in
 onPause() to determine whether the activity is simply pausing or
 completely finishing.
Bit indicating that this activity is "immersive" and should not be
 interrupted by notifications if possible.
 This value is initially set by the manifest property
 android:immersive but may be changed at runtime by
 setImmersive(boolean).
Return whether this activity is the root of a task. The root is the first activity in a task.
Check whether this activity is running as part of a voice interaction with the user.
 If true, it should perform its interaction with the user through the
 VoiceInteractor returned by getVoiceInteractor().
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 11.
    Use CursorLoader instead.
  
Wrapper around
 query(android.net.Uri, String[], String, String[], String)
 that gives the resulting Cursor to call
 startManagingCursor(Cursor) so that the activity will manage its
 lifecycle for you.
 
 If you are targeting HONEYCOMB
 or later, consider instead using LoaderManager instead, available
 via getLoaderManager().
 
Warning: Do not call close() on a cursor obtained using
 this method, because the activity will do that for you at the appropriate time. However, if
 you call stopManagingCursor(Cursor) on a cursor from a managed query, the system will
 not automatically close the cursor and, in that case, you must call
 close().
| uri | The URI of the content provider to query. | 
|---|---|
| projection | List of columns to return. | 
| selection | SQL WHERE clause. | 
| selectionArgs | The arguments to selection, if any ?s are pesent | 
| sortOrder | SQL ORDER BY clause. | 
Move the task containing this activity to the back of the activity stack. The activity's order within the task is unchanged.
| nonRoot | If false then this only works if the activity is the root of a task; if true it will work for any activity in a task. | 
|---|
Navigate from this activity to the activity specified by upIntent, finishing this activity in the process. If the activity indicated by upIntent already exists in the task's history, this activity and all others before the indicated activity in the history stack will be finished.
If the indicated activity does not appear in the history stack, this will finish each activity in this task until the root activity of the task is reached, resulting in an "in-app home" behavior. This can be useful in apps with a complex navigation hierarchy when an activity may be reached by a path not passing through a canonical parent activity.
This method should be used when performing up navigation from within the same task
 as the destination. If up navigation should cross tasks in some cases, see
 shouldUpRecreateTask(Intent).
| upIntent | An intent representing the target destination for up navigation | 
|---|
This is called when a child activity of this one calls its
 navigateUpTo(Intent) method.  The default implementation simply calls
 navigateUpTo(upIntent) on this activity (the parent).
| child | The activity making the call. | 
|---|---|
| upIntent | An intent representing the target destination for up navigation | 
Notifies the activity that an action mode has finished. Activity subclasses overriding this method should call the superclass implementation.
| mode | The action mode that just finished. | 
|---|
Notifies the Activity that an action mode has been started. Activity subclasses overriding this method should call the superclass implementation.
| mode | The new action mode. | 
|---|
Called when a Fragment is being attached to this activity, immediately
 after the call to its Fragment.onAttach()
 method and before Fragment.onCreate().
Called when the main window associated with the activity has been
 attached to the window manager.
 See View.onAttachedToWindow()
 for more information.
Called when the activity has detected the user's press of the back key. The default implementation simply finishes the current activity, but you can override this to do whatever you want.
Called by the system when the device configuration changes while your
 activity is running.  Note that this will only be called if
 you have selected configurations you would like to handle with the
 configChanges attribute in your manifest.  If
 any configuration change occurs that is not selected to be reported
 by that attribute, then instead of reporting it the system will stop
 and restart the activity (to have it launched with the new
 configuration).
 
 
At the time that this function has been called, your Resources object will have been updated to return resource values matching the new configuration.
| newConfig | The new device configuration. | 
|---|
This hook is called whenever the content view of the screen changes
 (due to a call to
 Window.setContentView or
 Window.addContentView).
This hook is called whenever an item in a context menu is selected. The default implementation simply returns false to have the normal processing happen (calling the item's Runnable or sending a message to its Handler as appropriate). You can use this method for any items for which you would like to do processing without those other facilities.
 Use getMenuInfo() to get extra information set by the
 View that added this menu item.
 
Derived classes should call through to the base class for it to perform the default menu handling.
| item | The context menu item that was selected. | 
|---|
This hook is called whenever the context menu is being closed (either by the user canceling the menu with the back/menu button, or when an item is selected).
| menu | The context menu that is being closed. | 
|---|
Called when a context menu for the view is about to be shown.
 Unlike onCreateOptionsMenu(Menu), this will be called every
 time the context menu is about to be shown and should be populated for
 the view (or item inside the view for AdapterView subclasses,
 this can be found in the menuInfo)).
 
 Use onContextItemSelected(android.view.MenuItem) to know when an
 item has been selected.
 
It is not safe to hold onto the context menu after this method returns.
| menu | The context menu that is being built | 
|---|---|
| v | The view for which the context menu is being built | 
| menuInfo | Extra information about the item for which the context menu should be shown. This information will vary depending on the class of v. | 
Generate a new description for this activity. This method is called before pausing the activity and can, if desired, return some textual description of its current state to be displayed to the user.
The default implementation returns null, which will cause you to inherit the description from the previous activity. If all activities return null, generally the label of the top activity will be used as the description.
Define the synthetic task stack that will be generated during Up navigation from a different task.
The default implementation of this method adds the parent chain of this activity
 as specified in the manifest to the supplied TaskStackBuilder. Applications
 may choose to override this method to construct the desired task stack in a different
 way.
This method will be invoked by the default implementation of onNavigateUp()
 if shouldUpRecreateTask(Intent) returns true when supplied with the intent
 returned by getParentActivityIntent().
Applications that wish to supply extra Intent parameters to the parent stack defined
 by the manifest should override onPrepareNavigateUpTaskStack(TaskStackBuilder).
| builder | An empty TaskStackBuilder - the application should add intents representing the desired task stack | 
|---|
Initialize the contents of the Activity's standard options menu. You should place your menu items in to menu.
This is only called once, the first time the options menu is
 displayed.  To update the menu every time it is displayed, see
 onPrepareOptionsMenu(Menu).
 
 
The default implementation populates the menu with standard system
 menu items.  These are placed in the CATEGORY_SYSTEM group so that 
 they will be correctly ordered with application-defined menu items. 
 Deriving classes should always call through to the base implementation. 
 
 
You can safely hold on to menu (and any items created from it), making modifications to it as desired, until the next time onCreateOptionsMenu() is called.
When you add items to the menu, you can implement the Activity's
 onOptionsItemSelected(MenuItem) method to handle them there.
| menu | The options menu in which you place your items. | 
|---|
Default implementation of
 onCreatePanelMenu(int, Menu)
 for activities.  This calls through to the new
 onCreateOptionsMenu(Menu) method for the
 FEATURE_OPTIONS_PANEL panel,
 so that subclasses of Activity don't need to deal with feature codes.
| featureId | The panel being created. | 
|---|---|
| menu | The menu inside the panel. | 
Default implementation of
 onCreatePanelView(int)
 for activities. This
 simply returns null so that all panel sub-windows will have the default
 menu behavior.
| featureId | Which panel is being created. | 
|---|
Generate a new thumbnail for this activity. This method is called before pausing the activity, and should draw into outBitmap the imagery for the desired thumbnail in the dimensions of that bitmap. It can use the given canvas, which is configured to draw into the bitmap, for rendering if desired.
The default implementation returns fails and does not draw a thumbnail; this will result in the platform creating its own thumbnail if needed.
| outBitmap | The bitmap to contain the thumbnail. | 
|---|---|
| canvas | Can be used to render into the bitmap. | 
Standard implementation of
 onCreateView(View, String, Context, AttributeSet)
 used when inflating with the LayoutInflater returned by getSystemService(String).
 This implementation handles 
| parent | The parent that the created view will be placed in; note that this may be null. | 
|---|---|
| name | Tag name to be inflated. | 
| context | The context the view is being created in. | 
| attrs | Inflation attributes as specified in XML file. | 
Standard implementation of
 onCreateView(String, Context, AttributeSet) used when
 inflating with the LayoutInflater returned by getSystemService(String).
 This implementation does nothing and is for
 pre-HONEYCOMB apps.  Newer apps
 should use onCreateView(View, String, Context, AttributeSet).
| name | Tag name to be inflated. | 
|---|---|
| context | The context the view is being created in. | 
| attrs | Inflation attributes as specified in XML file. | 
Called when the main window associated with the activity has been
 detached from the window manager.
 See View.onDetachedFromWindow()
 for more information.
Called when a generic motion event was not handled by any of the views inside of the activity.
 Generic motion events describe joystick movements, mouse hovers, track pad
 touches, scroll wheel movements and other input events.  The
 source of the motion event specifies
 the class of input that was received.  Implementations of this method
 must examine the bits in the source before processing the event.
 The following code example shows how this is done.
 
 Generic motion events with source class
 SOURCE_CLASS_POINTER
 are delivered to the view under the pointer.  All other generic motion events are
 delivered to the focused view.
 
 See onGenericMotionEvent(MotionEvent) for an example of how to
 handle this event.
 
| event | The generic motion event being processed. | 
|---|
Called when a key was pressed down and not handled by any of the views inside of the activity. So, for example, key presses while the cursor is inside a TextView will not trigger the event (unless it is a navigation to another object) because TextView handles its own key presses.
If the focused view didn't want this event, this method is called.
The default implementation takes care of KEYCODE_BACK
 by calling onBackPressed(), though the behavior varies based
 on the application compatibility mode: for
 ECLAIR or later applications,
 it will set up the dispatch to call onKeyUp(int, KeyEvent) where the action
 will be performed; for earlier applications, it will perform the
 action immediately in on-down, as those versions of the platform
 behaved.
 
 
Other additional default key handling may be performed
 if configured with setDefaultKeyMode(int).
| keyCode | The value in event.getKeyCode(). | 
|---|---|
| event | Description of the key event. | 
true to prevent this event from being propagated
 further, or false to indicate that you have not handled 
 this event and it should continue to be propagated.Default implementation of KeyEvent.Callback.onKeyLongPress(): always returns false (doesn't handle
 the event).
| keyCode | The value in event.getKeyCode(). | 
|---|---|
| event | Description of the key event. | 
Default implementation of KeyEvent.Callback.onKeyMultiple(): always returns false (doesn't handle
 the event).
| keyCode | The value in event.getKeyCode(). | 
|---|---|
| repeatCount | Number of pairs as returned by event.getRepeatCount(). | 
| event | Description of the key event. | 
Called when a key shortcut event is not handled by any of the views in the Activity.
 Override this method to implement global key shortcuts for the Activity.
 Key shortcuts can also be implemented by setting the
 shortcut property of menu items.
| keyCode | The value in event.getKeyCode(). | 
|---|---|
| event | Description of the key event. | 
Called when a key was released and not handled by any of the views inside of the activity. So, for example, key presses while the cursor is inside a TextView will not trigger the event (unless it is a navigation to another object) because TextView handles its own key presses.
The default implementation handles KEYCODE_BACK to stop the activity and go back.
| keyCode | The value in event.getKeyCode(). | 
|---|---|
| event | Description of the key event. | 
true to prevent this event from being propagated
 further, or false to indicate that you have not handled 
 this event and it should continue to be propagated.This is called when the overall system is running low on memory, and actively running processes should trim their memory usage. While the exact point at which this will be called is not defined, generally it will happen when all background process have been killed. That is, before reaching the point of killing processes hosting service and foreground UI that we would like to avoid killing.
You should implement this method to release any caches or other unnecessary resources you may be holding on to. The system will perform a garbage collection for you after returning from this method.
Preferably, you should implement onTrimMemory(int) from
 ComponentCallbacks2 to incrementally unload your resources based on various
 levels of memory demands.  That API is available for API level 14 and higher, so you should
 only use this onLowMemory() method as a fallback for older versions, which can be
 treated the same as onTrimMemory(int) with the TRIM_MEMORY_COMPLETE level.
Default implementation of
 onMenuItemSelected(int, MenuItem)
 for activities.  This calls through to the new
 onOptionsItemSelected(MenuItem) method for the
 FEATURE_OPTIONS_PANEL
 panel, so that subclasses of
 Activity don't need to deal with feature codes.
| featureId | The panel that the menu is in. | 
|---|---|
| item | The menu item that was selected. | 
Called when a panel's menu is opened by the user. This may also be called when the menu is changing from one type to another (for example, from the icon menu to the expanded menu).
| featureId | The panel that the menu is in. | 
|---|---|
| menu | The menu that is opened. | 
This method is called whenever the user chooses to navigate Up within your application's activity hierarchy from the action bar.
If the attribute parentActivityName
 was specified in the manifest for this activity or an activity-alias to it,
 default Up navigation will be handled automatically. If any activity
 along the parent chain requires extra Intent arguments, the Activity subclass
 should override the method onPrepareNavigateUpTaskStack(TaskStackBuilder)
 to supply those arguments.
See Tasks and Back Stack from the developer guide and Navigation from the design guide for more information about navigating within your app.
See the TaskStackBuilder class and the Activity methods
 getParentActivityIntent(), shouldUpRecreateTask(Intent), and
 navigateUpTo(Intent) for help implementing custom Up navigation.
 The AppNavigation sample application in the Android SDK is also available for reference.
This is called when a child activity of this one attempts to navigate up. The default implementation simply calls onNavigateUp() on this activity (the parent).
| child | The activity making the call. | 
|---|
This hook is called whenever an item in your options menu is selected. The default implementation simply returns false to have the normal processing happen (calling the item's Runnable or sending a message to its Handler as appropriate). You can use this method for any items for which you would like to do processing without those other facilities.
Derived classes should call through to the base class for it to perform the default menu handling.
| item | The menu item that was selected. | 
|---|
This hook is called whenever the options menu is being closed (either by the user canceling the menu with the back/menu button, or when an item is selected).
| menu | The options menu as last shown or first initialized by onCreateOptionsMenu(). | 
|---|
Default implementation of
 onPanelClosed(int, Menu) for
 activities. This calls through to onOptionsMenuClosed(Menu)
 method for the FEATURE_OPTIONS_PANEL panel,
 so that subclasses of Activity don't need to deal with feature codes.
 For context menus (FEATURE_CONTEXT_MENU), the
 onContextMenuClosed(Menu) will be called.
| featureId | The panel that is being displayed. | 
|---|---|
| menu | If onCreatePanelView() returned null, this is the Menu being displayed in the panel. | 
Prepare the synthetic task stack that will be generated during Up navigation from a different task.
This method receives the TaskStackBuilder with the constructed series of
 Intents as generated by onCreateNavigateUpTaskStack(TaskStackBuilder).
 If any extra data should be added to these intents before launching the new task,
 the application should override this method and add that data here.
| builder | A TaskStackBuilder that has been populated with Intents by onCreateNavigateUpTaskStack. | 
|---|
Prepare the Screen's standard options menu to be displayed. This is called right before the menu is shown, every time it is shown. You can use this method to efficiently enable/disable items or otherwise dynamically modify the contents.
The default implementation updates the system menu items based on the activity's state. Deriving classes should always call through to the base class implementation.
| menu | The options menu as last shown or first initialized by onCreateOptionsMenu(). | 
|---|
Default implementation of
 onPreparePanel(int, View, Menu)
 for activities.  This
 calls through to the new onPrepareOptionsMenu(Menu) method for the
 FEATURE_OPTIONS_PANEL
 panel, so that subclasses of
 Activity don't need to deal with feature codes.
| featureId | The panel that is being displayed. | 
|---|---|
| view | The View that was returned by onCreatePanelView(). | 
| menu | If onCreatePanelView() returned null, this is the Menu being displayed in the panel. | 
This is called when the user is requesting an assist, to build a full
 ACTION_ASSIST Intent with all of the context of the current
 application.  You can override this method to place into the bundle anything
 you would like to appear in the EXTRA_ASSIST_CONTEXT part
 of the assist Intent.  The default implementation does nothing.
 
This function will be called after any global assist callbacks that had
 been registered with Application.registerOnProvideAssistDataListener.
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new Fragment API
 setRetainInstance(boolean) instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package.
  
Called by the system, as part of destroying an
 activity due to a configuration change, when it is known that a new
 instance will immediately be created for the new configuration.  You
 can return any object you like here, including the activity instance
 itself, which can later be retrieved by calling
 getLastNonConfigurationInstance() in the new activity
 instance.
 
 If you are targeting HONEYCOMB
 or later, consider instead using a Fragment with
 Fragment.setRetainInstance(boolean.
 
This function is called purely as an optimization, and you must not rely on it being called. When it is called, a number of guarantees will be made to help optimize configuration switching:
onStop() and
 onDestroy().
 onDestroy() is called.  In particular,
 no messages will be dispatched during this time (when the returned
 object does not have an activity to be associated with).
 getLastNonConfigurationInstance() method of the following
 activity instance as described there.
 These guarantees are designed so that an activity can use this API to propagate extensive state from the old to new activity instance, from loaded bitmaps, to network connections, to evenly actively running threads. Note that you should not propagate any data that may change based on the configuration, including any data loaded from resources such as strings, layouts, or drawables.
The guarantee of no message handling during the switch to the next
 activity simplifies use with active objects.  For example if your retained
 state is an AsyncTask you are guaranteed that its
 call back functions (like onPostExecute(Result)) will
 not be called from the call here until you execute the next instance's
 onCreate(Bundle).  (Note however that there is of course no such
 guarantee for doInBackground(Params...) since that is
 running in a separate thread.)
This hook is called when the user signals the desire to start a search.
You can use this function as a simple way to launch the search UI, in response to a
 menu item, search button, or other widgets within your activity. Unless overidden, 
 calling this function is the same as calling
 startSearch(null, false, null, false), which launches
 search for the current activity as specified in its manifest, see SearchManager.
 
 
You can override this function to force global search, e.g. in response to a dedicated search key, or to block search entirely (by simply returning false).
true if search launched, and false if activity blocks it.
         The default implementation always returns true.Called when a touch screen event was not handled by any of the views under it. This is most useful to process touch events that happen outside of your window bounds, where there is no view to receive it.
| event | The touch screen event being processed. | 
|---|
Called when the trackball was moved and not handled by any of the views inside of the activity. So, for example, if the trackball moves while focus is on a button, you will receive a call here because buttons do not normally do anything with trackball events. The call here happens before trackball movements are converted to DPAD key events, which then get sent back to the view hierarchy, and will be processed at the point for things like focus navigation.
| event | The trackball event being processed. | 
|---|
Called when the operating system has determined that it is a good time for a process to trim unneeded memory from its process. This will happen for example when it goes in the background and there is not enough memory to keep as many background processes running as desired. You should never compare to exact values of the level, since new intermediate values may be added -- you will typically want to compare if the value is greater or equal to a level you are interested in.
To retrieve the processes current trim level at any point, you can
 use ActivityManager.getMyMemoryState(RunningAppProcessInfo).
| level | The context of the trim, giving a hint of the amount of
 trimming the application may like to perform.  May be TRIM_MEMORY_COMPLETE,TRIM_MEMORY_MODERATE,TRIM_MEMORY_BACKGROUND,TRIM_MEMORY_UI_HIDDEN,TRIM_MEMORY_RUNNING_CRITICAL,TRIM_MEMORY_RUNNING_LOW,
 orTRIM_MEMORY_RUNNING_MODERATE. | 
|---|
Called whenever a key, touch, or trackball event is dispatched to the
 activity.  Implement this method if you wish to know that the user has
 interacted with the device in some way while your activity is running.
 This callback and onUserLeaveHint() are intended to help
 activities manage status bar notifications intelligently; specifically,
 for helping activities determine the proper time to cancel a notfication.
 
 
All calls to your activity's onUserLeaveHint() callback will
 be accompanied by calls to onUserInteraction().  This
 ensures that your activity will be told of relevant user activity such
 as pulling down the notification pane and touching an item there.
 
 
Note that this callback will be invoked for the touch down action that begins a touch gesture, but may not be invoked for the touch-moved and touch-up actions that follow.
This is called whenever the current window attributes change.
Called when a window is dismissed. This informs the callback that the window is gone, and it should finish itself.
Called when the current Window of the activity gains or loses
 focus.  This is the best indicator of whether this activity is visible
 to the user.  The default implementation clears the key tracking
 state, so should always be called.
 
 
Note that this provides information about global focus state, which
 is managed independently of activity lifecycles.  As such, while focus
 changes will generally have some relation to lifecycle changes (an
 activity that is stopped will not generally get window focus), you
 should not rely on any particular order between the callbacks here and
 those in the other lifecycle methods such as onResume().
 
 
As a general rule, however, a resumed activity will have window focus... unless it has displayed other dialogs or popups that take input focus, in which case the activity itself will not have focus when the other windows have it. Likewise, the system may display system-level windows (such as the status bar notification panel or a system alert) which will temporarily take window input focus without pausing the foreground activity.
| hasFocus | Whether the window of this activity has focus. | 
|---|
Give the Activity a chance to control the UI for an action mode requested by the system.
Note: If you are looking for a notification callback that an action mode
 has been started for this activity, see onActionModeStarted(ActionMode).
| callback | The callback that should control the new action mode | 
|---|
null if the activity does not want to
         provide special handling for this action mode. (It will be handled by the system.)
Programmatically opens the context menu for a particular view.
 The view should have been added via
 registerForContextMenu(View).
| view | The view to show the context menu for. | 
|---|
Programmatically opens the options menu. If the options menu is already open, this method does nothing.
Call immediately after one of the flavors of startActivity(Intent)
 or finish() to specify an explicit transition animation to
 perform next.
 
As of JELLY_BEAN an alternative
 to using this with starting activities is to supply the desired animation
 information through a ActivityOptions bundle to
 {@link #startActivity(Intent, Bundle) or a related function.  This allows
 you to specify a custom animation even when starting an activity from
 outside the context of the current top activity.
| enterAnim | A resource ID of the animation resource to use for the incoming activity. Use 0 for no animation. | 
|---|---|
| exitAnim | A resource ID of the animation resource to use for the outgoing activity. Use 0 for no animation. | 
Postpone the entering activity transition when Activity was started with
 makeSceneTransitionAnimation(Activity, android.util.Pair[]).
 
This method gives the Activity the ability to delay starting the entering and
 shared element transitions until all data is loaded. Until then, the Activity won't
 draw into its window, leaving the window transparent. This may also cause the
 returning animation to be delayed until data is ready. This method should be
 called in onCreate(android.os.Bundle) or in
 onActivityReenter(int, android.content.Intent).
 startPostponedEnterTransition() must be called to allow the Activity to
 start the transitions. If the Activity did not use
 makeSceneTransitionAnimation(Activity, android.util.Pair[]), then this method does nothing.
Cause this Activity to be recreated with a new instance.  This results
 in essentially the same flow as when the Activity is created due to
 a configuration change -- the current instance will go through its
 lifecycle to onDestroy() and a new instance then created after it.
Registers a context menu to be shown for the given view (multiple views
 can show the context menu). This method will set the
 View.OnCreateContextMenuListener on the view to this activity, so
 onCreateContextMenu(ContextMenu, View, ContextMenuInfo) will be
 called when it is time to show the context menu.
| view | The view that should show a context menu. | 
|---|
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new DialogFragment class with
 FragmentManager instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package.
  
Removes any internal references to a dialog managed by this Activity. If the dialog is showing, it will dismiss it as part of the clean up.
This can be useful if you know that you will never show a dialog again and want to avoid the overhead of saving and restoring it in the future.
As of GINGERBREAD, this function
 will not throw an exception if you try to remove an ID that does not
 currently have an associated dialog.
| id | The id of the managed dialog. | 
|---|
Report to the system that your app is now fully drawn, purely for diagnostic
 purposes (calling it does not impact the visible behavior of the activity).
 This is only used to help instrument application launch times, so that the
 app can report when it is fully in a usable state; without this, the only thing
 the system itself can determine is the point at which the activity's window
 is first drawn and displayed.  To participate in app launch time
 measurement, you should always call this method after first launch (when
 onCreate(android.os.Bundle) is called), at the point where you have
 entirely drawn your UI and populated with all of the significant data.  You
 can safely call this method any time after first launch as well, in which case
 it will simply be ignored.
Enable extended window features.  This is a convenience for calling
 getWindow().requestFeature().
| featureId | The desired feature as defined in Window. | 
|---|
Runs the specified action on the UI thread. If the current thread is the UI thread, then the action is executed immediately. If the current thread is not the UI thread, the action is posted to the event queue of the UI thread.
| action | the action to run on the UI thread | 
|---|
Set a Toolbar to act as the ActionBar for this
 Activity window.
 
When set to a non-null value the getActionBar() method will return
 an ActionBar object that can be used to control the given toolbar as if it were
 a traditional window decor action bar. The toolbar's menu will be populated with the
 Activity's options menu and the navigation button will be wired through the standard
 home menu select action.
In order to use a Toolbar within the Activity's window content the application
 must not request the window feature FEATURE_ACTION_BAR.
| toolbar | Toolbar to set as the Activity's action bar | 
|---|
Set the TransitionManager to use for default transitions in this window.
 Requires FEATURE_CONTENT_TRANSITIONS.
| tm | The TransitionManager to use for scene changes. | 
|---|
Set the activity content to an explicit view.  This view is placed
 directly into the activity's view hierarchy.  It can itself be a complex
 view hierarchy.  When calling this method, the layout parameters of the
 specified view are ignored.  Both the width and the height of the view are
 set by default to MATCH_PARENT. To use
 your own layout parameters, invoke
 setContentView(android.view.View, android.view.ViewGroup.LayoutParams)
 instead.
| view | The desired content to display. | 
|---|
Set the activity content from a layout resource. The resource will be inflated, adding all top-level views to the activity.
| layoutResID | Resource ID to be inflated. | 
|---|
Set the activity content to an explicit view. This view is placed directly into the activity's view hierarchy. It can itself be a complex view hierarchy.
| view | The desired content to display. | 
|---|---|
| params | Layout parameters for the view. | 
Select the default key handling for this activity.  This controls what
 will happen to key events that are not otherwise handled.  The default
 mode (DEFAULT_KEYS_DISABLE) will simply drop them on the
 floor. Other modes allow you to launch the dialer
 (DEFAULT_KEYS_DIALER), execute a shortcut in your options
 menu without requiring the menu key be held down
 (DEFAULT_KEYS_SHORTCUT), or launch a search (DEFAULT_KEYS_SEARCH_LOCAL 
 and DEFAULT_KEYS_SEARCH_GLOBAL).
 
 
Note that the mode selected here does not impact the default handling of system keys, such as the "back" and "menu" keys, and your activity and its views always get a first chance to receive and handle all application keys.
| mode | The desired default key mode constant. | 
|---|
When makeSceneTransitionAnimation(Activity, android.view.View, String) was used to start an Activity, listener
 will be called to handle shared elements on the launched Activity. This requires
 FEATURE_CONTENT_TRANSITIONS.
| listener | Used to manipulate shared element transitions on the launched Activity. | 
|---|
When makeSceneTransitionAnimation(Activity, android.view.View, String) was used to start an Activity, listener
 will be called to handle shared elements on the launching Activity. Most
 calls will only come when returning from the started Activity.
 This requires FEATURE_CONTENT_TRANSITIONS.
| listener | Used to manipulate shared element transitions on the launching Activity. | 
|---|
Convenience for calling
 setFeatureDrawable(int, Drawable).
Convenience for calling
 setFeatureDrawableAlpha(int, int).
Convenience for calling
 setFeatureDrawableResource(int, int).
Convenience for calling
 setFeatureDrawableUri(int, Uri).
Sets whether this activity is finished when touched outside its window's bounds.
Adjust the current immersive mode setting.
 Note that changing this value will have no effect on the activity's
 ActivityInfo structure; that is, if
 android:immersive is set to true
 in the application's manifest entry for this activity, the ActivityInfo.flags member will
 always have its FLAG_IMMERSIVE bit set.
Change the intent returned by getIntent().  This holds a 
 reference to the given intent; it does not copy it.  Often used in 
 conjunction with onNewIntent(Intent).
| newIntent | The new Intent object to return from getIntent | 
|---|
Sets the progress for the progress bars in the title.
 In order for the progress bar to be shown, the feature must be requested
 via requestWindowFeature(int).
| progress | The progress for the progress bar. Valid ranges are from 0 to 10000 (both inclusive). If 10000 is given, the progress bar will be completely filled and will fade out. | 
|---|
Sets whether the horizontal progress bar in the title should be indeterminate (the circular is always indeterminate).
 In order for the progress bar to be shown, the feature must be requested
 via requestWindowFeature(int).
| indeterminate | Whether the horizontal progress bar should be indeterminate. | 
|---|
Sets the visibility of the indeterminate progress bar in the title.
 In order for the progress bar to be shown, the feature must be requested
 via requestWindowFeature(int).
| visible | Whether to show the progress bars in the title. | 
|---|
Sets the visibility of the progress bar in the title.
 In order for the progress bar to be shown, the feature must be requested
 via requestWindowFeature(int).
| visible | Whether to show the progress bars in the title. | 
|---|
Change the desired orientation of this activity. If the activity is currently in the foreground or otherwise impacting the screen orientation, the screen will immediately be changed (possibly causing the activity to be restarted). Otherwise, this will be used the next time the activity is visible.
| requestedOrientation | An orientation constant as used in ActivityInfo.screenOrientation. | 
|---|
Call this to set the result that your activity will return to its caller.
| resultCode | The result code to propagate back to the originating activity, often RESULT_CANCELED or RESULT_OK | 
|---|
Call this to set the result that your activity will return to its caller.
As of GINGERBREAD, the Intent
 you supply here can have Intent.FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION and/or Intent.FLAG_GRANT_WRITE_URI_PERMISSION set.  This will grant the
 Activity receiving the result access to the specific URIs in the Intent.
 Access will remain until the Activity has finished (it will remain across the hosting
 process being killed and other temporary destruction) and will be added
 to any existing set of URI permissions it already holds.
| resultCode | The result code to propagate back to the originating activity, often RESULT_CANCELED or RESULT_OK | 
|---|---|
| data | The data to propagate back to the originating activity. | 
Sets the secondary progress for the progress bar in the title. This
 progress is drawn between the primary progress (set via
 setProgress(int) and the background. It can be ideal for media
 scenarios such as showing the buffering progress while the default
 progress shows the play progress.
 
 In order for the progress bar to be shown, the feature must be requested
 via requestWindowFeature(int).
| secondaryProgress | The secondary progress for the progress bar. Valid ranges are from 0 to 10000 (both inclusive). | 
|---|
Sets information describing the task with this activity for presentation inside the Recents
 System UI. When getRecentTasks(int, int) is called, the activities of each task
 are traversed in order from the topmost activity to the bottommost. The traversal continues
 for each property until a suitable value is found. For each task the taskDescription will be
 returned in ActivityManager.TaskDescription.
| taskDescription | The TaskDescription properties that describe the task with this activity | 
|---|
Change the title associated with this activity. If this is a top-level activity, the title for its window will change. If it is an embedded activity, the parent can do whatever it wants with it.
Change the title associated with this activity. If this is a top-level activity, the title for its window will change. If it is an embedded activity, the parent can do whatever it wants with it.
      This method is deprecated.
    Use action bar styles instead.
  
Change the color of the title associated with this activity.
This method is deprecated starting in API Level 11 and replaced by action bar styles. For information on styling the Action Bar, read the Action Bar developer guide.
Control whether this activity's main window is visible. This is intended only for the special case of an activity that is not going to show a UI itself, but can't just finish prior to onResume() because it needs to wait for a service binding or such. Setting this to false allows you to prevent your UI from being shown during that time.
The default value for this is taken from the
 windowNoDisplay attribute of the activity's theme.
Suggests an audio stream whose volume should be changed by the hardware volume controls.
The suggested audio stream will be tied to the window of this Activity. If the Activity is switched, the stream set here is no longer the suggested stream. The client does not need to save and restore the old suggested stream value in onPause and onResume.
| streamType | The type of the audio stream whose volume should be
        changed by the hardware volume controls. It is not guaranteed that
        the hardware volume controls will always change this stream's
        volume (for example, if a call is in progress, its stream's volume
        may be changed instead). To reset back to the default, use USE_DEFAULT_STREAM_TYPE. | 
|---|
Returns true if the app should recreate the task when navigating 'up' from this activity by using targetIntent.
If this method returns false the app can trivially call
 navigateUpTo(Intent) using the same parameters to correctly perform
 up navigation. If this method returns false, the app should synthesize a new task stack
 by using TaskStackBuilder or another similar mechanism to perform up navigation.
| targetIntent | An intent representing the target destination for up navigation | 
|---|
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new DialogFragment class with
 FragmentManager instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package.
  
Show a dialog managed by this activity.  A call to onCreateDialog(int, Bundle)
 will be made with the same id the first time this is called for a given
 id.  From thereafter, the dialog will be automatically saved and restored.
 If you are targeting HONEYCOMB
 or later, consider instead using a DialogFragment instead.
 
Each time a dialog is shown, onPrepareDialog(int, Dialog, Bundle) will
 be made to provide an opportunity to do any timely preparation.
| id | The id of the managed dialog. | 
|---|---|
| args | Arguments to pass through to the dialog.  These will be saved
 and restored for you.  Note that if the dialog is already created, onCreateDialog(int, Bundle)will not be called with the new
 arguments butonPrepareDialog(int, Dialog, Bundle)will be.
 If you need to rebuild the dialog, callremoveDialog(int)first. | 
onCreateDialog(int, Bundle) returns false.
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new DialogFragment class with
 FragmentManager instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package.
  
Simple version of showDialog(int, Bundle) that does not
 take any arguments.  Simply calls showDialog(int, Bundle)
 with null arguments.
Start an action mode.
| callback | Callback that will manage lifecycle events for this context mode | 
|---|
Launch a new activity.  You will not receive any information about when
 the activity exits.  This implementation overrides the base version,
 providing information about
 the activity performing the launch.  Because of this additional
 information, the FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK launch flag is not
 required; if not specified, the new activity will be added to the
 task of the caller.
 
This method throws ActivityNotFoundException
 if there was no Activity found to run the given Intent.
| intents | The intents to start. | 
|---|---|
| options | Additional options for how the Activity should be started.
 See Context.startActivity(Intent, Bundle)for more details. | 
| android.content.ActivityNotFoundException | 
Same as startActivities(Intent[], Bundle) with no options
 specified.
| intents | The intents to start. | 
|---|
| android.content.ActivityNotFoundException | 
Launch a new activity.  You will not receive any information about when
 the activity exits.  This implementation overrides the base version,
 providing information about
 the activity performing the launch.  Because of this additional
 information, the FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK launch flag is not
 required; if not specified, the new activity will be added to the
 task of the caller.
 
 
This method throws ActivityNotFoundException
 if there was no Activity found to run the given Intent.
| intent | The intent to start. | 
|---|---|
| options | Additional options for how the Activity should be started.
 See Context.startActivity(Intent, Bundle)for more details. | 
| android.content.ActivityNotFoundException | 
Same as startActivity(Intent, Bundle) with no options
 specified.
| intent | The intent to start. | 
|---|
| android.content.ActivityNotFoundException | 
Same as calling startActivityForResult(Intent, int, Bundle)
 with no options.
| intent | The intent to start. | 
|---|---|
| requestCode | If >= 0, this code will be returned in onActivityResult() when the activity exits. | 
| android.content.ActivityNotFoundException | 
Launch an activity for which you would like a result when it finished.
 When this activity exits, your
 onActivityResult() method will be called with the given requestCode.
 Using a negative requestCode is the same as calling 
 startActivity(Intent) (the activity is not launched as a sub-activity).
 
Note that this method should only be used with Intent protocols
 that are defined to return a result.  In other protocols (such as
 ACTION_MAIN or ACTION_VIEW), you may
 not get the result when you expect.  For example, if the activity you
 are launching uses the singleTask launch mode, it will not run in your
 task and thus you will immediately receive a cancel result.
 
As a special case, if you call startActivityForResult() with a requestCode >= 0 during the initial onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState)/onResume() of your activity, then your window will not be displayed until a result is returned back from the started activity. This is to avoid visible flickering when redirecting to another activity.
This method throws ActivityNotFoundException
 if there was no Activity found to run the given Intent.
| intent | The intent to start. | 
|---|---|
| requestCode | If >= 0, this code will be returned in onActivityResult() when the activity exits. | 
| options | Additional options for how the Activity should be started.
 See Context.startActivity(Intent, Bundle)for more details. | 
| android.content.ActivityNotFoundException | 
This is called when a child activity of this one calls its 
 startActivity(Intent) or startActivityForResult(Intent, int) method.
 
 
This method throws ActivityNotFoundException
 if there was no Activity found to run the given Intent.
| child | The activity making the call. | 
|---|---|
| intent | The intent to start. | 
| requestCode | Reply request code. < 0 if reply is not requested. | 
| options | Additional options for how the Activity should be started.
 See Context.startActivity(Intent, Bundle)for more details. | 
| android.content.ActivityNotFoundException | 
Same as calling startActivityFromChild(Activity, Intent, int, Bundle)
 with no options.
| child | The activity making the call. | 
|---|---|
| intent | The intent to start. | 
| requestCode | Reply request code. < 0 if reply is not requested. | 
| android.content.ActivityNotFoundException | 
This is called when a Fragment in this activity calls its 
 startActivity(Intent) or startActivityForResult(Intent, int)
 method.
 
 
This method throws ActivityNotFoundException
 if there was no Activity found to run the given Intent.
| fragment | The fragment making the call. | 
|---|---|
| intent | The intent to start. | 
| requestCode | Reply request code. < 0 if reply is not requested. | 
| options | Additional options for how the Activity should be started.
 See Context.startActivity(Intent, Bundle)for more details. | 
| android.content.ActivityNotFoundException | 
Same as calling startActivityFromFragment(Fragment, Intent, int, Bundle)
 with no options.
| fragment | The fragment making the call. | 
|---|---|
| intent | The intent to start. | 
| requestCode | Reply request code. < 0 if reply is not requested. | 
| android.content.ActivityNotFoundException | 
A special variation to launch an activity only if a new activity
 instance is needed to handle the given Intent.  In other words, this is
 just like startActivityForResult(Intent, int) except: if you are 
 using the FLAG_ACTIVITY_SINGLE_TOP flag, or
 singleTask or singleTop 
 launchMode,
 and the activity 
 that handles intent is the same as your currently running 
 activity, then a new instance is not needed.  In this case, instead of 
 the normal behavior of calling onNewIntent(Intent) this function will 
 return and you can handle the Intent yourself. 
 
 
This function can only be called from a top-level activity; if it is called from a child activity, a runtime exception will be thrown.
| intent | The intent to start. | 
|---|---|
| requestCode | If >= 0, this code will be returned in
         onActivityResult() when the activity exits, as described in startActivityForResult(Intent, int). | 
| options | Additional options for how the Activity should be started.
 See Context.startActivity(Intent, Bundle)for more details. | 
Same as calling startActivityIfNeeded(Intent, int, Bundle)
 with no options.
| intent | The intent to start. | 
|---|---|
| requestCode | If >= 0, this code will be returned in
         onActivityResult() when the activity exits, as described in startActivityForResult(Intent, int). | 
Like startActivity(Intent, Bundle), but taking a IntentSender
 to start; see
 startIntentSenderForResult(IntentSender, int, Intent, int, int, int, Bundle)
 for more information.
| intent | The IntentSender to launch. | 
|---|---|
| fillInIntent | If non-null, this will be provided as the
 intent parameter to sendIntent(Context, int, Intent, IntentSender.OnFinished, Handler). | 
| flagsMask | Intent flags in the original IntentSender that you would like to change. | 
| flagsValues | Desired values for any bits set in flagsMask | 
| extraFlags | Always set to 0. | 
| options | Additional options for how the Activity should be started.
 See Context.startActivity(Intent, Bundle)for more details.  If options
 have also been supplied by the IntentSender, options given here will
 override any that conflict with those given by the IntentSender. | 
Same as calling startIntentSender(IntentSender, Intent, int, int, int, Bundle)
 with no options.
| intent | The IntentSender to launch. | 
|---|---|
| fillInIntent | If non-null, this will be provided as the
 intent parameter to sendIntent(Context, int, Intent, IntentSender.OnFinished, Handler). | 
| flagsMask | Intent flags in the original IntentSender that you would like to change. | 
| flagsValues | Desired values for any bits set in flagsMask | 
| extraFlags | Always set to 0. | 
Same as calling startIntentSenderForResult(IntentSender, int, Intent, int, int, int, Bundle) with no options.
| intent | The IntentSender to launch. | 
|---|---|
| requestCode | If >= 0, this code will be returned in onActivityResult() when the activity exits. | 
| fillInIntent | If non-null, this will be provided as the
 intent parameter to sendIntent(Context, int, Intent, IntentSender.OnFinished, Handler). | 
| flagsMask | Intent flags in the original IntentSender that you would like to change. | 
| flagsValues | Desired values for any bits set in flagsMask | 
| extraFlags | Always set to 0. | 
Like startActivityForResult(Intent, int), but allowing you
 to use a IntentSender to describe the activity to be started.  If
 the IntentSender is for an activity, that activity will be started
 as if you had called the regular startActivityForResult(Intent, int)
 here; otherwise, its associated action will be executed (such as
 sending a broadcast) as if you had called
 IntentSender.sendIntent on it.
| intent | The IntentSender to launch. | 
|---|---|
| requestCode | If >= 0, this code will be returned in onActivityResult() when the activity exits. | 
| fillInIntent | If non-null, this will be provided as the
 intent parameter to sendIntent(Context, int, Intent, IntentSender.OnFinished, Handler). | 
| flagsMask | Intent flags in the original IntentSender that you would like to change. | 
| flagsValues | Desired values for any bits set in flagsMask | 
| extraFlags | Always set to 0. | 
| options | Additional options for how the Activity should be started.
 See Context.startActivity(Intent, Bundle)for more details.  If options
 have also been supplied by the IntentSender, options given here will
 override any that conflict with those given by the IntentSender. | 
Same as calling startIntentSenderFromChild(Activity, IntentSender, int, Intent, int, int, int, Bundle) with no options.
Like startActivityFromChild(Activity, Intent, int), but
 taking a IntentSender; see
 startIntentSenderForResult(IntentSender, int, Intent, int, int, int)
 for more information.
Put this Activity in a mode where the user is locked to the current task. This will prevent the user from launching other apps, going to settings, or reaching the home screen. Lock task mode will only start if the activity has been whitelisted by the Device Owner through DevicePolicyManager#setLockTaskComponents.
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 11.
    Use the new CursorLoader class with
 LoaderManager instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package.
  
This method allows the activity to take care of managing the given
 Cursor's lifecycle for you based on the activity's lifecycle.
 That is, when the activity is stopped it will automatically call
 deactivate() on the given Cursor, and when it is later restarted
 it will call requery() for you.  When the activity is
 destroyed, all managed Cursors will be closed automatically.
 
 If you are targeting HONEYCOMB
 or later, consider instead using LoaderManager instead, available
 via getLoaderManager().
 
Warning: Do not call close() on cursor obtained from
 managedQuery(Uri, String[], String, String[], String), because the activity will do that for you at the appropriate time.
 However, if you call stopManagingCursor(Cursor) on a cursor from a managed query, the system
 will not automatically close the cursor and, in that case, you must call
 close().
| c | The Cursor to be managed. | 
|---|
Same as calling startNextMatchingActivity(Intent, Bundle) with
 no options.
| intent | The intent to dispatch to the next activity. For correct behavior, this must be the same as the Intent that started your own activity; the only changes you can make are to the extras inside of it. | 
|---|
Special version of starting an activity, for use when you are replacing
 other activity components.  You can use this to hand the Intent off
 to the next Activity that can handle it.  You typically call this in
 onCreate(Bundle) with the Intent returned by getIntent().
| intent | The intent to dispatch to the next activity. For correct behavior, this must be the same as the Intent that started your own activity; the only changes you can make are to the extras inside of it. | 
|---|---|
| options | Additional options for how the Activity should be started.
 See Context.startActivity(Intent, Bundle)for more details. | 
Begin postponed transitions after postponeEnterTransition() was called.
 If postponeEnterTransition() was called, you must call startPostponedEnterTransition()
 to have your Activity start drawing.
This hook is called to launch the search UI.
It is typically called from onSearchRequested(), either directly from Activity.onSearchRequested() or from an overridden version in any given Activity. If your goal is simply to activate search, it is preferred to call onSearchRequested(), which may have been overridden elsewhere in your Activity. If your goal is to inject specific data such as context data, it is preferred to override onSearchRequested(), so that any callers to it will benefit from the override.
| initialQuery | Any non-null non-empty string will be inserted as pre-entered text in the search query box. | 
|---|---|
| selectInitialQuery | If true, the initial query will be preselected, which means that any further typing will replace it. This is useful for cases where an entire pre-formed query is being inserted. If false, the selection point will be placed at the end of the inserted query. This is useful when the inserted query is text that the user entered, and the user would expect to be able to keep typing. This parameter is only meaningful if initialQuery is a non-empty string. | 
| appSearchData | An application can insert application-specific context here, in order to improve quality or specificity of its own searches. This data will be returned with SEARCH intent(s). Null if no extra data is required. | 
| globalSearch | If false, this will only launch the search that has been specifically defined by the application (which is usually defined as a local search). If no default search is defined in the current application or activity, global search will be launched. If true, this will always launch a platform-global (e.g. web-based) search instead. | 
Allow the user to switch away from the current task.
 Called to end the mode started by startLockTask(). This
 can only be called by activities that have successfully called
 startLockTask previously.
 This will allow the user to exit this app and move onto other activities.
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 11.
    Use the new CursorLoader class with
 LoaderManager instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package.
  
Given a Cursor that was previously given to
 startManagingCursor(Cursor), stop the activity's management of that
 cursor.
 
 
Warning: After calling this method on a cursor from a managed query,
 the system will not automatically close the cursor and you must call 
 close().
| c | The Cursor that was being managed. | 
|---|
Request that key events come to this activity. Use this if your activity has no views with focus, but the activity still wants a chance to process key events.
Similar to startSearch(String, boolean, Bundle, boolean), but actually fires off the search query after invoking
 the search dialog.  Made available for testing purposes.
| query | The query to trigger. If empty, the request will be ignored. | 
|---|---|
| appSearchData | An application can insert application-specific context here, in order to improve quality or specificity of its own searches. This data will be returned with SEARCH intent(s). Null if no extra data is required. | 
Prevents a context menu to be shown for the given view. This method will remove the
 View.OnCreateContextMenuListener on the view.
| view | The view that should stop showing a context menu. | 
|---|
Called when an activity you launched with an activity transition exposes this
 Activity through a returning activity transition, giving you the resultCode
 and any additional data from it. This method will only be called if the activity
 set a result code other than RESULT_CANCELED and it supports activity
 transitions with FEATURE_CONTENT_TRANSITIONS.
 
The purpose of this function is to let the called Activity send a hint about its state so that this underlying Activity can prepare to be exposed. A call to this method does not guarantee that the called Activity has or will be exiting soon. It only indicates that it will expose this Activity's Window and it has some data to pass to prepare it.
| resultCode | The integer result code returned by the child activity through its setResult(). | 
|---|---|
| data | An Intent, which can return result data to the caller (various data can be attached to Intent "extras"). | 
Called when an activity you launched exits, giving you the requestCode
 you started it with, the resultCode it returned, and any additional
 data from it.  The resultCode will be
 RESULT_CANCELED if the activity explicitly returned that,
 didn't return any result, or crashed during its operation.
 
 
You will receive this call immediately before onResume() when your activity is re-starting.
| requestCode | The integer request code originally supplied to startActivityForResult(), allowing you to identify who this result came from. | 
|---|---|
| resultCode | The integer result code returned by the child activity through its setResult(). | 
| data | An Intent, which can return result data to the caller (various data can be attached to Intent "extras"). | 
Called by setTheme(int) and getTheme() to apply a theme
 resource to the current Theme object.  Can override to change the
 default (simple) behavior.  This method will not be called in multiple
 threads simultaneously.
| theme | The Theme object being modified. | 
|---|---|
| resid | The theme style resource being applied to theme. | 
| first | Set to true if this is the first time a style is being applied to theme. | 
Called when the activity is starting.  This is where most initialization
 should go: calling setContentView(int) to inflate the
 activity's UI, using findViewById(int) to programmatically interact
 with widgets in the UI, calling
 managedQuery(android.net.Uri, String[], String, String[], String) to retrieve
 cursors for data being displayed, etc.
 
 
You can call finish() from within this function, in
 which case onDestroy() will be immediately called without any of the rest
 of the activity lifecycle (onStart(), onResume(),
 onPause(), etc) executing.
 
 
Derived classes must call through to the super class's implementation of this method. If they do not, an exception will be thrown.
| savedInstanceState | If the activity is being re-initialized after
     previously being shut down then this Bundle contains the data it most
     recently supplied in onSaveInstanceState(Bundle).  Note: Otherwise it is null. | 
|---|
Same as onCreate(android.os.Bundle) but called for those activities created with
 the attribute persistable set true.
| savedInstanceState | if the activity is being re-initialized after
     previously being shut down then this Bundle contains the data it most
     recently supplied in onSaveInstanceState(Bundle).
     Note: Otherwise it is null. | 
|---|---|
| persistentState | if the activity is being re-initialized after
     previously being shut down or powered off then this Bundle contains the data it most
     recently supplied to outPersistentState in onSaveInstanceState(Bundle).
     Note: Otherwise it is null. | 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new DialogFragment class with
 FragmentManager instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package.
  
Callback for creating dialogs that are managed (saved and restored) for you
 by the activity.  The default implementation calls through to
 onCreateDialog(int) for compatibility.
 If you are targeting HONEYCOMB
 or later, consider instead using a DialogFragment instead.
 
If you use showDialog(int), the activity will call through to
 this method the first time, and hang onto it thereafter.  Any dialog
 that is created by this method will automatically be saved and restored
 for you, including whether it is showing.
 
If you would like the activity to manage saving and restoring dialogs
 for you, you should override this method and handle any ids that are
 passed to showDialog(int).
 
If you would like an opportunity to prepare your dialog before it is shown,
 override onPrepareDialog(int, Dialog, Bundle).
| id | The id of the dialog. | 
|---|---|
| args | The dialog arguments provided to showDialog(int, Bundle). | 
Perform any final cleanup before an activity is destroyed.  This can
 happen either because the activity is finishing (someone called
 finish() on it, or because the system is temporarily destroying
 this instance of the activity to save space.  You can distinguish
 between these two scenarios with the isFinishing() method.
 
 
Note: do not count on this method being called as a place for
 saving data! For example, if an activity is editing data in a content
 provider, those edits should be committed in either onPause() or
 onSaveInstanceState(Bundle), not here. This method is usually implemented to
 free resources like threads that are associated with an activity, so
 that a destroyed activity does not leave such things around while the
 rest of its application is still running.  There are situations where
 the system will simply kill the activity's hosting process without
 calling this method (or any others) in it, so it should not be used to
 do things that are intended to remain around after the process goes
 away.
 
 
Derived classes must call through to the super class's implementation of this method. If they do not, an exception will be thrown.
This is called for activities that set launchMode to "singleTop" in
 their package, or if a client used the FLAG_ACTIVITY_SINGLE_TOP
 flag when calling startActivity(Intent).  In either case, when the
 activity is re-launched while at the top of the activity stack instead
 of a new instance of the activity being started, onNewIntent() will be
 called on the existing instance with the Intent that was used to
 re-launch it. 
  
 
An activity will always be paused before receiving a new intent, so 
 you can count on onResume() being called after this method. 
 
 
Note that getIntent() still returns the original Intent.  You 
 can use setIntent(Intent) to update it to this new Intent.
| intent | The new intent that was started for the activity. | 
|---|
Called as part of the activity lifecycle when an activity is going into
 the background, but has not (yet) been killed.  The counterpart to
 onResume().
 
When activity B is launched in front of activity A, this callback will
 be invoked on A.  B will not be created until A's onPause() returns,
 so be sure to not do anything lengthy here.
 
This callback is mostly used for saving any persistent state the activity is editing, to present a "edit in place" model to the user and making sure nothing is lost if there are not enough resources to start the new activity without first killing this one. This is also a good place to do things like stop animations and other things that consume a noticeable amount of CPU in order to make the switch to the next activity as fast as possible, or to close resources that are exclusive access such as the camera.
In situations where the system needs more memory it may kill paused
 processes to reclaim resources.  Because of this, you should be sure
 that all of your state is saved by the time you return from
 this function.  In general onSaveInstanceState(Bundle) is used to save
 per-instance state in the activity and this method is used to store
 global persistent data (in content providers, files, etc.)
 
 
After receiving this call you will usually receive a following call
 to onStop() (after the next activity has been resumed and
 displayed), however in some cases there will be a direct call back to
 onResume() without going through the stopped state.
 
 
Derived classes must call through to the super class's implementation of this method. If they do not, an exception will be thrown.
Called when activity start-up is complete (after onStart()
 and onRestoreInstanceState(Bundle) have been called).  Applications will
 generally not implement this method; it is intended for system
 classes to do final initialization after application code has run.
 
 
Derived classes must call through to the super class's implementation of this method. If they do not, an exception will be thrown.
| savedInstanceState | If the activity is being re-initialized after
     previously being shut down then this Bundle contains the data it most
     recently supplied in onSaveInstanceState(Bundle).  Note: Otherwise it is null. | 
|---|
This is the same as onPostCreate(Bundle) but is called for activities
 created with the attribute persistable.
| savedInstanceState | The data most recently supplied in onSaveInstanceState(Bundle) | 
|---|---|
| persistentState | The data caming from the PersistableBundle first
 saved in onSaveInstanceState(Bundle, PersistableBundle). | 
Called when activity resume is complete (after onResume() has
 been called). Applications will generally not implement this method;
 it is intended for system classes to do final setup after application
 resume code has run.
 
 
Derived classes must call through to the super class's implementation of this method. If they do not, an exception will be thrown.
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 13.
    Use the new DialogFragment class with
 FragmentManager instead; this is also
 available on older platforms through the Android compatibility package.
  
Provides an opportunity to prepare a managed dialog before it is being
 shown.  The default implementation calls through to
 onPrepareDialog(int, Dialog) for compatibility.
 
 
Override this if you need to update a managed dialog based on the state of the application each time it is shown. For example, a time picker dialog might want to be updated with the current time. You should call through to the superclass's implementation. The default implementation will set this Activity as the owner activity on the Dialog.
| id | The id of the managed dialog. | 
|---|---|
| dialog | The dialog. | 
| args | The dialog arguments provided to showDialog(int, Bundle). | 
      This method was deprecated
      in API level 8.
    Old no-arguments version of
 onPrepareDialog(int, Dialog, Bundle).
  
Called after onStop() when the current activity is being
 re-displayed to the user (the user has navigated back to it).  It will
 be followed by onStart() and then onResume().
 
For activities that are using raw Cursor objects (instead of
 creating them through
 managedQuery(android.net.Uri, String[], String, String[], String),
 this is usually the place
 where the cursor should be requeried (because you had deactivated it in
 onStop().
 
 
Derived classes must call through to the super class's implementation of this method. If they do not, an exception will be thrown.
This is the same as onRestoreInstanceState(Bundle) but is called for activities
 created with the attribute persistable. The PersistableBundle passed came from the restored PersistableBundle first
 saved in onSaveInstanceState(Bundle, PersistableBundle).
 
This method is called between onStart() and
 onPostCreate(Bundle).
 
If this method is called onRestoreInstanceState(Bundle) will not be called.
| savedInstanceState | the data most recently supplied in onSaveInstanceState(Bundle). | 
|---|---|
| persistentState | the data most recently supplied in onSaveInstanceState(Bundle). | 
This method is called after onStart() when the activity is
 being re-initialized from a previously saved state, given here in
 savedInstanceState.  Most implementations will simply use onCreate(Bundle)
 to restore their state, but it is sometimes convenient to do it here
 after all of the initialization has been done or to allow subclasses to
 decide whether to use your default implementation.  The default
 implementation of this method performs a restore of any view state that
 had previously been frozen by onSaveInstanceState(Bundle).
 
 
This method is called between onStart() and
 onPostCreate(Bundle).
| savedInstanceState | the data most recently supplied in onSaveInstanceState(Bundle). | 
|---|
Called after onRestoreInstanceState(Bundle), onRestart(), or
 onPause(), for your activity to start interacting with the user.
 This is a good place to begin animations, open exclusive-access devices
 (such as the camera), etc.
 
Keep in mind that onResume is not the best indicator that your activity
 is visible to the user; a system window such as the keyguard may be in
 front.  Use onWindowFocusChanged(boolean) to know for certain that your
 activity is visible to the user (for example, to resume a game).
 
Derived classes must call through to the super class's implementation of this method. If they do not, an exception will be thrown.
Called to retrieve per-instance state from an activity before being killed
 so that the state can be restored in onCreate(Bundle) or
 onRestoreInstanceState(Bundle) (the Bundle populated by this method
 will be passed to both).
 
This method is called before an activity may be killed so that when it
 comes back some time in the future it can restore its state.  For example,
 if activity B is launched in front of activity A, and at some point activity
 A is killed to reclaim resources, activity A will have a chance to save the
 current state of its user interface via this method so that when the user
 returns to activity A, the state of the user interface can be restored
 via onCreate(Bundle) or onRestoreInstanceState(Bundle).
 
Do not confuse this method with activity lifecycle callbacks such as
 onPause(), which is always called when an activity is being placed
 in the background or on its way to destruction, or onStop() which
 is called before destruction.  One example of when onPause() and
 onStop() is called and not this method is when a user navigates back
 from activity B to activity A: there is no need to call onSaveInstanceState(Bundle)
 on B because that particular instance will never be restored, so the
 system avoids calling it.  An example when onPause() is called and
 not onSaveInstanceState(Bundle) is when activity B is launched in front of activity A:
 the system may avoid calling onSaveInstanceState(Bundle) on activity A if it isn't
 killed during the lifetime of B since the state of the user interface of
 A will stay intact.
 
The default implementation takes care of most of the UI per-instance
 state for you by calling onSaveInstanceState() on each
 view in the hierarchy that has an id, and by saving the id of the currently
 focused view (all of which is restored by the default implementation of
 onRestoreInstanceState(Bundle)).  If you override this method to save additional
 information not captured by each individual view, you will likely want to
 call through to the default implementation, otherwise be prepared to save
 all of the state of each view yourself.
 
If called, this method will occur before onStop().  There are
 no guarantees about whether it will occur before or after onPause().
| outState | Bundle in which to place your saved state. | 
|---|
This is the same as onSaveInstanceState(Bundle) but is called for activities
 created with the attribute persistable. The PersistableBundle passed in will be saved and presented in
 onCreate(Bundle, PersistableBundle) the first time that this activity
 is restarted following the next device reboot.
| outState | Bundle in which to place your saved state. | 
|---|---|
| outPersistentState | State which will be saved across reboots. | 
Called after onCreate(Bundle) — or after onRestart() when  
 the activity had been stopped, but is now again being displayed to the 
 user.  It will be followed by onResume().
 
Derived classes must call through to the super class's implementation of this method. If they do not, an exception will be thrown.
Called when you are no longer visible to the user.  You will next
 receive either onRestart(), onDestroy(), or nothing,
 depending on later user activity.
 
 
Note that this method may never be called, in low memory situations
 where the system does not have enough memory to keep your activity's
 process running after its onPause() method is called.
 
 
Derived classes must call through to the super class's implementation of this method. If they do not, an exception will be thrown.
Called as part of the activity lifecycle when an activity is about to go
 into the background as the result of user choice.  For example, when the
 user presses the Home key, onUserLeaveHint() will be called, but
 when an incoming phone call causes the in-call Activity to be automatically
 brought to the foreground, onUserLeaveHint() will not be called on
 the activity being interrupted.  In cases when it is invoked, this method
 is called right before the activity's onPause() callback.
 
 
This callback and onUserInteraction() are intended to help
 activities manage status bar notifications intelligently; specifically,
 for helping activities determine the proper time to cancel a notfication.