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Displaying a Toast message from the Application class

I have several classes in my application. Some are Activities, Services and Pure java classes. I know i can display a Toast message from within an Activity but i'd like to display a Toast from a pure java class.

In the java class i pass a context in to the constructor but this doesn't seem to show the toast.

I have created a method in the Application class that takes a String as an argument, hoping i could generate a Toast using the Application context, no joy here either.

How can i generate a Toast from a class that isn't a service or Activity etc.

public class LoginValidate{

public LoginValidate(Context context) {

        this.context = context;

        nfcscannerapplication = (NfcScannerApplication) context
                .getApplicationContext();


    }

public void someMethod(){

nfcscannerapplication.showToastMessage(result);

}

}

.

///then in my Application class

public void showToastMessage(String message){

            Toast.makeText(this.getApplictionContext(), "Encountered a problem with sending tag: " + message, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();

    }
like image 877
turtleboy Avatar asked Dec 23 '13 11:12

turtleboy


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4 Answers

There are two ways you can do that, if you have a valid context, you can do it like @CapDroid wrote:

public static void showToastWithTitle(String title) {
    Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), title, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}

if you don't, you can send a Context as well,

public static void showToastWithTitleAndContext(Context context, String title) {
    Toast.makeText(context, title, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}

Note that you can define a static Context in your Application.java and use it to call shoh toast.

hope that helps.

like image 160
Shahar Avatar answered Oct 17 '22 14:10

Shahar


First create Application class like this..

public class ApplicationContext extends Application {

/** Instance of the current application. */
private static ApplicationContext instance;

/**
 * Constructor.
 */
public ApplicationContext() {
    instance = this;
}

/**
 * Gets the application context.
 * 
 * @return the application context
 */
public static Context getContext() {
    if (instance == null) {
        instance = new ApplicationContext();
    }
    return instance;
}

/**
     * display toast message
     * 
     * @param data
     */
    public static void showToast(String data) {
        Toast.makeText(getContext(), data,
                Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
    }

}

call this method from any of your class like ApplicationContext.showToast("your string");

be careful about context object leaking..

like image 35
kalyan pvs Avatar answered Oct 17 '22 15:10

kalyan pvs


Write this method in your Application Class. You just need to pass message in parameter from any Activity.

public void showToast(String message)
{
    Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), message, Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
like image 4
Niranj Patel Avatar answered Oct 17 '22 15:10

Niranj Patel


Need to pass the context to the showToastMessage(String message)

Like this showToastMessage(String message, Context context)

//then in my Application class

public void showToastMessage(String message, Context context){

            Toast.makeText(context, "Encountered a problem with sending tag: " + message, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();

    }
like image 1
Vimalathithan A Avatar answered Oct 17 '22 15:10

Vimalathithan A