Friday 1 February 2019

Android Activity Lifecycle

When a user navigates through an Android App, a series of events occurs. For example, when a user launches an app, e.g., the Facebook App, it starts and becomes visible on the foreground to the user, onCreate() → onStart() → onResume().
If another activity starts, e.g., a phone call comes in, then the Facebook app will go to the background and the call comes to the foreground. We now have two processes running.
onPause()  --- > onStop()
When the phone call ends, the Facebook app returns to the foreground. Three methods are called.
onRestart() --- > onStart() --- > onResume()



There are 7 lifecycle processes in an Android activity. They include −
  • onCreate − It is called when the activity is first created.
  • onStart − It is called when the activity starts and becomes visible to the user.
  • onResume − It is called when the activity starts interacting with the user. User input takes place at this stage.
  • onPause − It is called when the activity runs in the background but has not yet been killed.
  • onStop − It is called when the activity is no longer visible to the user.
  • onRestart − It is called after the activity has stopped, before starting again. It is normally called when a user goes back to a previous activity that had been stopped.
  • onDestroy − This is the final call before the activity is removed from the memory.


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