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In Android programming, what exactly is a Context class and what is it used for?

I read about it on the developer site, but I am unable to understand it clearly.

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32 Answers 32

1697

Putting it simply:

As the name suggests, it's the context of the current state of the application/object. It lets newly-created objects understand what has been going on. Typically you call it to get information regarding another part of your program (activity and package/application).

You can get the context by invoking getApplicationContext(), getContext(), getBaseContext() or this (when in a class that extends from Context, such as the Application, Activity, Service and IntentService classes).

Typical uses of context:

  • Creating new objects: Creating new views, adapters, listeners:

     TextView tv = new TextView(getContext());
     ListAdapter adapter = new SimpleCursorAdapter(getApplicationContext(), ...);
    
  • Accessing standard common resources: Services like LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE, SharedPreferences:

     context.getSystemService(LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE)
     getApplicationContext().getSharedPreferences(*name*, *mode*);
    
  • Accessing components implicitly: Regarding content providers, broadcasts, intent

     getApplicationContext().getContentResolver().query(uri, ...);
    
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  • 60
    In your example context.getSystemService(LAYOUT_INFLATER_SERVICE), where and how is context defined?
    – Dennis
    Dec 4, 2012 at 21:47
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    It is well explained why we need context while dynamically creating a text view. But while dynamically creating arrays of text views we don't have to mention any context. Why is that so ? TextView[] textview = new TextView[10]; Dec 26, 2014 at 8:09
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    @AbhinavArora when defining the array, you're not actually constructing an instance of any text views (you're basically just creating the space for them to go into). At the point you come to put any values into that array, you'll either need pre-created TextViews, or need a Context to allow you to create them.
    – mc1arke
    Mar 18, 2015 at 7:57
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    Why do views need context? For example, what would TextView not be able to do if it didn't have the context?
    – dinosaur
    Apr 22, 2016 at 17:33
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    A piece of code without a "Context" can run on each operating systems that has JVM. But if there is a context it should run on Android.If you want to use Android specific things(accessing device location, taking a photo, running a background service etc.) you need a context Although you don't need if you make an http request. Context can be assumed as a bridge between Java and Android. Jun 16, 2016 at 12:14
580

Definition of Context

  • Context represents environment data
  • It provides access to things such as databases

Simpler terms (example 1)

  • Consider Person-X is the CEO of a start-up software company.

  • There is a lead architect present in the company, this lead architect does all the work in the company which involves such database, UI etc.

  • Now the CEO has hired a new Developer.

  • It is the Architect who tells the responsibility of the newly hired person based on the skills of the new person and whether he will work on Database or UI etc.

Simpler terms (example 2)

  • It's like access to Android activity to the app's resources.

  • It's similar to when you visit a hotel, you want breakfast, lunch & dinner in the suitable timings, right?

  • There are many other things you like during the time of stay. How do you get these things?

  • You ask the room service person to bring these things for you.

  • Here the room service person is the context considering you are the single activity and the hotel to be your app, and finally the breakfast, lunch & dinner has to be the resource.


Things that involve context are:

  1. Loading a resource.
  2. Launching a new activity.
  3. Creating views.
  4. obtaining system service.

Context is the base class for Activity, Service, Application, etc

Another way to describe this: Consider context as remote of a TV & channels in the television are resources, services, using intents, etc - - - Here remote acts as an access to get access to all the different resources in the foreground.

  • So, Remote has access to channels such as resources, services, using intents, etc ....

  • Likewise ... Whoever has access to remote naturally has access to all the things such as resources, services, using intents, etc


Different methods by which you can get context

  • getApplicationContext()
  • getContext()
  • getBaseContext()
  • or this (when in the activity class)

Example:

TextView tv = new TextView(this);

The keyword this refers to the context of the current activity.

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    Ok, so the class derived from the Activity IS a context itself. That is why by passing this to the newly created views, we pass the context.
    – 0leg
    Jan 25, 2015 at 14:40
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    I wonder if it's a good design decision to have the context accessible from so many different places? One static getContext() in the application would have been enough in my opinion. Dec 28, 2015 at 9:05
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    @Trilarion... It depends on how you want to use context getApplicationContext(), getContext(),getBaseContext() ..... Refer this - > (stackoverflow.com/a/10641257)
    – Devrath
    Aug 14, 2016 at 15:00
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    Just to expand the last piece with creating a textview: In some cases it may be necessary to call SomeActivityName.this. IN a thread for an instance, this refers to teh thread and not the activity
    – Zoe is on strike
    May 14, 2017 at 10:37
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    Is context object unique for an apk or Android OS? Can an application have two different contexts?
    – valijon
    Aug 30, 2018 at 12:14
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A Context is a handle to the system; it provides services like resolving resources, obtaining access to databases and preferences, and so on. An Android app has activities. Context is like a handle to the environment your application is currently running in. The activity object inherits the Context object.

For more information, look in Introduction to Android development with Android Studio - Tutorial.

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Context is an "interface" to the global information about an application environment. In practice, Context is actually an abstract class, whose implementation is provided by the Android system.

It allows access to application-specific resources and classes, as well as up-calls for application-level operations, such as launching activities, broadcasting and receiving intents, etc.

In the following picture, you can see a hierarchy of classes, where Context is the root class of this hierarchy. In particular, it's worth emphasizing that Activity is a descendant of Context.

Activity diagram

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77

What's Context exactly?

Per the Android reference documentation, it's an entity that represents various environment data. It provides access to local files, databases, class loaders associated to the environment, services (including system-level services), and more. Throughout this book, and in your day-to-day coding with Android, you'll see the Context passed around frequently.

From the "Android in Practice" book, p. 60.

Several Android APIs require a Context as parameter

If you look through the various Android APIs, you’ll notice that many of them take an android.content.Context object as a parameter. You’ll also see that an Activity or a Service is usually used as a Context. This works because both of these classes extend from Context.

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Simple Example to understand context in android :

Every boss has an assistant to look after, to do all less important and time-consuming tasks. If a file or a cup of coffee is needed, an assistant is on the run. Some bosses barely know what’s going on in the office, so they ask their assistants regarding this too. They do some work themselves but for most other things they need the help of their assistants.

In this scenario,

Boss – is the Android application

Assistant – is a context

Files/Cup of coffee – are resources

We generally call context when we need to get information about different parts of our application like Activities, Applications, etc.

Some operations(things where the assistant is needed) where context is involved:

  • Loading common resources
  • Creating dynamic views
  • Displaying Toast messages
  • Launching Activities etc.

Different ways of getting context:

getContext()

getBaseContext()

getApplicationContext()

this
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An Android Context is an Interface (in the general sense, not in the Java sense; in Java, Context is actually an abstract class!) that allows access to application specific resources and class and information about application environment.

If your android app was a web app, your context would be something similar to ServletContext (I am not making an exact comparison here).

Your activities and services also extend Context, so they inherit all those methods to access the environment information in which the app is running.

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  • Context represents a handle to get environment data .
  • Context class itself is declared as abstract, whose implementation is provided by the android OS.
  • Context is like remote of a TV & channel's in the television are resources, services, etc. enter image description here

What can you do with it ?

  • Loading resource.
  • Launching a new activity.
  • Creating views.
  • Obtaining system service.

Ways to get context :

  • getApplicationContext()
  • getContext()
  • getBaseContext()enter image description hereenter image description here
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Just putting it out there for newbies;

So First understand Word Context :

In english-lib. it means:

"The circumstances that form the setting for an event, statement, or idea, and in terms of which it can be fully understood and assessed."

"The parts of something written or spoken that immediately precede and follow a word or passage and clarify its meaning."

Now take the same understanding to programming world:

context of current state of the application/object. It lets newly created objects understand what has been going on. Typically you call it to get information regarding another part of your program (activity, package/application)

You can get the context by invoking getApplicationContext(), getContext(), getBaseContext() or this (when in the activity class).

To Get Context Anywhere in application use following code:

Create new class AppContext inside your android application

public class AppContext extends Application {

    private static Context context;

    public void onCreate(){
        super.onCreate();
        AppContext.context = getApplicationContext();
    }

    public static Context getAppContext() {
        return AppContext.context;
    }
}

Now any time you want application context in non-activity class, call this method and you have application context.

Hope this help ;)

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Context is a reference to the current object as this. Also context allows access to information about the application environment.

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Think of it as the VM that has siloed the process the app or service is running in. The siloed environment has access to a bunch of underlying system information and certain permitted resources. You need that context to get at those services.

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The class android.content.Context provides the connection to the Android system and the resources of the project. It is the interface to global information about the application environment.

The Context also provides access to Android Services, e.g. the Location Service.

Activities and Services extend the Context class.

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The Context is an abstract class provided by Android, and as such, its job is to bridge your application code with the Android System. Through classes that inherit from Context (activities, services, and your application), your app gains the ability to access resources and functionalities reachable only by the Operating System.

When context descendant objects get instantiated by the Operating System (through an OS controlled instantiation mechanism, like "intents"), they become administered by the Operating System, and as such, they obtain lifecycle.

For anything else, passing a context as a parameter in method calls, allows this method to use the context as a channel of communication with the OS, in order to reach the OS and ask it to perform some action or return some resource.

Visualising the Context together with the Manifest

enter image description here

To visualize the Android Context and Manifest in action, an old calling centre switchboard is a great analogy.

The base is the Android System, where all the wires connecting all the application components of every running app, emerge.

  1. Each "switchboard application" contains some plugholes, which represent the app's manifest component declarations. So through manifest declarations, the Android System learns about the existence of these plugholes so it can plug a new context wire by creating objects through intents.

  2. Each wire represents an Android Context connected to some launchable component of the app, or to the app itself. You can use an existing wire since it is connected with the Android System, in order to request all kinds of things that need to go through the Operating System, to be accomplished.

  3. You can assume that when an activity is destroyed, its wire gets unplugged. While when another activity (or another component) is constructed, a new wire emerges and connects to the correct manifest-declared plughole.

I have written an entire article that explains how the Context couples your app to the android system:

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  • mixing Context with AndroidManifest is not the best idea to explain Context Apr 26, 2022 at 13:31
  • This answer is seriously underrated along with the article you link to. +1
    – frezq
    May 26, 2022 at 12:20
  • "... the problem comes in when you see that the operator - the 78 year-old woman whose job is connecting those wires (We'll call her Gradle) - has 47 versions of each wire, 71 versions of each plughole (many of which have been disconnected and many MORE of which, due to emerging technology, have plugs that won't fit SOME holes, at least without a dongle... which you need to make a call to get. Be patient, Gradle will connect you, once her senile, septuagenarian ass grasps that you're calling ABOUT a dongle, not telling her to use one). Now, Gradle's become a bit too fond of the sauce, and..."
    – NerdyDeeds
    Mar 9, 2023 at 12:02
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Context is an interface to global information about an application environment. It's an abstract class whose implementation is provided by the Android system.

Context allows access to application-specific resources and classes, as well as calls for application-level operations such as launching activities, broadcasting and receiving intents, etc.

Here is Example

 public class MyActivity extends Activity {

      public void Testing() {

      Context actContext = this; /*returns the Activity Context since   Activity extends Context.*/

      Context appContext = getApplicationContext();    /*returns the context of the single, global Application object of the current process. */

      Button BtnShowAct1 = (Button) findViewById(R.id.btnGoToAct1);
      Context BtnContext = BtnShowAct1.getContext();   /*returns the context of the View. */

For more details you can visit http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/Context.html

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Context is Instances of the the class android.content.Context provide the connection to the Android system which executes the application. For example, you can check the size of the current device display via the Context.

It also gives access to the resources of the project. It is the interface to global information about the application environment.

The Context class also provides access to Android services, e.g., the alarm manager to trigger time based events.

Activities and services extend the Context class. Therefore they can be directly used to access the Context.

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Context is context of current state of the application/object.Its an entity that represents various environment data . Context helps the current activity to interact with out side android environment like local files, databases, class loaders associated to the environment, services including system-level services, and more.

A Context is a handle to the system . It provides services like resolving resources, obtaining access to databases and preferences, and so on. An android app has activities. It’s like a handle to the environment your application is currently running in. The activity object inherits the Context object.

Different invoking methods by which you can get context 1. getApplicationContext(), 2. getContext(), 3. getBaseContext() 4. or this (when in the activity class).

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Context is basically for resource access and getting the environment details of the application(for application context) or activity (for activity context) or any other...

In order to avoid memory leak you should use application context for every components that needs a context object.... for more click here

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Putting simple, Androids Context is a mess that you won't love until you stop worrying about.

Android Contexts are:

  • God-objects.

  • Thing that you want to pass around all your application when you are starting developing for Android, but will avoid doing it when you get a little bit closer to programming, testing and Android itself.

    • Unclear dependency.

    • Common source of memory leaks.

    • PITA for testing.

  • Actual context used by Android system to dispatch permissions, resources, preferences, services, broadcasts, styles, showing dialogs and inflating layout. And you need different Context instances for some separate things (obviously, you can't show a dialog from an application or service context; layouts inflated from application and activity contexts may differ).

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Context means Android get to know in which activity I should go for or act in.

1 - Toast.makeText(context, "Enter All Details", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show(); it used in this. Context context = ActivityName.this;

2 -startActivity(new Intent(context,LoginActivity.class));

in this context means from which activity you wanna go to other activity. context or ActivityName.this is faster then , getContext and getApplicatinContext.

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Boss Assistant Analogy

Let's have a small analogy before diving deep in the technicality of Context

Every Boss has an assistant or someone( errand boy) who does less important and more time-consuming things for him. For example, if they need a file or coffee then an assistant will be on run. Boss will not know what is going on in the background but the file or the task will be delivered

So Here
Boss - Android Application
Assistant - Context
File or cup of coffee - Resource

What official Android Developer site says about Context

Context is your access point for application-related resources

Let's see some of such resources or tasks

  • Launching an activity.

  • Getting an absolute path to the application-specific cache directory on the filesystem.

  • Determining whether the given permission is allowed for a particular process and user ID running in the system.

  • Checking whether you have been granted a particular permission.

And so on.
So if an Android application wants to start an activity, it goes straight to Context (Access Point), and the Context class gives him back the resources(Intent in this case).

Like any other class Context class has fields and methods.
You can explore more about Context in official documentation, it covers pretty much everything, available methods, fields, and even how to use fields with methods.

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  • 1
    "...except sometimes, seemingly at random, you're getting yelled at by the boss, while turning frantically in circles trying to figure out where his damn coffee is. Didn't you JUST have it? At some point? You thought you did. Right before you walked into his office. You're SURE you didn't set it down... but now it's gone. Fortunately, it's handed back to you JUST as you walk out the door, but as you turn BACK around, your boss's boss, demanding TEA, snatches it, drains it, and dies. Fatal exception, coffee was poisoned. Who's to blame? Well, YOU had it last, so..." Hmph. Context ruins lives.
    – NerdyDeeds
    Mar 9, 2023 at 11:33
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A Context is what most of us would call Application. It's made by the Android system and is able to do only what an application is able to. In Tomcat, a Context is also what I would call an application.

There is one Context that holds many Activities, each Activity may have many Views.

Obviously, some will say that it doesn't fit because of this or that and they are probably right, but saying that a Context is your current application will help you to understand what you are putting in method parameters.

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The Context is the android specific api to each app-s Sandbox that provides access app private data like to resources, database, private filedirectories, preferences, settings ...

Most of the privatedata are the same for all activities/services/broadcastlisteners of one application.

Since Application, Activity, Service implement the Context interface they can be used where an api call needs a Context parameter

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Instances of the the class android.content.Context provide the connection to the Android system which executes the application. For example, you can check the size of the current device display via the Context.

It also gives access to the resources of the project. It is the interface to global information about the application environment.

The Context class also provides access to Android services, e.g., the alarm manager to trigger time based events.

Activities and services extend the Context class. Therefore they can be directly used to access the Context.

5

If you want to connect Context with other familiar classes in Android, keep in mind this structure:

Context < ContextWrapper < Application

Context < ContextWrapper < ContextThemeWrapper < Activity

Context < ContextWrapper < ContextThemeWrapper < Activity < ListActivity

Context < ContextWrapper < Service

Context < ContextWrapper < Service < IntentService

So, all of those classes are contexts in their own way. You can cast Service and ListActivity to Context if you wish. But if you look closely, some of the classes inherit theme as well. In activity or fragment, you would like theming to be applied to your views, but don't care about it Service class, for instance.

I explain the difference in contexts here.

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Context means component (or application) in various time-period. If I do eat so much food between 1 to 2 pm then my context of that time is used to access all methods (or resources) that I use during that time. Content is a component (application) for a particular time. The Context of components of the application keeps changing based on the underlying lifecycle of the components or application. For instance, inside the onCreate() of an Activity,

getBaseContext() -- gives the context of the Activity that is set (created) by the constructor of activity. getApplicationContext() -- gives the Context setup (created) during the creation of application.

Note: <application> holds all Android Components.

<application>
    <activity> .. </activity> 

    <service>  .. </service>

    <receiver> .. </receiver>

    <provider> .. </provider>
</application> 

It means, when you call getApplicationContext() from inside whatever component, you are calling the common context of the whole application.

Context keeps being modified by the system based on the lifecycle of components.

4

What's Context exactly?

Per the Android reference documentation, it's an entity that represents various environment data. It provides access to local files, databases, class loaders associated to the environment, services (including system-level services), and more. Throughout this book, and in your day-to-day coding with Android, you'll see the Context passed around frequently.

From the "Android in Practice" book, p. 60.

Several Android APIs require a Context as parameter

If you look through the various Android APIs, you’ll notice that many of them take an android.content.Context object as a parameter. You’ll also see that an Activity or a Service is usually used as a Context. This works because both of these classes extend from Context.

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for more details about context, read this article. I will explain that briefly.

If you wanna know what is context you must know what it does...
for example getContext() is one of the methods that retrieve context. In getContext(), Context is tied to an Activity and its lifecycle. We can imagine Context as layer which stands behind Activity and it will live as long as Activity lives. The moment the Activity dies, Context will too. this method gives list of functionalities to activity, like:

Load Resource Values,
Layout Inflation,
Start an Activity,
Show a Dialog,
Start a Service,
Bind to a Service,
Send a Broadcast,
Register BroadcastReceiver.

now imagine that :

Context is a layer(interface) which stands behind its component (Activity, Application…) and component’s lifecycle, which provides access to various functionalities which are supported by application environment and Android framework.

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If you look at the comment of https://stackoverflow.com/a/16301475/1772898 , you will find a comment by ulf-edholm

Hmmm, to me it all sounds like what we old timers used to call global variables, which was much frowned on when object orientation entered the scene

He is right. Context is an alternative to global variable.

For simplicity we can say that: global variable ≈ context

The benefit of context over global variable is, global variables make it impossible to create two independent instances of the same system in the same process, whereas, The context allows multiple instances of the system to coexist in a single process, each with its own context.

Please check A Philosophy of Software Design by John Ousterhout, 7.5 Pass-through variables.

global variables make it impossible to create two independent instances of the same system in the same process, since accesses to the global variables will conflict.

...

The solution I use most often is to introduce a context object as in Figure 7.2(d). A context stores all of the application’s global state (anything that would otherwise be a pass-through variable or global variable). Most applications have multiple variables in their global state, representing things such as configuration options, shared subsystems, and performance counters. There is one context object per instance of the system. The context allows multiple instances of the system to coexist in a single process, each with its own context.

later in the comment section, you will find another comment by bjornw

If you just grep a codebase you'll see hundreds of different getContext, getBaseContext, getBlaBlaContext.

He is also right.

To reduce the number of methods that must be aware of the context, a reference to the context is referred in many major objects. That is why you see getContext, getBaseContext, getBlaBlaContext .. in so many places.

Reference: A Philosophy of Software Design by John Ousterhout, 7.5 Pass-through variables.

Unfortunately, the context will probably be needed in many places, so it can potentially become a pass-through variable. To reduce the number of methods that must be aware of it, a reference to the context can be saved in most of the system’s major objects. In the example of Figure 7.2(d), the class containing m3 stores a reference to the context as an instance variable in its objects. When a new object is created, the creating method retrieves the context reference from its object and passes it to the constructor for the new object. With this approach, the context is available everywhere, but it only appears as an explicit argument in constructors.

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Think of Context as a box with different resources: string, colors, and fonts. If you need a resource, you turn to this box. When you rotate the screen, this box changes because the orientation changes to landscape.

1

Another analogy:

Context can be thought of as an office keycard. You must carry it around in order to gain access to certain restricted areas. In Android this includes: system services, application's files, assets, themes, permissions, etc.

In practice, a Context is represented by an application component (e.g. Activity, Service). And just like different keycards can unlock some of the doors but not others, some application components have limited usage as a Context (e.g. you can't use it to launch a dialog or inflate a layout).

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