I came to the same conclusion as droidDev due to this:
IteratorMapString, String iterator = response.iterator();
If 'response' isnt a class variable, that would not compile. Also, in his
second comment he pretty much confirmed that was the case. I dont think he
meant to say that by omitting
Yeah i was thinking the same thing.
But, how come no one asks him why he wants to get the response data back
in the main thread ? It seems like he believes he needs to pass stuff
around so other threads will have access to them (i dont see any UI related
calls that would require them to be
droidDev wrote:
You forgot to attribute the quote there, sport.
Lew said:
.. What you said there doesn't make sense. A variable has to be
explicitly declared as a class or instance member; it doesn't just
magically appear when you remove a local variable.
I think what John was describing
.. What you said there doesn't make sense. A variable has to be explicitly
declared as a class or instance member; it doesn't just magically appear
when you remove a local variable.
I think what John was describing does make sense. He had inadvertently
created a new response var in an inner
I have a thread to make a web service request. And then I get the data
and store it in response variable. Now I need to add items to the map
on the main thread, but how do i get the response data back in the
main thread. Here is what I have:
private void processHistory(final String authkey, final
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 5:27 PM, John Merlino stoici...@aol.com wrote:
I have a thread to make a web service request. And then I get the data and
store it in response variable. Now I need to add items to the map on the
main thread, but how do i get the response data back in the main thread.
6 matches
Mail list logo