Thanks for your professional answer. I' ll try it again.
Thanks and best regards Hero. Greg Brown <[email protected]> 12/09/2010 09:13 PM Please respond to [email protected] To [email protected] cc Subject Re: how to set large data using getquery and jsonserializer? I'd like to build a demo following the large data set sample in Apache Pivot official web site . The sample is using CSVSerializer and calling a thead class [ AddRowsCallback] in method endList() and readitem(). Question: 1.Can any one demonstrate the 2 method of endList() and readItem()? The code at the beginning of this file is the best example of how to use these methods: http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/pivot/trunk/demos/src/org/apache/pivot/demos/million/LargeData.java The execute() method opens a stream from the given URL and wraps it in a MonitoredInputStream. MonitoredInputStream is an inner class of IOTask that will respect the abort flag if it is set by the caller. It then reads the data from the input stream using CSVSerializer. CSVSerializer fires 3 events: beginList() -- called when the list is created endList() -- called after the last item has been read readItem() -- called after each item is read In this example, the listener implementation builds up pages of results before adding them to the table view, since this will generally perform better for a large number of rows. The add is done in a callback so the UI does not get bogged down. 2.if using JSONSerializer and accept ArrayList parameter.do i still have to overwrite endList() and readItem()?I tried but it seams wrong. If you are reading JSON data, you will probably want to implement endList() and endDictionary() (assuming that your items are stored as JSON objects). endDictionary() will be called for each "row" in your data set. I just want to set ArrayList into tableview.As when the list'length is over about 500 hundreds,UI becomes frozen a few minutes. Yes, that is why we use the callback with the listeners. Make sure that you are calling the asynchronous version of Task#execute() (the one that takes a TaskListener). The synchronous one won't do you much good, since you'll be executing the actual query on the UI thread and it won't get any updates until the task is done.
