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  • Introduction of Realm (A replacement of SQLite) for Android

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    Realm is substitute of SQLite and ORM libraries in your Android application. It is a lightweight database that can replace both SQLite and ORM libraries.

    Installation:-
     

    Step 1: Add the following class path dependency to the project level build.gradle file.

    buildscript {
        repositories {
            jcenter()
        }
        dependencies {
            classpath "io.realm:realm-gradle-plugin:0.90.0"
        }
    }

     

    Step 2: Apply the realm-android plugin to the top of application/module level build.gradle file. 

    apply plugin: 'realm-android'

    From the above successfully integrated Realm in our application. Now you can use the awesome feature of Realm.

     

    Step3: Set default configuration of Realm in application class so that you can use its instance in any activity

    public class MyApplication extends Application {
        @Override
        public void onCreate() {
            super.onCreate();
            RealmConfiguration realmConfiguration = new RealmConfiguration.Builder(this).build();
            Realm.setDefaultConfiguration(realmConfiguration);
        }
    }

     

    Step 4: Create RealM data models

    Create a model class and extend with RealmObject. Any Model class or JavaBean can be stored in a Realm once it extends the RealmObject class.

    public class EmployeeBean extends RealmObject {
        private String employeeName;
       
        private String employeeId;
    
        private long employeeSalary;
    
        public String getEmployeeName() {
            return employeeName;
        }
    
        public void setEmployeeName(String employeeName) {
            this.employeeName = employeeName;
        }
    
        public String getEmployeeId() {
            return employeeId;
        }
    
        public void setEmployeeId(String employeeId) {
            this.employeeId = employeeId;
        }
    
        public long getEmployeeSalary() {
            return employeeSalary;
        }
    
        public void setEmployeeSalary(long employeeSalary) {
            this.employeeSalary = employeeSalary;
        }
    }

     

    Step 5: Obtain Realm instance in activity

    mRealm = Realm.getDefaultInstance();

     

    Step 6: Store data on Realm object

    Syntax:-

    // Obtain a Realm instance
    Realm realm = Realm.getDefaultInstance();
    
    realm.beginTransaction();
    
    //... add or update objects here ...
    
    realm.commitTransaction();

     

    Add employee details on Realm like this

     mRealm.beginTransaction();
     EmployeeBean employee = mRealm.createObject(EmployeeBean.class);
     employee.setEmployeeId("EMP001");
     employee.setEmployeeName("Tarun Joshi");
     employee.setEmployeeSalary(100000);
     mRealm.commitTransaction();

     

    You can also use Transaction blocks  which will automatically handle begin/commit, and cancel if an error happens. That means you don't need to add beginTransaction() and commitTransaction() everytime.

    // Transaction block
    mRealm.executeTransaction(new Realm.Transaction() {
         @Override
         public void execute(Realm realm) {
             EmployeeBean employee = mRealm.createObject(EmployeeBean.class);
             employee.setEmployeeId("EMP002");
             employee.setEmployeeName("Amit Rai");
             employee.setEmployeeSalary(60000);
         }
     });
     

    If you want to do the above transaction in a background thread then use Asynchronous Transactions

    mRealm.executeTransactionAsync(new Realm.Transaction() {
          @Override
          public void execute(Realm bgRealm) {
           EmployeeBean employee = bgRealm.createObject(EmployeeBean.class);
           employee.setEmployeeId("EMP003");
           employee.setEmployeeName("Devesh Bhandari");
           employee.setEmployeeSalary(75000);
          }
        }, new Realm.Transaction.OnSuccess() {
          @Override
          public void onSuccess() {
            // Transaction was a success.  
          }
        }, new Realm.Transaction.OnError() {
          @Override
          public void onError(Throwable error) {
            // Transaction failed and was automatically canceled.
          }
        });

     

    Step 7: Retrieve result from Realm objects or how to make query using Realm

    // query all employee
    RealmResults<EmployeeBean> employees = mRealm.where(EmployeeBean.class).findAll();
    for (EmployeeBean employee : employees) {
         Log.i(TAG, "EmployeeId: "+employee.getEmployeeId());
         Log.i(TAG, "EmployeeName: "+employee.getEmployeeName());
         Log.i(TAG, "EmployeeSalary: "+employee.getEmployeeSalary());
    }
    // retrieve all employees whose sal is greater than 50000
    RealmResults<EmployeeBean> employees = mRealm.where(EmployeeBean.class).greaterThan("employeeSalary", 50000).findAll();

     

    This is sufficient information to start with Realm. Please let me know in comments for further queries.

    Happy coding :)  

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