For some actions, you could only declare the BroadcastReceiver in Java code. This happens to the BATTERY_CHANGED
action and SCREEN_ON
,SCREEN_OFF
so far as I know.
When you declare a BroadcastReceiver in the Manifest.xml file, no matter whether your app is running or not, the BroadcastReceiver will be awaken and thus the onReceive
method will be called.
Why?I think this is because the BATTERY_CHANGED
action is very common to take place and if you can declare it in the Manifest, the system will often send a lot of broadcasts and thus consumes battery dramatically;however, when you declare it in the code, the broadcastReceiver will only be effective when the activity is running and thus avoid extreme battery consumption. To save battery, Android doesn't allow such actions to be registered in the file.
This is just my guess. I didn't see any official explanations on this. As a developer, I just memorize such actions, rather than the reasons behind them.
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