October 2018
Intermediate to advanced
464 pages
15h 17m
English
As you can see, this is very similar to saving state data, because it also uses name/value pairs. Here, we just stored an int, but we can just as easily store one of the other primitive data types. Each data type has equivalent getters and setters, for example, SharedPreferences.getBoolean() or SharedPreferences.setString().
Saving our data requires the services of SharedPreferences.Editor. This is evoked with edit() and accepts remove() and clear() procedures, as well as setters such as putInt(). Note that we must conclude any changes with the commit() statement.