And how are you reading these? On Sep 14, 8:10 pm, nextgen <[email protected]> wrote: > Here is the line where I load the XML into the Array: > > TEAM_SCORES = getResources().getStringArray(R.array.TEAM_SCORES) > > Here is a clip of the XML for TEAM_SCORES: > > <string-array name="TEAM_SCORES"> > <item>[1]sd[2]77[3]w1...@kc[5]san Diego Chargers[6]R01[7]Mon Sep 13, > 10:15 PM[8]</item> > <item>[1]ari[2]69[3]w1...@stl[5]arizona Cardinals[6]R02[7]Sun Sep 12, > 4:15 PM[8]</item> > ... > </string-array> > > Only instead of two items, there are 512. When I cut it down to, say, > the first 32, everything is fine. The file size of strings.xml on > disk is 44k, which doesn't necessarily sound that large to me. Maybe > it's choking on a certain entry later on in the list? > > On Sep 14, 9:04 pm, DanH <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Maybe you could give us a sample of what you're "loading". > > > On Sep 14, 7:44 pm, nextgen <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Thank you both for the replies. Unfortunately you are stretching my > > > admittedly thin knowledge, only began in Android and Java a month > > > ago. I'll look into LogCat. Frank, if you can spare a bit more of > > > your time to explain how to do this at compile time I would be > > > grateful, although I'm sure it's pretty remedial for you. > > > > On Sep 14, 5:14 pm, Frank Weiss <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > It's running out of time in onCreate() or running out of memory. If the > > > > XML > > > > data is known at compile time, why bother parsing it at run time? > > > > Any messages in LogCat?- Hide quoted text - > > > - Show quoted text -
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