Android Log.v(), Log.d(), Log.i(), Log.w(), Log.e() - When to use each one? Android Log.v(), Log.d(), Log.i(), Log.w(), Log.e() - When to use each one? android android

Android Log.v(), Log.d(), Log.i(), Log.w(), Log.e() - When to use each one?


Let's go in reverse order:

  • Log.e: This is for when bad stuff happens. Use this tag in places like inside a catch statement. You know that an error has occurred and therefore you're logging an error.

  • Log.w: Use this when you suspect something shady is going on. You may not be completely in full on error mode, but maybe you recovered from some unexpected behavior. Basically, use this to log stuff you didn't expect to happen but isn't necessarily an error. Kind of like a "hey, this happened, and it's weird, we should look into it."

  • Log.i: Use this to post useful information to the log. For example: that you have successfully connected to a server. Basically use it to report successes.

  • Log.d: Use this for debugging purposes. If you want to print out a bunch of messages so you can log the exact flow of your program, use this. If you want to keep a log of variable values, use this.

  • Log.v: Use this when you want to go absolutely nuts with your logging. If for some reason you've decided to log every little thing in a particular part of your app, use the Log.v tag.

And as a bonus...

  • Log.wtf: Use this when stuff goes absolutely, horribly, holy-crap wrong. You know those catch blocks where you're catching errors that you never should get...yeah, if you wanna log them use Log.wtf


The different methods are indications of priority. As you've listed them, they're going from least to most important. I think how you specifically map them to debug logs in your code depends on the component or app you're working on, as well as how Android treats them on different build flavors (eng, userdebug, and user). I have done a fair amount of work in the native daemons in Android, and this is how I do it. It may not apply directly to your app, but there may be some common ground. If my explanation sounds vague, it's because some of this is more of an art than a science. My basic rule is to be as efficient as possible, ensure you can reasonably debug your component without killing the performance of the system, and always check for errors and log them.

V - Printouts of state at different intervals, or upon any events occurring which my component processes. Also possibly very detailed printouts of the payloads of messages/events that my component receives or sends.

D - Details of minor events that occur within my component, as well as payloads of messages/events that my component receives or sends.

I - The header of any messages/events that my component receives or sends, as well as any important pieces of the payload which are critical to my component's operation.

W - Anything that happens that is unusual or suspicious, but not necessarily an error.

E - Errors, meaning things that aren't supposed to happen when things are working as they should.

The biggest mistake I see people make is that they overuse things like V, D, and I, but never use W or E. If an error is, by definition, not supposed to happen, or should only happen very rarely, then it's extremely cheap for you to log a message when it occurs. On the other hand, if every time somebody presses a key you do a Log.i(), you're abusing the shared logging resource. Of course, use common sense and be careful with error logs for things outside of your control (like network errors), or those contained in tight loops.

Maybe Bad

Log.i("I am here");

Good

Log.e("I shouldn't be here");

With all this in mind, the closer your code gets to "production ready", the more you can restrict the base logging level for your code (you need V in alpha, D in beta, I in production, or possibly even W in production). You should run through some simple use cases and view the logs to ensure that you can still mostly understand what's happening as you apply more restrictive filtering. If you run with the filter below, you should still be able to tell what your app is doing, but maybe not get all the details.

logcat -v threadtime MyApp:I *:S


You can use LOG such as :

Log.e(String, String) (error)Log.w(String, String) (warning)Log.i(String, String) (information)Log.d(String, String) (debug)Log.v(String, String) (verbose)

example code:

private static final String TAG = "MyActivity";...Log.i(TAG, "MyClass.getView() — get item number " + position);