Here's what I've found regarding the use of context:
1) . Within an Activity itself, use this for inflating layouts and menus, register context menus, instantiating widgets, start other activities, create new Intent within an Activity, instantiating preferences, or other methods available in an Activity.
Inflate layout:
View mView = this.getLayoutInflater().inflate(R.layout.myLayout, myViewGroup);
Inflate menu:
@Override
public boolean onCreateOptionsMenu(Menu menu) {
super.onCreateOptionsMenu(menu);
this.getMenuInflater().inflate(R.menu.mymenu, menu);
return true;
}
Register context menu:
this.registerForContextMenu(myView);
Instantiate widget:
TextView myTextView = (TextView) this.findViewById(R.id.myTextView);
Start an Activity:
Intent mIntent = new Intent(this, MyActivity.class);
this.startActivity(mIntent);
Instantiate preferences:
SharedPreferences mSharedPreferences = this.getPreferenceManager().getSharedPreferences();
2) . For application-wide class, use getApplicationContext() as this context exist for the lifespan of the application.
Retrieve the name of the current Android package:
public class MyApplication extends Application {
public static String getPackageName() {
String packageName = null;
try {
PackageInfo mPackageInfo = getApplicationContext().getPackageManager().getPackageInfo(getApplicationContext().getPackageName(), 0);
packageName = mPackageInfo.packageName;
} catch (NameNotFoundException e) {
// Log error here.
}
return packageName;
}
}
Bind an application-wide class:
Intent mIntent = new Intent(this, MyPersistent.class);
MyServiceConnection mServiceConnection = new MyServiceConnection();
if (mServiceConnection != null) {
getApplicationContext().bindService(mIntent, mServiceConnection, Context.BIND_AUTO_CREATE);
}
3) . For Listeners and other type of Android classes (e.g. ContentObserver), use a Context substitution like:
mContext = this; // Example 1
mContext = context; // Example 2
where this or context is the context of a class (Activity, etc).
Activity context substitution:
public class MyActivity extends Activity {
private Context mContext;
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
mContext = this;
}
}
Listener context substitution:
public class MyLocationListener implements LocationListener {
private Context mContext;
public MyLocationListener(Context context) {
mContext = context;
}
}
ContentObserver context substitution:
public class MyContentObserver extends ContentObserver {
private Context mContext;
public MyContentObserver(Handler handler, Context context) {
super(handler);
mContext = context;
}
}
4) . For BroadcastReceiver (including inlined/embedded receiver), use the receiver's own context.
External BroadcastReceiver:
public class MyBroadcastReceiver extends BroadcastReceiver {
@Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
final String action = intent.getAction();
if (action.equals(Intent.ACTION_SCREEN_OFF)) {
sendReceiverAction(context, true);
}
private static void sendReceiverAction(Context context, boolean state) {
Intent mIntent = new Intent(context.getClass().getName() + "." + context.getString(R.string.receiver_action));
mIntent.putExtra("extra", state);
context.sendBroadcast(mIntent, null);
}
}
}
Inlined/Embedded BroadcastReceiver:
public class MyActivity extends Activity {
private BroadcastReceiver mBroadcastReceiver = new BroadcastReceiver() {
@Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
final boolean connected = intent.getBooleanExtra(context.getString(R.string.connected), false);
if (connected) {
// Do something.
}
}
};
}
5) . For Services, use the service's own context.
public class MyService extends Service {
private BroadcastReceiver mBroadcastReceiver;
@Override
public void onCreate() {
super.onCreate();
registerReceiver();
}
private void registerReceiver() {
IntentFilter mIntentFilter = new IntentFilter();
mIntentFilter.addAction(Intent.ACTION_SCREEN_OFF);
this.mBroadcastReceiver = new MyBroadcastReceiver();
this.registerReceiver(this.mBroadcastReceiver, mIntentFilter);
}
}
6) . For Toasts, generally use getApplicationContext(), but where possible, use the context passed from an Activity, Service, etc.
Use context of the application:
Toast mToast = Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), message, Toast.LENGTH_LONG);
mToast.show();
Use context passed from a source:
public static void showLongToast(Context context, String message) {
if (context != null && message != null) {
Toast mToast = Toast.makeText(context, message, Toast.LENGTH_LONG);
mToast.show();
}
}
And last, don't use getBaseContext() as advised by Android's framework developers.
UPDATE: Add examples of Context usage.