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Android Studio 4.1 Development Essentials – Java Edition

You're reading from  Android Studio 4.1 Development Essentials – Java Edition

Product type Book
Published in May 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801815161
Pages 810 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Neil Smyth Neil Smyth
Profile icon Neil Smyth

Table of Contents (88) Chapters

1. Introduction 2. Setting up an Android Studio Development Environment 3. Creating an Example Android App in Android Studio 4. Creating an Android Virtual Device (AVD) in Android Studio 5. Using and Configuring the Android Studio AVD Emulator 6. A Tour of the Android Studio User Interface 7. Testing Android Studio Apps on a Physical Android Device 8. The Basics of the Android Studio Code Editor 9. An Overview of the Android Architecture 10. The Anatomy of an Android Application 11. An Overview of Android View Binding 12. Understanding Android Application and Activity Lifecycles 13. Handling Android Activity State Changes 14. Android Activity State Changes by Example 15. Saving and Restoring the State of an Android Activity 16. Understanding Android Views, View Groups and Layouts 17. A Guide to the Android Studio Layout Editor Tool 18. A Guide to the Android ConstraintLayout 19. A Guide to using ConstraintLayout in Android Studio 20. Working with ConstraintLayout Chains and Ratios in Android Studio 21. An Android Studio Layout Editor ConstraintLayout Tutorial 22. Manual XML Layout Design in Android Studio 23. Managing Constraints using Constraint Sets 24. An Android ConstraintSet Tutorial 25. A Guide to using Apply Changes in Android Studio 26. An Overview and Example of Android Event Handling 27. Android Touch and Multi-touch Event Handling 28. Detecting Common Gestures using the Android Gesture Detector Class 29. Implementing Custom Gesture and Pinch Recognition on Android 30. An Introduction to Android Fragments 31. Using Fragments in Android Studio - An Example 32. Modern Android App Architecture with Jetpack 33. An Android Jetpack ViewModel Tutorial 34. An Android Jetpack LiveData Tutorial 35. An Overview of Android Jetpack Data Binding 36. An Android Jetpack Data Binding Tutorial 37. An Android ViewModel Saved State Tutorial 38. Working with Android Lifecycle-Aware Components 39. An Android Jetpack Lifecycle Awareness Tutorial 40. An Overview of the Navigation Architecture Component 41. An Android Jetpack Navigation Component Tutorial 42. Creating and Managing Overflow Menus on Android 43. An Introduction to MotionLayout 44. An Android MotionLayout Editor Tutorial 45. A MotionLayout KeyCycle Tutorial 46. Working with the Floating Action Button and Snackbar 47. Creating a Tabbed Interface using the TabLayout Component 48. Working with the RecyclerView and CardView Widgets 49. An Android RecyclerView and CardView Tutorial 50. A Layout Editor Sample Data Tutorial 51. Working with the AppBar and Collapsing Toolbar Layouts 52. An Android Studio Master/Detail Flow Tutorial 53. An Overview of Android Intents 54. Android Explicit Intents – A Worked Example 55. Android Implicit Intents – A Worked Example 56. Android Broadcast Intents and Broadcast Receivers 57. A Basic Overview of Threads and AsyncTasks 58. An Overview of Android Started and Bound Services 59. Implementing an Android Started Service – A Worked Example 60. Android Local Bound Services – A Worked Example 61. Android Remote Bound Services – A Worked Example 62. An Android Notifications Tutorial 63. An Android Direct Reply Notification Tutorial 64. Foldable Devices and Multi-Window Support 65. An Overview of Android SQLite Databases 66. The Android Room Persistence Library 67. An Android TableLayout and TableRow Tutorial 68. An Android Room Database and Repository Tutorial 69. Accessing Cloud Storage using the Android Storage Access Framework 70. An Android Storage Access Framework Example 71. Video Playback on Android using the VideoView and MediaController Classes 72. Android Picture-in-Picture Mode 73. An Android Picture-in-Picture Tutorial 74. Making Runtime Permission Requests in Android 75. Android Audio Recording and Playback using MediaPlayer and MediaRecorder 76. Working with the Google Maps Android API in Android Studio 77. Printing with the Android Printing Framework 78. An Android HTML and Web Content Printing Example 79. A Guide to Android Custom Document Printing 80. An Introduction to Android App Links 81. An Android Studio App Links Tutorial 82. A Guide to the Android Studio Profiler 83. An Android Biometric Authentication Tutorial 84. Creating, Testing and Uploading an Android App Bundle 85. An Overview of Android Dynamic Feature Modules 86. An Android Studio Dynamic Feature Tutorial 87. An Overview of Gradle in Android Studio Index

53. An Overview of Android Intents

By this stage of the book, it should be clear that Android applications are comprised, among other things, of one or more activities. An area that has yet to be covered in extensive detail, however, is the mechanism by which one activity can trigger the launch of another activity. As outlined briefly in the chapter entitled “The Anatomy of an Android Application”, this is achieved primarily by using Intents.

Prior to working through some Android Studio based example implementations of intents in the following chapters, the goal of this chapter is to provide an overview of intents in the form of explicit intents and implicit intents together with an introduction to intent filters.

53.1 An Overview of Intents

Intents (android.content.Intent) are the messaging system by which one activity is able to launch another activity. An activity can, for example, issue an intent to request the launch of another activity contained within the same application. Intents also, however, go beyond this concept by allowing an activity to request the services of any other appropriately registered activity on the device for which permissions are configured. Consider, for example, an activity contained within an application that requires a web page to be loaded and displayed to the user. Rather than the application having to contain a second activity to perform this task, the code can simply send an intent to the Android runtime requesting the services of any activity that has registered the ability to display a web page. The runtime system will match the request to available activities on the device and either launch the activity that matches or, in the event of multiple matches...

53.2 Explicit Intents

An explicit intent requests the launch of a specific activity by referencing the component name (which is actually the class name) of the target activity. This approach is most common when launching an activity residing in the same application as the sending activity (since the class name is known to the application developer).

An explicit intent is issued by creating an instance of the Intent class, passing through the activity context and the component name of the activity to be launched. A call is then made to the startActivity() method, passing the intent object as an argument. For example, the following code fragment issues an intent for the activity with the class name ActivityB to be launched:

Intent i = new Intent(this, ActivityB.class);

startActivity(i);

Data may be transmitted to the receiving activity by adding it to the intent object before it is started via calls to the putExtra() method of the intent object. Data must be added in the...

53.3 Returning Data from an Activity

As the example in the previous section stands, while data is transferred to ActivityB, there is no way for data to be returned to the first activity (which we will call ActivityA). This can, however, be achieved by launching ActivityB as a sub-activity of ActivityA. An activity is started as a sub-activity by starting the intent with a call to the startActivityForResult() method instead of using startActivity(). In addition to the intent object, this method is also passed a request code value which can be used to identify the return data when the sub-activity returns. For example:

startActivityForResult(i, REQUEST_CODE);

In order to return data to the parent activity, the sub-activity must implement the finish() method, the purpose of which is to create a new intent object containing the data to be returned, and then calling the setResult() method of the enclosing activity, passing through a result code and the intent containing the return...

53.4 Implicit Intents

Unlike explicit intents, which reference the class name of the activity to be launched, implicit intents identify the activity to be launched by specifying the action to be performed and the type of data to be handled by the receiving activity. For example, an action type of ACTION_VIEW accompanied by the URL of a web page in the form of a URI object will instruct the Android system to search for, and subsequently launch, a web browser capable activity. The following implicit intent will, when executed on an Android device, result in the designated web page appearing in a web browser activity:

Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW,

        Uri.parse("https://www.ebookfrenzy.com"));

 

startActivity(intent);

When the above implicit intent is issued by an activity, the Android system will search for activities on the device that have registered the ability to handle ACTION_VIEW requests...

53.5 Using Intent Filters

Intent filters are the mechanism by which activities “advertise” supported actions and data handling capabilities to the Android intent resolution process. Continuing the example in the previous section, an activity capable of displaying web pages would include an intent filter section in its manifest file indicating support for the ACTION_VIEW type of intent requests on http scheme data.

It is important to note that both the sending and receiving activities must have requested permission for the type of action to be performed. This is achieved by adding <uses-permission> tags to the manifest files of both activities. For example, the following manifest lines request permission to access the internet and contacts database:

<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.READ_CONTACTS" />

<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.INTERNET"/>

The following AndroidManifest.xml file illustrates...

53.6 Checking Intent Availability

It is generally unwise to assume that an activity will be available for a particular intent, especially since the absence of a matching action will typically result in the application crashing. Fortunately, it is possible to identify the availability of an activity for a specific intent before it is sent to the runtime system. The following method can be used to identify the availability of an activity for a specified intent action type:

public static boolean isIntentAvailable(Context context, String action) {

    final PackageManager packageManager = context.getPackageManager();

    final Intent intent = new Intent(action);

    List<ResolveInfo> list =

            packageManager.queryIntentActivities(intent,

                 ...

53.7 Summary

Intents are the messaging mechanism by which one Android activity can launch another. An explicit intent references a specific activity to be launched by referencing the receiving activity by class name. Explicit intents are typically, though not exclusively, used when launching activities contained within the same application. An implicit intent specifies the action to be performed and the type of data to be handled, and lets the Android runtime find a matching activity to launch. Implicit intents are generally used when launching activities that reside in different applications.

An activity can send data to the receiving activity by bundling data into the intent object in the form of key-value pairs. Data can only be returned from an activity if it is started as a sub-activity of the sending activity.

Activities advertise capabilities to the Android intent resolution process through the specification of intent-filters in the application manifest file. Both sending...

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Published in: May 2021 Publisher: Packt ISBN-13: 9781801815161
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