How can i get JSON from php in android - java

i could not found codes. I want to this;
for example
JSONObject result = function("url",paramsArrayList);
txt.setText(result.getString["result1"]);
i want to use so basic, please help me, what should i use? Thanks...

To send and receive data from php, you need to implement HTTP client in android side. I would strongly recommed you to use Retrofit, A type-safe HTTP client for Android and Java.
http://square.github.io/retrofit/
//delcare API interface
public interface TaskService {
#GET("/tasks")
Call<List<Task>> getTasks();
}
//Asynchronous Request
TaskService taskService = ServiceGenerator.createService(TaskService.class);
Call<List<Task>> call = taskService.getTasks();
call.enqueue(new Callback<List<Task>>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<List<Task>> call, Response<List<Task>> response) {
if (response.isSuccessful()) {
// tasks available
} else {
// error response, no access to resource?
}
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<List<Task>> call, Throwable t) {
// something went completely south (like no internet connection)
Log.d("Error", t.getMessage());
}
}

Related

How do I properly set the annotation and query in Retrofit 2.0+?

URL query string "q={city}" must not have replace block
I can't get this to work, I've tried several other variants but still get some form of exception.
public interface WeatherInterface {
#GET("/weather?q={city}")
Call<WeatherModel> getWeather(#Query("city") String city);
}
/////
public interface WeatherInterface {
#GET("/weather")
Call<WeatherModel> getWeather(#Query("q") String city);
}
And so on.
WeatherActivity.class
Call<WeatherModel> call = weatherInterface.getWeather("""CITYNAME""");
call.enqueue(new Callback<WeatherModel>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<WeatherModel> call, Response<WeatherModel> response) {
if(response.isSuccessful()) {
**///FIRST VARIANT FAILS HERE**
city.setText(response.body().getName());
}
**///SECOND VARIANT FAILES RESPONSE**
else Log.d("No response", "RESPONSE");
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<WeatherModel> call, Throwable t) {
Log.d("fail", "fail");
}
});
EDIT:
Log.d(call.request().url().toString(), "CALL REQUEST URL");
I should share my solution too probably, I just logged the call url.
I forgot the to add my API KEY in the url. I shamefully withdraw my question.
U can use this sample take example:
public interface GitHubClient {
#GET("/users/{user}/repos")
Call<List<GitHubRepo>> reposForUser(
#Path("user") String user
);
}
For more samples just visit this website

Retrofit 2.0 how to delete?

I am using retrofit 2.0 and I am implementing a delete feature in my Android app, however, I cannot make it successfully, can someone give me a suggestion?
I tried both:
#DELETE("books/{id}") void deleteBook(#Path("id") int itemId);
#DELETE("books/{id}") void deleteBook(#Path("id") int bookId, Callback<Response> callback);
I get error java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Service methods cannot return void. for method LibraryService.deleteBook.
I also gave a try on this:
Response deleteBook(#Path("id") int bookId);
Call<Response> deleteBook(#Path("id") int bookId);
no matter I use okhttp3.Response or retrofit2.Response, I will get the error: '*.Response' is not a valid response body type. Did you mean ResponseBody?
Can someone give me a successful delete example? I googled online but cannot find enough information. Thanks a lot.
Do it this way as you noted last:
Call<ResponseBody> deleteBook(#Path("id") int bookId);
Make sure you make the call off the UI-thread via AsyncTask or some other threading mechanism. Not sure if you've used RxJava + Retrofit 2 before, but it is nice.
The ResponseBody object will return the results from the call. It is what I use for some REST API requests that don't return an entity object, and all I care about is looking at the response code.
Call<ResponseBody> deleteRequest = mService.deleteBook(123);
deleteRequest.enqueue(new Callback<ResponseBody>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<ResponseBody> call, Response<ResponseBody> response) {
// use response.code, response.headers, etc.
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<ResponseBody> call, Throwable t) {
// handle failure
}
});
Or, Jake Wharton suggests
Use Void which not only has better semantics but is (slightly) more efficient in the empty case and vastly more efficient in a non-empty case (when you just don't care about body).
So you have:
Call<Void> deleteBook(#Path("id") int bookId);
Usage:
deleteRequest.enqueue(new Callback<Void>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<Void> call, Response<Void> response) {
// use response.code, response.headers, etc.
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<Void> call, Throwable t) {
// handle failure
}
});
This is better if all you care about is the response code and no body to the response
EDIT 2: Left out the proper Callback definition. Fixed :)

Create a Custom Completion/Callback Handler to return Objects after a HTTP Request is Completed

I am an iOS Developer starting to learn Android. In Swift, creating a completion handler is very simple, but I still can't find a way to do it in Java.
I am sorry if this question is too noob for StackOverflow people.
Problem
I am creating a class to handle all my Http Request which is done using Retrofit.
I make this function is my RequestHelper.java
public static void checkEmailAvailability(String email) {
MyWebServiceAPI serviceAPI = retrofit.create(MyWebServiceAPI.class);
Call<APIResults> call = serviceAPI.checkEmailAvailability(getAuthenticationHeader(), RequestBody.create(MediaType.parse("text/plain"), email));
call.enqueue(new Callback<APIResults>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(retrofit.Response<APIResults> response, Retrofit retrofit) {
//Parse Response Json
//Get some value and place it inside an object
//ANDI WOULD LIKE RETURN SOME BOOLEAN VALUE AND SOME OTHER STRING
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Throwable t) {
//I WOULD LIKE A BOOLEAN VALUE HERE
}
});
}
I call it like this from my MainActivity
RequestHelper.checkEmailAvailability("user#user.com");
Now the function is still void but I would like for it to return something after the on the onResponse and onFailure method.
Any thoughts please?
You should pass the Callback object as a parameter to the checkEmailAvailability().
And implement the interface when you call the method from your MainActivity,and use the response parameter in the onXXX() method as the data returned to update UI.

Using Retrofit in Android

I have an android app that has 3 activities :
A login activity
A tasks acivity where all tasks pertaining to a user are displayed (Populated using an Array Adapter)
A task_details activity which results from clicking a task on the list
I have to consume REST Apis. The research I have done so far directs me to use Retrofit. I checked how to use it and found out that :
Set the base URL in the Main Activity (Mine is the Login Activity)
I need to create a API class and define my functions using annotations.
Use the class Rest Adapter in the Activity and define Callbacks.
Had my app been a single activity app, I would have crunched everything in my MainActivity.java but I don't know how and where to put all the code from steps 1,2,3 for use in my 3 activities.Could you please help by telling how to use Retrofit in my app. Thanks a lot.
Specifically, I need network calls to :
1. Login the user
2. Get all the tasks of the user.
And for both I would be using a given REST api.
*********************************************
Calling Api USing Retrofit
*********************************************
**Dependancies** :-
implementation 'com.android.support:recyclerview-v7:27.1.1'
implementation 'com.squareup.picasso:picasso:2.5.2'
implementation 'com.android.support:cardview-v7:27.1.1'
enter code here
**Model**
use the Pozo class
**Api Call**
-> getLogin() // use the method
//API call for Login
private void getLogin()
{
getWindow().setFlags(WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_NOT_TOUCHABLE,
WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_NOT_TOUCHABLE);
AsyncHttpClient client = new AsyncHttpClient();
RequestParams requestParams = new RequestParams();
requestParams.put("email_id", edit_email.getText().toString());
requestParams.put("password", edit_password.getText().toString());
Log.e("", "LOGIN URL==>" + Urls.LOGIN + requestParams);
Log.d("device_token", "Device_ Token" + FirebaseInstanceId.getInstance().getToken());
client.post(Urls.LOGIN, requestParams, new JsonHttpResponseHandler() {
#Override
public void onStart() {
super.onStart();
ShowProgress();
}
#Override
public void onFinish() {
super.onFinish();
Hideprogress();
}
#Override
public void onSuccess(int statusCode, Header[] headers, JSONObject response) {
super.onSuccess(statusCode, headers, response);
Log.e("", "Login RESPONSE-" + response);
Login login = new Gson().fromJson(String.valueOf(response), Login.class);
edit_email.setText("");
edit_password.setText("");
if (login.getStatus().equals("true")) {
getWindow().clearFlags(WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_NOT_TOUCHABLE);
MDToast mdToast = MDToast.makeText(SignInActivity.this, String.valueOf("User Login Successfully!"),
MDToast.LENGTH_SHORT, MDToast.TYPE_SUCCESS);
mdToast.show();
Utils.WriteSharePrefrence(SignInActivity.this, Util_Main.Constant.EMAIL, login.getData().getEmailId());
Utils.WriteSharePrefrence(SignInActivity.this, Constant.USERID, login.getData().getId());
Utils.WriteSharePrefrence(SignInActivity.this, Constant.USERNAME, login.getData().getFirstName());
Utils.WriteSharePrefrence(SignInActivity.this, Constant.PROFILE, login.getData().getProfileImage());
hideKeyboard(SignInActivity.this);
Intent intent = new Intent(SignInActivity.this, DashboardActivity.class);
intent.setFlags(Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK | Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_CLEAR_TASK);
startActivity(intent);
finish();
} else {
getWindow().clearFlags(WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_NOT_TOUCHABLE);
MDToast mdToast = MDToast.makeText(SignInActivity.this, String.valueOf("Login Denied"),
MDToast.LENGTH_SHORT, MDToast.TYPE_ERROR);
mdToast.show();
}
}
#Override
public void onFailure(int statusCode, Header[] headers, String responseString, Throwable throwable) {
super.onFailure(statusCode, headers, responseString, throwable);
Log.e("", throwable.getMessage());
getWindow().clearFlags(WindowManager.LayoutParams.FLAG_NOT_TOUCHABLE);
MDToast mdToast = MDToast.makeText(SignInActivity.this, "Something went wrong",
MDToast.LENGTH_SHORT, MDToast.TYPE_ERROR);
mdToast.show();
}
});
}
Using Retrofit is quite simple and straightforward.
First of all you need to add retrofit to your project, as example with Gradle build sytem.
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit:retrofit:1.7.1' |
another way you can download .jar and place it to your libs folder.
Then you need to define interfaces that will be used by Retrofit to make API calls to your REST endpoints. For example for users:
public interface YourUsersApi {
//You can use rx.java for sophisticated composition of requests
#GET("/users/{user}")
public Observable<SomeUserModel> fetchUser(#Path("user") String user);
//or you can just get your model if you use json api
#GET("/users/{user}")
public SomeUserModel fetchUser(#Path("user") String user);
//or if there are some special cases you can process your response manually
#GET("/users/{user}")
public Response fetchUser(#Path("user") String user);
}
Ok. Now you have defined your API interface an you can try to use it.
To start you need to create an instance of RestAdapter and set base url of your API back-end. It's also quite simple:
RestAdapter restAdapter = new RestAdapter.Builder()
.setEndpoint("https://yourserveraddress.com")
.build();
YourUsersApi yourUsersApi = restAdapter.create(YourUsersApi.class);
Here Retrofit will read your information from interface and under the hood it will create RestHandler according to meta-info your provided which actually will perform HTTP requests.
Then under the hood, once response is received, in case of json api your data will be transformed to your model using Gson library so you should be aware of that fact that limitations that are present in Gson are actually there in Retrofit.
To extend/override process of serialisers/deserialisation your response data to your models you might want to provide your custom serialisers/deserialisers to retrofit.
Here you need to implement Converter interface and implement 2 methods fromBody() and toBody().
Here is example:
public class SomeCustomRetrofitConverter implements Converter {
private GsonBuilder gb;
public SomeCustomRetrofitConverter() {
gb = new GsonBuilder();
//register your cursom custom type serialisers/deserialisers if needed
gb.registerTypeAdapter(SomeCutsomType.class, new SomeCutsomTypeDeserializer());
}
public static final String ENCODING = "UTF-8";
#Override
public Object fromBody(TypedInput body, Type type) throws ConversionException {
String charset = "UTF-8";
if (body.mimeType() != null) {
charset = MimeUtil.parseCharset(body.mimeType());
}
InputStreamReader isr = null;
try {
isr = new InputStreamReader(body.in(), charset);
Gson gson = gb.create();
return gson.fromJson(isr, type);
} catch (IOException e) {
throw new ConversionException(e);
} catch (JsonParseException e) {
throw new ConversionException(e);
} finally {
if (isr != null) {
try {
isr.close();
} catch (IOException ignored) {
}
}
}
}
#Override
public TypedOutput toBody(Object object) {
try {
Gson gson = gb.create();
return new JsonTypedOutput(gson.toJson(object).getBytes(ENCODING), ENCODING);
} catch (UnsupportedEncodingException e) {
throw new AssertionError(e);
}
}
private static class JsonTypedOutput implements TypedOutput {
private final byte[] jsonBytes;
private final String mimeType;
JsonTypedOutput(byte[] jsonBytes, String encode) {
this.jsonBytes = jsonBytes;
this.mimeType = "application/json; charset=" + encode;
}
#Override
public String fileName() {
return null;
}
#Override
public String mimeType() {
return mimeType;
}
#Override
public long length() {
return jsonBytes.length;
}
#Override
public void writeTo(OutputStream out) throws IOException {
out.write(jsonBytes);
}
}
}
And now you need to enable your custom adapters, if it was needed by using setConverter() on building RestAdapter
Ok. Now you are aware how you can get your data from server to your Android application. But you need somehow mange your data and invoke REST call in right place.
There I would suggest to use android Service or AsyncTask or loader or rx.java that would query your data on background thread in order to not block your UI.
So now you can find the most appropriate place to call
SomeUserModel yourUser = yourUsersApi.fetchUser("someUsers")
to fetch your remote data.
I have just used retrofit for a couple of weeks and at first I found it hard to use in my application. I would like to share to you the easiest way to use retrofit in you application. And then later on if you already have a good grasp in retrofit you can enhance your codes(separating your ui from api and use callbacks) and maybe get some techniques from the post above.
In your app you have Login,Activity for list of task,and activity to view detailed task.
First thing is you need to add retrofit in your app and theres 2 ways, follow #artemis post above.
Retrofit uses interface as your API. So, create an interface class.
public interface MyApi{
/*LOGIN*/
#GET("/api_reciever/login") //your login function in your api
public void login(#Query("username") String username,#Query("password") String password,Callback<String> calback); //this is for your login, and you can used String as response or you can use a POJO, retrofit is very rubust to convert JSON to POJO
/*GET LIST*/
#GET("/api_reciever/getlist") //a function in your api to get all the list
public void getTaskList(#Query("user_uuid") String user_uuid,Callback<ArrayList<Task>> callback); //this is an example of response POJO - make sure your variable name is the same with your json tagging
/*GET LIST*/
#GET("/api_reciever/getlistdetails") //a function in your api to get all the list
public void getTaskDetail(#Query("task_uuid") String task_uuid,Callback<Task> callback); //this is an example of response POJO - make sure your variable name is the same with your json tagging
}
Create another interface class to hold all your BASE ADDRESS of your api
public interface Constants{
public String URL = "www.yoururl.com"
}
In your Login activity create a method to handle the retrofit
private void myLogin(String username,String password){
RestAdapter restAdapter = new RestAdapter.Builder()
.setEndpoint(Constants.URL) //call your base url
.build();
MyApi mylogin = restAdapter.create(MyApi.class); //this is how retrofit create your api
mylogin.login(username,password,new Callback<String>() {
#Override
public void success(String s, Response response) {
//process your response if login successfull you can call Intent and launch your main activity
}
#Override
public void failure(RetrofitError retrofitError) {
retrofitError.printStackTrace(); //to see if you have errors
}
});
}
In your MainActivityList
private void myList(String user_uuid){
RestAdapter restAdapter = new RestAdapter.Builder()
.setEndpoint(Constants.URL) //call your base url
.build();
MyApi mytask = restAdapter.create(MyApi.class); //this is how retrofit create your api
mytask.getTaskDetail(user_uuid,new Callback<Task>>() {
#Override
public void success(ArrayList<Task> list, Response response) {
//process your response if successful load the list in your listview adapter
}
#Override
public void failure(RetrofitError retrofitError) {
retrofitError.printStackTrace(); //to see if you have errors
}
});
}
In your Detailed List
private void myDetailed(String task_uuid){
RestAdapter restAdapter = new RestAdapter.Builder()
.setEndpoint(Constants.URL) //call your base url
.build();
MyApi mytask = restAdapter.create(MyApi.class); //this is how retrofit create your api
mytask.getTaskList(task_uuid,new Callback<Task>() {
#Override
public void success(Task task, Response response) {
//process your response if successful do what you want in your task
}
#Override
public void failure(RetrofitError retrofitError) {
retrofitError.printStackTrace(); //to see if you have errors
}
});
}
Hope this would help you though its really the simplest way to use retrofit.
Take a look at this , excellent blog on using Retrofit in conjunction with Otto, both libraries are from Square.
http://www.mdswanson.com/blog/2014/04/07/durable-android-rest-clients.html
The basic idea is that you will hold a reference to a "repository" object in your Application class. This object will have methods that "subscribe" to rest api event requests. When one is received it will make the proper Retrofit call, and then "post" the response, which can then be "subscribed" to by another component (such as the activity that made the request).
Once you have this all setup properly, accessing data via your rest api becomes very easy. For example, making are request for data would look something like this :
mBus.post(new GetMicropostsRequest(mUserId));
and consuming the data would look something like this:
#Subscribe
public void onGetUserProfileResponse(GetUserProfileResponse event) {
mView.setUserIcon("http://www.gravatar.com/avatar/" + event.getGravatar_id());
mView.setUserName(event.getName());
}
It takes a little bit of upfront effort, but in the end it becomes "trivial" to access anything you need from our backend via Rest.
You may try saving references to your api inside your application class. Then you can get it's instance from any activity or fragment and get api from there. That sounds a little weird, but it may be a simple DI alternative. And if you will only store references in your app class, it won't be a kind of god object
UPD: http://square.github.io/retrofit/ - here is some documentation, it might be useful
Using RetroFit is very easy.
Add dependecy in build.gradle.
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit:retrofit:1.9.0'
compile 'com.squareup.okhttp:okhttp:2.4.0'
Make an Interface for all http methods.
Copy your json output and create pojo class to recieve json of your
response, you can make pojo from JsonSchema2pojo site .
make an adapter and call your method
for complete demo try this tutorial Retrofit Android example
Checkout this app that demonstrates Retrofit integration to Google Tasks API.
https://github.com/sschendel/SyncManagerAndroid-DemoGoogleTasks
There are examples of Retrofit api (TaskApi) used within Activity AsyncTask in MainActivity, as well as examples of use within Sync Adapter in background service.
The strategy from the article posted in #nPn's answer is probably a more elegant solution, but you can at least look at another working example.
Firstly, putting everything in MainActivity would be bad practice and you would end up with a God object.
The documentation on the Retrofit site is fantastic, so I'm going to read your question on how to structure the project. I wrote a very small app for demonstration purposes. It loads cats from the cat API and should be fairly simple to follow what is happening.
It has an example of using JSON or XML for the parsing of data from the service. You can find it at https://github.com/codepath/android_guides/wiki/Consuming-APIs-with-Retrofit
Hopefully you can extrapolate why I have structured it the way I have. I'm happy to answer any questions you have in the comments and update the answer.
I find these tutorials AndroidHive , CodePath helpful
I will briefly describe what I have learned.
Step 1 : Add these three dependencies to build.gradle and Add Internet permission to Manifest
compile 'com.google.code.gson:gson:2.6.2' // for string to class conversion. Not Compulsory
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:retrofit:2.1.0'// compulsory
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-gson:2.1.0' //for retrofit conversion
Add them in Manifest
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.INTERNET" />
Step 2
Creae ApiClient and ApiInterface.
public class ApiClient {
public static final String BASE_URL = "http://yourwebsite/services/";
private static Retrofit retrofit = null;
public static Retrofit getClient() {
if (retrofit==null) {
retrofit = new Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(BASE_URL)
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create())
.build();
}
return retrofit;
}
}
where ApiInterface.class
public interface ApiInterface {
// getting same data in three different ways.
#GET("GetCompanyDetailByID")
Call<CompanyResponse> getDetailOfComapanies(#Query("CompanyID") int companyID);
#GET("GetCompanyDetailByID")
Call<ResponseBody> getRawDetailOfCompanies(#Query("CompanyID") int companyID);
#GET("{pathToAdd}")
Call<CompanyResponse> getDetailOfComapaniesWithPath(#Path("pathToAdd") String pathToAppend, #Query("CompanyID") int companyID);
}
And call this service like
ApiInterface apiService =
ApiClient.getClient().create(ApiInterface.class);
Call<CompanyResponse> companyResponseCall = apiService.getDetailOfComapanies(2);
//Call<CompanyResponse> companyResponseCall = apiService.getDetailOfComapaniesWithPath("GetCompanyDetailByID",2);
companyResponseCall.enqueue(new Callback<CompanyResponse>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<CompanyResponse> call, Response<CompanyResponse> response) {
CompanyResponse comapnyResponse = response.body();
Boolean status = comapnyResponse.getStatus();
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<CompanyResponse> call, Throwable t) {
}
});
For Getting Raw Json String
Call<ResponseBody> call = apiService.getRawDetailOfCompanies(2);
call.enqueue(new Callback<ResponseBody>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<ResponseBody> call, Response<ResponseBody> response) {
String jsonStr = response.body().string();
if(!jsonStr.isEmpty()){
Gson gson = new Gson();
JSONObject jObject = new JSONObject(jsonStr).getJSONObject("data");
//1st Method
Data dataKiType = gson.fromJson(jObject.toString(), Data.class);
dataKiType.getCompanyDetail();
//2nd method for creaing class or List at runTime
Type listType = new TypeToken<Data>(){}.getType();
Data yourClassList = new Gson().fromJson(jObject.toString(), listType);
yourClassList.getCompanyDetail();
} e.printStackTrace();
}
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<ResponseBody> call, Throwable t) {
}
});
You can create your business object using http://www.jsonschema2pojo.org/ by simply pasting json. and selecting source type to JSON and Annotation Style to GSon
Found a small, but complete and concise example at
https://github.com/square/retrofit/tree/master/samples
Beginners find it little intimidating to learn retrofit. I have prepared a tutorial which will simplify the learning curve. See Retrofit android tutorial for more information.
Developing your own type-safe HTTP library to interface with a REST API can be a real pain: you have to handle many aspects, such as making connections, caching, retrying failed requests, threading, response parsing, error handling, and more. Retrofit, on the other hand, is a well-planned, documented and tested library that will save you a lot of precious time and headaches.
compile 'com.google.code.gson:gson:2.6.2'
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:retrofit:2.1.0'// compulsory
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-gson:2.1.0' //for retrofit conversion
First, add this lines to gradle file
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:retrofit:2.1.0'
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-gson:2.1.0'
compile 'com.google.code.gson:gson:2.7'
compile 'com.squareup:otto:1.3.8'
compile 'com.squareup.okhttp3:logging-interceptor:3.4.1'
Then Create Objects in OnCreate of Activity
HttpLoggingInterceptor interceptor = new HttpLoggingInterceptor();
interceptor.setLevel(HttpLoggingInterceptor.Level.BODY);
OkHttpClient client= new OkHttpClient
.Builder()
.connectTimeout(30, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
.readTimeout(30, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
.addInterceptor(interceptor).build();
Gson gson=new GsonBuilder()
.setDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssZ")
.create();
Retrofit retrofit= new Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl("url")
.client(client)
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson))
.build();
Create an iterface
public interface summaryListAPI {
//post
#FormUrlEncoded
#POST("index.php")
Call<summaryList> post(
#Field("status") String status,
#Field("sox") String sox
);
//get
#GET("yesbdeChatHistoryList/{userId}/")
Call<List<ChatTabTwoResp>> getFriends(
#Path("userId") int userId
);
}
Create classes
public class summaryList {
#SerializedName("bookingSummary") #Expose private List<summaryListData> status = new ArrayList<summaryListData>();
}
public class summaryListData {
#SerializedName("date") #Expose private String date;
}
Add this Method to your activity
public void apiSummaryListMain(final Retrofit retrofit) {
retrofit.create(summaryListAPI.class).post("8547861657","100").enqueue(new Callback<summaryList>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<summaryList> call, Response<summaryList> response) {
if (response.isSuccessful()) {
progressBar.setVisibility(View.INVISIBLE);
List<summaryListData> summary_List= response.body().getStatus();
}else{
}
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<summaryList> call, Throwable t) {
}
});
}
Its Working
package com.keshav.gmailretrofitexampleworking.network;
import retrofit2.Retrofit;
import retrofit2.converter.gson.GsonConverterFactory;
public class ApiClient {
public static final String BASE_URL = "http://api.androidhive.info/json/";
private static Retrofit retrofit = null;
public static Retrofit getClient() {
if (retrofit == null) {
retrofit = new Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(BASE_URL)
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create())
.build();
}
return retrofit;
}
}
==============================================
package com.keshav.gmailretrofitexampleworking.network;
import com.keshav.gmailretrofitexampleworking.models.Message;
import java.util.List;
import retrofit2.Call;
import retrofit2.http.GET;
public interface ApiInterface {
#GET("inbox.json")
Call<List<Message>> getInbox();
}
compile 'com.google.code.gson:gson:2.6.2'
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:retrofit:2.0.2'
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-gson:2.0.2'
=====================================================
Call Retrofit 2 APi inside onCreate
private void getInbox() {
swipeRefreshLayout.setRefreshing(true);
ApiInterface apiService =
ApiClient.getClient().create(ApiInterface.class);
Call<List<Message>> call = apiService.getInbox();
call.enqueue(new Callback<List<Message>>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<List<Message>> call, Response<List<Message>> response) {
// clear the inbox
messages.clear();
// add all the messages
// messages.addAll(response.body());
// TODO - avoid looping
// the loop was performed to add colors to each message
Log.e("keshav","response" +response.body());
for (Message message : response.body()) {
// generate a random color
// TODO keshav Generate Random Color Here
message.setColor(getRandomMaterialColor("400"));
messages.add(message);
}
mAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
swipeRefreshLayout.setRefreshing(false);
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<List<Message>> call, Throwable t) {
Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), "Unable to fetch json: " + t.getMessage(), Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
swipeRefreshLayout.setRefreshing(false);
}
});
}
Source Code
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0BzBKpZ4nzNzUVFRnVVkzc0JabUU
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0BzBKpZ4nzNzUc2FBdW00WkRfWW8
I just braked this problem in a very easy way you just need install a plugin and follow some steps to implement retrofit in any of your App.:
Already posted answer : Retrofit in android?
Add (QAssist - Android Studio Plugin) Android plugin in your Android studio. ( https://github.com/sakkeerhussain/QAssist ).
Hope this will help you.
Simple retrofit + okhttp integration using RxJava
public WebService apiService(Context context) {
String mBaseUrl = context.getString(BuildConfig.DEBUG ? R.string.local_url : R.string.live_url);
int cacheSize = 5 * 1024 * 1024; // 5 MB
Cache cache = new Cache(context.getCacheDir(), cacheSize);
HttpLoggingInterceptor loggingInterceptor = new HttpLoggingInterceptor();
loggingInterceptor.setLevel(BuildConfig.DEBUG ? HttpLoggingInterceptor.Level.BODY : HttpLoggingInterceptor.Level.NONE);
OkHttpClient okHttpClient = new OkHttpClient.Builder()
.readTimeout(120, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
.writeTimeout(120, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
.connectTimeout(120, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
.addInterceptor(loggingInterceptor)
//.addNetworkInterceptor(networkInterceptor)
.cache(cache)
.build();
return new Retrofit.Builder().baseUrl(mBaseUrl)
.client(okHttpClient)
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create())
.addCallAdapterFactory(RxJava2CallAdapterFactory.create())
.build().create(WebService.class);
}
public interface APIService {
#POST(Constant.updateProfile)
#FormUrlEncoded
Call<ResponseBody> updateProfile(
#Field("user_id") String user_id,
#Field("first_name") String first_name,
#Field("last_name") String last_name
);
}
public class RetrofitClient {
private static Retrofit retrofit = null;
public static Retrofit getClient(String baseUrl) {
if (retrofit == null) {
retrofit = new Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(baseUrl)
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create())
.build();
}
return retrofit;
}
}
public class Body {
// Check Status if Status True or False
String status;
String message;
String checksum;
}
public interface OnBodyResponseListner {
public void onSucces(Body response);
public void onFailure(Body response);
public void onBlankBody(Call<ResponseBody> call);
}
public static void setOnWebServiceCallListner(final Call<ResponseBody> t, final OnBodyResponseListner onBodyResponseListner) {
t.enqueue(new Callback<ResponseBody>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<ResponseBody> call, Response<ResponseBody> response) {
try {
call.cancel();
Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().serializeNulls().create();
String json = response.body().string();
Log.d(TAG, json + " ~ Response ~ " + json);
Body body = gson.fromJson(json, Body.class);
if (body.getStatus().equalsIgnoreCase("true")) {
onBodyResponseListner.onSucces(body);
} else {
onBodyResponseListner.onFailure(body);
}
} catch (Exception e) {
}
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<ResponseBody> call, Throwable t) {
onBodyResponseListner.onBlankBody(call);
Log.d(TAG, "~ Response Message Blank ~ " + t.getMessage() + " \n Localize Message ~ " + t.getLocalizedMessage() + " \n" + t.getStackTrace().toString());
}
});
}
APIService mService = RetrofitClient.getClient(Constant.BASE_URL).create(APIService.class);
Oprations.setOnWebServiceCallListner(mService.updateProfile("12",
"first_name",
"last,name"
), new OnBodyResponseListner() {
#Override
public void onSucces(Body response) {
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Body response) {
Toast.makeText(mContext, response.getMessage(), Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
#Override
public void onBlankBody(Call<ResponseBody> call) {
}
});
}
First, add the dependency - compile 'com.squareup.retrofit:retrofit:1.7.1'
Create retrofit instance class
public class RetrofitClientInstance {
private Context context;
private static OkHttpClient.Builder httpClient = new OkHttpClient.Builder();
private static Retrofit retrofit
private static Retrofit.Builder builder =
new Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(BuildConfig.SERVER_URL)
.client(getRequestHeader())
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create());
public static HttpLoggingInterceptor setLogger() {
HttpLoggingInterceptor logging = new HttpLoggingInterceptor();
logging.setLevel(HttpLoggingInterceptor.Level.BODY);
return logging;
}
public static <S> S createService(Class<S> serviceClass) {
if (!httpClient.interceptors().isEmpty()) {
httpClient.interceptors().clear();
}
httpClient.authenticator(new AccessTokenAuthenticator());
httpClient.readTimeout(60,TimeUnit.SECONDS);
httpClient.connectTimeout(60,TimeUnit.SECONDS);
httpClient.addInterceptor(setLogger());
httpClient.addInterceptor(new Interceptor() {
#Override
public Response intercept(Chain chain) throws IOException {
Request original = chain.request();
Request.Builder requestBuilder = original.newBuilder()
.header("LocalSystemDate", MyApplication.getInstance().getCurrentDateAndTimeWithTimeZone())
.addHeader("channel_id", AppConst.CHANNEL_ID)
.addHeader("Authorization", "Bearer" + " " + SharedPref.getsAccessToken())
.method(original.method(), original.body());
Request request = requestBuilder.build();
return chain.proceed(request);
}
});
OkHttpClient client = httpClient.build();
Retrofit retrofit = builder.client(client).build();
return retrofit.create(serviceClass);
}
private static OkHttpClient getRequestHeader() {
return new OkHttpClient.Builder()
.readTimeout(60, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
.connectTimeout(60, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
.build();
}
}
Write the interface
public interface GetDataService {
#Headers("Content-Type: application/json")
#POST("login")
Call<LoginResponseModel> loginUser(
#Body LoginBodyModel loginBodyModel
);
}
Call the service
GetDataService service = RetrofitClientInstance.createService(GetDataService.class);
Call<LoginResponseModel> loginModelCall = service.loginUser(loginBodyModel);
loginModelCall.enqueue(new Callback<LoginResponseModel>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<LoginResponseModel> call, Response<LoginResponseModel> response) {
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<LoginResponseModel> call, Throwable t) {
}
});
You can do this with hilt
#Module
#InstallIn(SingletonComponent::class)
object RestClientModule {
#Provides
#Singleton
internal fun provideApiService(
#WeatherRetrofit retrofit: Retrofit
): ApiService = retrofit.create(ApiService::class.java)
#Provides
#WeatherRetrofit
#Singleton
internal fun provideHiCityRetrofit(
okHttpClient: OkHttpClient,
moshi: Moshi
): Retrofit = Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(EndPoint.STAGE_BASE_URL)
.client(okHttpClient)
.addConverterFactory(ScalarsConverterFactory.create())
.addConverterFactory(MoshiConverterFactory.create(moshi))
.build()
}
You can checkout this Github Link with source-code avaible for login and signup API in android. https://github.com/probelalkhan/kotlin-retrofit-tutorial/commits/master
Or you can check this tutorial for learning purpose.
https://youtu.be/TyJEDhauUeQ
Or for more other details checkout this
https://gist.github.com/codinginflow/d7a02bd69eebf566b4650c41bc362be7

asyncHttpClient no onSuccess or onFailure run

I'm trying to connect means AsyncHttpClient to a php script on my website. The script do the html parsing of another page, and convert the result to json. it work well. But, when I try to take the json form java for using it on android, the method that have the only work of open a stream and return 'response', doesn't run onSuccess and onFailure both. can anyone help me?
Here the code:
private String getStream() {
AsyncHttpClient client = new AsyncHttpClient();
client.get("http://jem88.net/eventsAroundYouParser.php", new AsyncHttpResponseHandler() {
#Override
public void onSuccess(String response) {
System.out.println("response is here..."+response);
Log.d("eventstaker", "into response!!");
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Throwable e, String response) {
Log.d("eventstaker", "onFailure method is run... :(");
}
});
return "";
}`
I've set the internet and network_access permission in the manifest.
Thank you in advance
You can override more onFailure methods

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