I need to detect the system ui visibility (full screen) from a service. I tried creating a custom view and adding setOnSystemUiVisibilityChangeListener but it never gets called.
public void setListener() {
setOnSystemUiVisibilityChangeListener(new OnSystemUiVisibilityChangeListener() {
#Override
public void onSystemUiVisibilityChange(int i) {
Log.e(TAG, "onSystemUiVisibilityChange =" + i);
}
});
}
I run setListener from my service's onStartCommand. What's wrong here? Or is there any other method to detect when the system ui is visible or not? Thanks for any help.
You wrote:
...from a service. I tried creating a custom view...
The custom View in your Service in not added to the View hierarchy that's drawn. That's why the method is not called. In an Activity you could do mRootView.add(mCustomView) and then check but that doesn't work from a Service since you don't have a reference to a visible layout.
For a (hacky) solution see this answer: Receiving hidden status bar/entering a full screen activity event on a Service
If you have an Activity visible while the Service is running there are more options. You can bind the Service to an Activity and send updates from asetOnSystemUiVisibility() inside the Activity to the Service.
See: http://developer.android.com/guide/components/bound-services.html
Or just send out a broadcast from the Activity when the UI state changes, which the Service listens for.
You can add one view (with full height) and use OnGlobalLayoutListener to listerner layout change, in onGlobalLayout check view.getHeight with max Y of screen.
if (mMaxY == helperWnd.getHeight()) {
//full screen
} else {
//none full screen
}
Hope help you
Related
I have a service which controls my mediaplayer object and when i close my app, a notification is still shown to control playback.
Now when a song is done playing i want update the UI in my activity and i did this with a broadcastreceiver, but this only works when my app is visible and not in the background/closed. (unregistered broadcastreceiver in onPause)
But how do i keep listening for these events when my application is not visible and when the user opens my application again it has the updated UI (new song).
Service
#Override
public void onCompletion(MediaPlayer mp) {
Log.d(TAG, "OnCompletion called!");
Intent broadCastReceiverIntentUpdateSong = new Intent(Constants.ACTIONS.BROADCAST_UPDATE_SONG);
sendBroadcast(broadCastReceiverIntentUpdateSong);
}
When your app starts, it should ask the Service for the current state of the player and show that.
While the app is running and in the foreground, it can listen for the broadcast events and update the UI (or its own internal state) accordingly.
When your app goes to the background, it doesn't need to do anything. When it comes again to the foreground (in onResume()) it can again ask the Servicefor the current state of the player.
You can have the Activity bind to the Service and use AIDL to get the current state OR you can just call startService() with an Intent that contains an ACTION or an EXTRA that indicates that you want to know the current state, and the Service can ract to that by sending a broadcast Intent containing the current state, which your Activity can listen for.
I know for an activity you can override onStart on onStop methods to know when an activity starts / exits. The issue I'm running into is I want to keep a session open from when a user opens the app until it enters the background / user exits and tying into onStop (for end session) for each activity isn't giving the the results I want, it ends the session every new activity. So I was wondering what are my options for knowing when a user puts the app in the background or exits.
One thing I thought of is keeping track of onStart and onStop (or any two combinations in the activity life cycle) so I know if I have a onStop without a onStart right before the app is exiting. This seems very hacky, not sure if its the right place to start.
Thanks for any input.
You can extend Application class and use registerActivityLifecycleCallbacks to build the logic.
Using for example these two callbacks:
#Override
public void onActivityResumed(Activity activity) {
mBackground = false;
}
#Override
public void onActivityPaused(Activity activity) {
mBackground = true;
}
https://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/Application.html#registerActivityLifecycleCallbacks(android.app.Application.ActivityLifecycleCallbacks)
I have an app that has three activities, the user will be constantly tabbing between these three activities. Right before the user closes the app, my code downloads the current time from the internet and stores it. The problem is that i have my code for downloading the time in the onPause() method. This causes the data to be downloaded over and over each time the user switches activities. I tried using onDestroy() but the download would never start. is there a method that is called when the user minimizes or closes the app altogether instead of one that is called on an activity switch?
Thank you very much, any help is appreciated!
We can achieve this using the Application class. There we can implement the ActivityLifecycleCallbacks to identify when our app goes to the background and based on that result we can perform our required task. Here, a sample code:
public class MyApplication extends Application implements ActivityLifecycleCallbacks {
private Handler mHandler;
#Override
public void onCreate() {
super.onCreate();
mHandler = new Handler();
}
...
#Override
public void onActivityResumed(Activity activity) {
Log.i("Activity Resumed", activity.getLocalClassName());
// cancel scheduled download operation (if any)
mHandler.cancelCallbacksAndMessages(null);
}
#Override
public void onActivityPaused(Activity activity) {
Log.i("Activity Paused", activity.getLocalClassName());
// schedule a download operation after 5 seconds
mHandler.postDelayed(new Runnable() {
#Override
public void run() {
performDownloadOperation()
}
}, 5000);
}
... // other lifecycle callbacks
private void performDownloadOperation() {
// perform download operation here
}
}
In the above code, we are basically giving the user [and the system] a grace time of 5 seconds to switch from one activity to another. Otherwise, we note that the app went to background and do our stuff there. So, even if the user switches to a different app for 4 seconds and then come back, we'd still not download the data, which should be fine in most cases.
Note that to use the above class, you need to provide the class reference to the android:name property as android:name=".MyApplication" under the <application> tag in the manifest file.
You can make use of Activity::isFinishing(). This will return false when you (1) launch another activity or when (2) the app is put on background, but it will return true when (3) the back button is pressed or if (4) somebody calls finish on the activity.
If it is important to distinguish between (1) and (2), then you can always keep a flag that you can switch every time you launch an activity and reset it in onPause.
My application has an activity, that launches oauth-authorization process in browser, and finally browser receives redirect to url "appname://com.appname", that calls back to my activity. (activity declared that it can view such urls)
Everything is OK, but if user presses "Back" he goes back to web browser.
I want to clear history stack when activity is called back, to make this activity root and top in this task.
What flags or hooks can I use for this case?
I found only one ugly solution:
receive appname://com.appname urls to special "Gag" activity, that will launch main activity on its onResume.
I tried to make main activity "singleTask", launch browser in new task, set flags NO_HISTORY and EXLUDE_FROM_RECENTS, CLEAR_TOP, set clearTaskOnLaunch="true".
Tried many combinations of that flags and tags in manifest - nothing helps.
I solved this problem:
1) set clearTaskOnLaunch="true" in AndroidManifest.xml
2) Launch browser in new task (with FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK), and finish current activity(to finish current task).
3) override onBackPressed: instead of finish this activity call to moveTaskToBack(true);
when user presses back - task(browser is in root of it) goes to background and user see his homescreen.
when user launches application again - it opens from existing instance,clears task and becomes root of it (because clearTaskOnLaunch="true")
When click link appname://com.appname in web browser, the browser call your activity, but browser did not call finish itself, you can't change the browser.
I think that make a new activity that has a webview inside can solve this.
You will start that new activity instead of android browser.
In the new activity, set webViewClient to navigate back to your main activity:
wv_mem_rank.setWebViewClient(new WebViewClient() {
public boolean shouldOverrideUrlLoading(WebView view, String url) {
if(url.startWith("appname://com.appname"))
{
startActivity();
finish();
}
view.loadUrl(url);
return true;
}
public void onLoadResource (WebView view, String url) {
}
public void onPageFinished(WebView view, String url) {
}
});
The title explains all... I have this snippet of code in my application:
String url = createTelUrl("3112007315");
Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_CALL);
intent.setData(Uri.parse(url));
context.startActivity(intent);
It does make a call, but once the call ends, my application crashes. I'd like to return to my application once the call has finished, but I read this post and it seems not to be possible. So... is there anyway to at least pause my application and resume it once the call has finished?
EDIT:
Thanks for the two answers I received, I feel I'm really close to my goal... I had already done some of the things you guys suggested. But, maybe I didn't explain some details of the application... I'm developing Who Wants To Be A Millonarie game, so I need to implement calls (I don't know how it's called in USA or other countrys, but here we call it "call to a friend").
Anyway... I've done too many changes to this app and now it's not crashing. But, the Canvas where I draw the UI is not been showed once the called has ended.
I have a SurfaceView that holds the UI. For that SurfaceView I created a thread that is meant to refresh the UI... this is basically what the thread does:
#Override
public void run() {
Canvas c;
while (_run) {
c = null;
try {
c = _surfaceHolder.lockCanvas(null);
// Check if should wait
synchronized (_surfaceHolder) {
_panel.onDraw(c);
}
} finally {
// do this in a finally so that if an exception is thrown
// during the above, we don't leave the Surface in an
// inconsistent state
if (c != null) {
_surfaceHolder.unlockCanvasAndPost(c);
}
}
}
}
But, once the call has ended I get a black screen. The surface is there (I know it because it still can receive some touch events), but it's not showing anything. Another thing to take in account is how I'm starting the Thread from the SurfaceView class:
public void surfaceCreated(SurfaceHolder holder) {
hilo.setRunning(true);
try{
hilo.start();
}catch(IllegalThreadStateException ite){
Log.e("wwtbam", "god dammed");
}
}
This worked nice before I start implementing phone-calls. The problem here is that once the call has ended and it executes again the start method which throws a IllegalThreadStateException because the thread has already been started. I've tried using some 'technics' to pause the UI thread while calling but I haven't been able to solve this problem. I tried doing something like:
// this in the UI thread class
if(haveToWait)
wait();
....
// this in the surface view class
if(callEnded)
hilo.notify();
But that didn't work. I also have tried some other 'tricks' like using sleep(50); instead of wait(); but it does not work either.
With all that information I provided... what could you suggest to me?
The problem here is the place you're using to start the thread. Once you start a new call, your main activity will be paused and the surfaceview will be destroyed. Though, the thread will keep running. So, once your app takes the control back, the surface is created again and the start method will be invoked. That causes a IllegalThreadStateException.
The way to go here is to manipulate the thread out of the SurfaceView class. That will give you the control of the thread from the main activity, and you will be able to decide when to start or pause your thread.
Take a look of this example: http://code.google.com/p/apps-for-android/source/browse/trunk/SpriteMethodTest/src/com/android/spritemethodtest/
This is possible using an android.telephony.PhoneStateListener.
First, we need to take care of the manifest of the app:
We need the permission to make calls (duh!) as well as the permission to watch the phone state. The latter is needed so the app can react to the ending of a call as well. So we add these lines to out application manifest:
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.CALL_PHONE" />
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.READ_PHONE_STATE" />
Also, we don't want Android to start a different instance of our activity when the call has ended, so we set the launchMode attribute of the activity to "singleInstance".
<activity android:name=".CallTest" android:label="Calling Test"
android:launchMode="singleInstance" />
Having prepared everything in the manifest, we can now look at the activity making the call:
public class CallTest extends Activity {
PhoneStateListener mListener;
TelephonyManager mTelMgr;
#Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.main);
mListener = new CallEndedListener();
mTelMgr = (TelephonyManager) this.getSystemService(TELEPHONY_SERVICE);
}
public void makecall(View v) {
// Register our listener to be notified of the beginning
// and ending of calls
mTelMgr.listen(mListener, PhoneStateListener.LISTEN_CALL_STATE);
// Start the call
Intent call = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_CALL);
call.setData(Uri.parse("tel:12345"));
startActivity(call);
}
class CallEndedListener extends PhoneStateListener {
boolean called = false;
#Override
public void onCallStateChanged(int state, String incomingNumber) {
super.onCallStateChanged(state, incomingNumber);
// Don't fire before the call was made
if (state == TelephonyManager.CALL_STATE_OFFHOOK)
called = true;
// Call has ended -- now bring the activity back to front
if (called && state == TelephonyManager.CALL_STATE_IDLE) {
called = false;
mTelMgr.listen(this, PhoneStateListener.LISTEN_NONE);
startActivity(new Intent(CallTest.this, CallTest.class));
}
}
}
}
The only new thing in the makecall method, compared to the code snippet in the question, is the PhoneStateListener implementation added right before actually making the call. This listener then gets notified by Android when an outgoing call is dialed, an incoming call is ringing or when an active call is ended.
Our implementation waits for the latter CALL_STATE_IDLE event and starts our activity again, so that after the call has ended we're back in our app where we left it. It then deregisters itself, so our activity doesn't get restarted every time the user ends a call not initiated by our own activity.
However, when registering for the CALL_STATE-events with the TelephonyManager, Android instantly fires a notification with the current status -- so our listener would get triggered before the call had even started. Therefore our listener implementation first waits until an outgoing call was started (CALL_STATE_OFFHOOK) and only after that happened reacts to the CALL_STATE_IDLE notification.
HTH!
As for the crash - please post the log and put your debugger onStart/onResume to find out why you're crashing. It's possible that something is initialized in the wrong place and you might something as simple as nullpointer.
As for the call end thing - i've never try this, but i'd try to register receiver, catch
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/telephony/TelephonyManager.html#ACTION_PHONE_STATE_CHANGED
Evaluate the state of the phone and do what you need to do .
Also there is more info here
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/telephony/
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/telephony/PhoneStateListener.html
And finally you'll find examples of how to use that in the applications that are use that functionality in source.android.com