I have on my app a service who get my location (gps). This service get information like latitude, longitude, etc, and I want wrote these information in layouts fragment and activity (TextView).
But how can I get view reference of theses fragments since my service ?
You can do one thing to achieve this. send broadcast to the activity. And on that activity where you want to update view register broadcast there. Once you get the location stuff then send broadcast. Hope that helps you. Write this code in service when you get location stuff and pass that stuff via intent as mentioned in below code
Intent broadcastIntent = new Intent(your action here);
broadcastIntent.putExtra(BaseBroadCastReceiver.BROADCAST_KEY_AUDIO_INDEX, audioIndex);
broadcastIntent.putExtra(BaseBroadCastReceiver.BROADCAST_KEY_AUDIO_LIST, mSongList.size());
sendBroadcast(broadcastIntent);
And in your activity write below code
private void registerMyReceiver() {
IntentFilter filter = new IntentFilter(your action here you passed in service);
registerReceiver(playNewAudio, filter);
}
NOTE: your action can be any string but string must be same on both side
When activity's oncreate method is called, call registerMyReceiver() method
and in onDestroy method unregister is else you may get RUNTIME exception.
Below will be your code for actual broad cast receiver
private BroadcastReceiver myBroadcast= new BroadcastReceiver() {
#Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
//do your stuff here... get extra which you passed
// from service and set that value in views
}
};
Related
I have a receiver, it does call details saving task like storing incoming call, outgoing call etc.. all these details goes to sqlite DB. If my activity is not running, then its fine.
Sometime, when my activity is running, i get some incoming call. the receiver runs & stores data to DB. UI wont get refreshed because it never knows about change in DB.
Here i need to manually tell from receiver that, if activity is running refresh screen. How to implement this process in android.
I'm slightly confused in this part
You can use a LocalBroadcastManager to send a local broadcast to your Activity (more efficient and more secure than using a global broadcast):
Intent intent = new Intent(action);
LocalBroadcastManager mgr = LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(context);
mgr.sendBroadcast(intent);
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/support/v4/content/LocalBroadcastManager.html
Your Activity would have to register a BroadcastReceiver in onStart and unregister it in onStop:
private BroadcastReceiver mBroadcastReceiver;
mBroadcastReceiver = new BroadcastReceiver() {
#Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
// do your thing
}
};
LocalBroadcastManager mgr = LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(this);
mgr.registerReceiver(mBroadcastReceiver, new IntentFilter(action));
in onStop:
mgr.unregisterReceiver(mBroadcastReceiver)
Now that's the official Android way to do it. I most certainly prefer to use an event/message bus like Otto or EventBus (https://github.com/greenrobot/EventBus). You can use those to broadcast messages/events across different components in your app. The advantage is you don't need access to a Context (like you do when using Broadcasts), it's faster and it forces the developer to object oriented programming (since the events are always objects). Once you start using an event bus you'll never look back to local broadcasts and you'll replace many of the sometimes messy observer / listener patterns used across your app.
You can create a BroadcastReceiver inside an activity. Register it in onResume() and unregister it in onPause(). Whenever your other receiver receives a broadcast, send a broadcast to this receiver too. If the activity is running(i.e. on front), the broadcast will be received. Do whatever you want in its onReceive().
Example:
BroadcastReceiver br = new BroadcastReceiver() {
#Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
//Do stuff
}
};
Also override methods:
#Override
protected void onPause() {
super.onPause();
unregisterReceiver(br);
}
#Override
protected void onResume() {
super.onResume();
registerReceiver(br, new IntentFilter("intent_filter"));//Use any string for IntentFilter you like
}
You can update fragments from activiy by creating methods inside fragment and access them from Fragment object inside activity.
I have some problems working with Android Services. I already have a Service which downloads a file from a server. (The Service checks cyclic for new data) Aftwerwards it parses the file and adds values to an ArrayList wich will be saved to SharedPreferences.
In my Activity there are two methods. One will display the values from the ArrayList/SharedPreferences in UI and the second method sets a Notification if needed.
But how do I now when my Service completed its task so the two methods can be started?
Register a BroadcastReceiver in your Activity something like:
myReceiver = new BroadcastReceiver() {
#Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
// do my stuff
}
};
registerReceiver(myReceiver , new IntentFilter("com.myapp.DOWNLOADCOMPLETE"));
Then in your service send the broadcast:
Intent i = new Intent("com.myapp.DOWNLOADCOMPLETE");
sendBroadcast(i);
You can also putExtras on your intent if you need to pass some values:
Documentation BroadcastReceiver
I'm wanting to implement what CommonsWare describes on this blog post: http://commonsware.com/blog/2010/08/11/activity-notification-ordered-broadcast.html. The post makes sense, and I was able to browse the example source here: https://github.com/commonsguy/cw-advandroid/tree/master/Broadcast.
What I'm curious about is if calling LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(UnzipService.this).sendBroadcast(broadcast); inside of a service will still be picked up by a broadcast receiver of the type you define in your manifest.
In case what I'm asking isn't clear, what I'm trying to do is use the LocalBroadcastManager because the broadcasts from my service don't necessarily need to be seen system wide and I'd rather keep them private if possible, but I also want to display notifications if the user closes my app and the service is still running. Is there a way to combine both of those capabilities without sending a broadcast twice inside of the service?
(What I don't want to have to do) like:
LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(UnzipService.this).sendBroadcast(broadcast);
sendOrderedBroadcast(broadcast);
What I'm curious about is if calling LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(UnzipService.this).sendBroadcast(broadcast); inside of a service will still be picked up by a broadcast receiver of the type you define in your manifest.
No. LocalBroadcastManager only works with receivers registered with the LocalBroadcastManager singleton itself. Moreover, LocalBroadcastManager does not support ordered broadcasts, last I checked.
what I'm trying to do is use the LocalBroadcastManager because the broadcasts from my service don't necessarily need to be seen system wide and I'd rather keep them private if possible
So long as you are not using an <intent-filter> on your BroadcastReceiver in the manifest, and therefore are using an explicit Intent as the broadcast itself, your broadcast will only be seen by yourself and the bit of the OS that manages broadcasts. Other apps will not be able to spy upon it.
If you only have 2 objects that might handle your broadcast (in your case an Activity and a notifications controller), you can achieve the behavior of a ordered broadcast using only the LocalBroadcastManager.
The general idea is:
Set up your Service so that it broadcasts an Intent to your Activity with a particular action when you want to display your result
In your Activity create a BroadcastReceiver that handles your Service result Intent, and register it on the LocalBroadcastManager with an IntentFilter using the action from step 1
In your Service, when the results are available, try to send the result Intent using LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(Context).sendBroadcast(Intent) this method returns a boolean that indicates if the broadcast has been sent to at least one receiver. If this boolean is false, it means that your Activity didn't handle your broadcast and you should show a notification instead.
In your service:
public UnzipService extends IntentService {
public static final String ACTION_SHOWRESULT = UnzipService.class.getCanonicalName() + ".ACTION_SHOWRESULT";
#Override
protected void onHandleIntent(Intent intent) {
Thread.sleep(500); // Do the hard work
// Then try to notify the Activity about the results
Intent activityIntent = new Intent(this, YourActivity.class);
activityIntent.setAction(ACTION_SHOWRESULT);
activityIntent.putExtra(SOME_KEY, SOME_RESULTVALUE); // Put the result into extras
boolean broadcastEnqueued = LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(this).sendBroadcast(activityIntent);
if (!broadcastEnqueued) { // Fallback to notification!
PendingIntent pendingIntent = PendingIntent.getActivity(this, (int) System.currentTimeMillis(), activityIntent, PendingIntent.FLAG_UPDATE_CURRENT);
((NotificationManager) context.getSystemService(Context.NOTIFICATION_SERVICE))
.notify(SOME_ID, new NotificationCompat.Builder(this)
.setContentIntent(pendingIntent)
.setTicker("results available")
.setContentText("results")
.build());
}
}
}
In your Activity:
public YourActivity extends Activity {
private BroadcastReceiver resultReceiver = new BroadcastReceiver() {
#Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
processResult(intent); // Results Intent received through local broadcast
}
}
private IntentFilter resultFilter = new IntentFilter(UnzipService.ACTION_SHOWRESULT);
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate();
Intent intent = getIntent();
if (UnzipService.ACTION_SHOWRESULT.equals(intent.getAction())) {
// The Activity has been launched with a tap on the notification
processResult(intent); // Results Intent contained in the notification PendingIntent
}
}
#Override
protected void onResume() {
super.onResume();
LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(this)
.registerReceiver(resultReceiver, resultFilter);
}
#Override
protected void onPause() {
LocalBroadcastManager.getInstance(this)
.unregisterReceiver(resultReceiver);
super.onPause();
}
private void processResult(Intent intent) {
// Show the results from Intent extras
}
}
This should be a complete working example.
I hope this helps who is trying to implement ordered broadcasts with LocalBroadcastManager from support library!
I understand you want to achieve the following:
"I have an event that occurs in the background. I want to update my activity, if the activity is on the screen. Otherwise, I want to raise a Notification." (#TheCommonsBlog)
You can achieve this behaviour by implementing a ResultReceiver.
Examples Restful API service and
http://itekblog.com/background-processing-with-intentservice-class/
What you basically do is instance a ResultReceiver in your Activity and pass it to the Service like a Parcelable parameter through an intent. Then, each time your service whats to update the UI, the service verifies the ResultReceiver object for NULL. If not NULL, you update the Ui via the onReceiveResult interface. Else, you raise a notification. When your activity dismisses, make sure you set the ResultReceiver on the Service to NULL.
Hope it helps.
PS: IMO, broadcasts are too much work and hard to control.
Use LocalBroadcastManager and broadcasts become easy to use.
I am not in favor of updating an Activity if an event occurs in the background. The user might already be doing something else in the Activity. Seems to me that a Notification is sufficient; it's always visible and remains until the user dismisses it. Gmail and Gcal work like this; Gmail doesn't update the current screen if a new mail comes in. If you want to know how to handle the task flow for handling a notification when the user is already in the app, see the Notifications API guide and also the [Notifying The User2 training class.
I've a simple Main Activity which has to stop till an SMS is received... How can I launch a method from the MainActivity within the BroadcastReceiver's onReceive() Method?
Is there away with Signal and Wait? Can I pass something with a pending Intent, or how can I implement this communication?
Communication from BroadcastReceiver to Activity is touchy; what if the activity is already gone?
If I were you I'd set up a new BroadcastReceiver inside the Activity, which would receive a CLOSE message:
private BroadcastReceiver closeReceiver;
// ...
closeReceiver = new BroadcastReceiver() {
#Override
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
//EDIT: receiving parameters
String value = getIntent().getStringExtra("name");
//... do something with value
finish();
}
};
registerReceiver(closeReceiver, new IntentFilter(CLOSE_ACTION));
Then from the SMS BroadcastReceiver you can send out this action:
Intent i = new Intent(CLOSE_ACTION);
i.putExtra("name", "value"); //EDIT: this passes a parameter to the receiver
context.sendBroadcast(i);
I hope this helps?
I had the exact same problem, I tried using intent but i was unsuccessful
The easiest way to use it would be using static methods and static variables
MainActivity.java
public static void stopsms()
{
/*
some code to stop the activity
*/
}
SMSReceiver.java
at the end call this function
MainActivity.stopsms();
It works amazing if your code does not affect when you use static methods and variables. Let me know if you need any help.
The problem with registering a second receiver within the activity, however, is that it will not be persistent like registering in the manifest... thus, although, this solution may work, will only work if the activity is running in background.
it's easy, use interface like that:
1) in your broadcast receiver create an interface.
public interface ChangeListener{
public void functionWhoSendData(String type);
public void etc();
}
and instantiate that interface in your broadcast receiver, use it:
public void onReceive(....
String data=functionWhereYouReceiveYouData();
ChangeListener.functionWhoSendData(data);
}
And in your activity, make it implements your interface
i have a android service running in the background which receives the coordinates from the server every few seconds. i am not sure how do i display the coordinates on a map every time the service receives a response from the server. kindly help or give an idea.
thanks
I don't know any tutorials on this, but here's a version of mine:
To send a broadcast, you use the 'sendBroadcast(Intent i)' method of the Context class. The Service class extends Context, so you can access it from your implementation.
So in your Service goes:
public static final String BROADCAST_ACTION="com.yourservice.update";
public void onStart( Intent intent, int startId ) {
...
Intent broadcastIntent = new Intent(BROADCAST_ACTION);
sendBroadcast(broadcastIntent);
...
}
You have to register a receiver for this broadcast in you Activity (possibly before you start boradcasting them), like this:
private BroadcastReceiver receiver=new BroadcastReceiver() {
public void onReceive(Context context, Intent intent) {
//Here goes handling the stuff you got from the service
Bundle extras = intent.getExtras();
if(extras != null)processUIUpdate(extras);
}
};
public void onResume() {
...
//Register for the update broadcasts from the torrent service
registerReceiver(receiver, new IntentFilter(YourService.BROADCAST_ACTION));
...
}
Don't forget to deregister when the Activity goes background:
public void onPause() {
...
//Deregister for the update broadcast from the torrent service
unregisterReceiver(receiver);
...
}
This should work.
Your service could broadcast intents whenever it wants to update the displayed location on the map. The Activity displaying the map should register a receiver for that boradcast, and the boradcast's intent can hold the values for lat. and long.