I have looked around the web but have yet to find a solution that fits my specific need. I am looking for a way to share information with a share intent that provides a clickable link, something like:
Check out this news article
via Jimmy's News App
I have successfully set up a share intent in my android app which looks like this:
Intent shareIntent = new Intent();
shareIntent.setAction(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
shareIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, "Subject Text");
shareIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, "Check out this news article" + "\n\n" + getResources().getText(R.string.shared_via));
shareIntent.setType("text/plain");
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(shareIntent, "Share this article with..."));
My string resource looks like this:
<string name="shared_via">via <a ref="http://google.com">Jimmy's News App</a></string>
The sharing functions as it should however when shared in an Email, Twitter, etc. the link is ignored and the tweet shows only plain text like this:
I tried playing around with the MIME type, but still no cigar. Is there anyway to get "Jimmy's News App" clickable when shared? I am more than greatful for any and all help and or tips.
Thanks in advance!
First, I wouldn't have expected your project to even build, as string resources do not support arbitrary HTML tags. The only documented ones are <b>, <i>, and <u>.
Second, even if it does support arbitrary HTML tags, you are converting it back from a Spanned (getText()) into a plain string, which will remove that formatting.
To overcome both problems, either move that string into Java (after all, it's not like you have i18n going, with hardcoded English elsewhere in your code snippet), or wrap the string content in a CDATA (while also fixing your broken HTML, to use href for the <a> attribute):
<string name="shared_via"><![CDATA[via Jimmy's News App]]></string>
At this point, if you look at your concatenated string, it should look like quasi-HTML source:
Check out this news article
via Jimmy's News App
Next, while you are sending over HTML, you are declaring it as plain text. Many apps will therefore treat it as plain text, and may do anything from ignoring the tag to showing the raw HTML. You are welcome to try text/html as a MIME type and see if you get better results.
Finally, there is no requirement that any app actually honor your links. ACTION_SEND is a request, not a command. There are no rules for how third-party apps use the HTML that you send over, and so you are going to get varying results from varying apps.
Related
May be this question is already asked or duplicate of another question, but I didn't get any solution for my search.
Here are the links which I followed for my question:
Link1 Link2
Actually, my question is related to sharing HTML text in android default intent with an ACTION_SEND. When I am trying to create a hyperlink to URL with different value then it is showing a simple text of value. That is not clickable as a link.
Here is how I am doing:
Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
intent.setType("text/html");
String link = "https://www.android.com/";
String linkValue = "Click Me";
String body1 = "" + link+ "";//I don't want this
String body2 = "" + linkValue + "";//This is not working
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, Html.fromHtml(body2));
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(intent, "Share With"));
For body2:
When I share the text using Gmail then in email hyperlinked text will come as a normal text. Simply "Click Me". I checked it on desktop browser also. But there also it is same. I checked this text in Inspect Element(You can get Inspect Element of a browser page like: Right click on browser page>> In popup window click at the bottom Inspect OR refer Inspect Element) format and found there was no tag for hyperlink text.
For body1:
It's working and I got the URL as a hyperlink in the email, but I got the URL as a hyperlink I don't want to show the same URL in email rather than there should be some hint value as body2 format. This format can be achieved by direct URL sharing in the body no need of tag.
So finally my search is, Is there any way in Android for sharing hyperlink text with different hint value rather than as of link(URL).
I suggest you use a string resource instead of a Java string, it's generally and good practice and that way you won't have to escape the " either. And with the HTML data you'll have to wrap it in CDATA.
XML:
<string name="readyandroid"><![CDATA[readyandroid]]></string>
in Java, replace body2 with:
String body2 = getString(R.string.readyandroid);
Then try passing it to the intent and sending it in an email, it should be a proper hyperlink as you would like it to be.
What you do in body is perfectly correct.
But Gmail reads the extra android.intent.extra.TEXTas a string.
You are in fact making a feature request / reporting a bug.
android:autoLink="web|email"
Please add this code in textview xml. It will directly goes gmail link
I don't think you can do using email Intent. Send email without intent Make email client for sending email. That will support HTML tag.
plz refer
http://www.jondev.net/articles/Sending_Emails_without_User_Intervention_%28no_Intents%29_in_Android
After you put your String to extra, it lose it attributes as Spanned. If you would send it as html, it can be resolved by some applications and shown as you want. Generally, you just put a plain text into the Bundle of your Intent, and each application interprets it as it wish, so there is no solution to send it as html and force applications to show it as html.
On the other hand, if you know which applications you're going to use via share, you can read its documentation and check if it allows to send hyperlinks via ACTION_SEND intent.
You can tell a receiver that a type of your text by intent.setType("text/html"), maybe some applications behavior depends on it.
Yes, I achieved this issue solution. Thanks, #Faraz.
This is my answer code, as I created tag string in string.xml
<string name="link_to_google_map"><![CDATA[LINK TO GOOGLE MAP]]></string>
And my code is like this, which works perfectly for sharing using tag in android:
Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
intent.setType("text/html");
String shareText = "Thank you for using the ReadyAndroid App" + "<br />" + "Name : " + "ReadyAndroid";
shareText += "<br />" + "Address : " + "https://readyandroid.wordpress.com/ <br />Mandawa, Jhunjhunu, Rajasthan 333704";
String mapLocation = String.format(getString(R.string.link_to_google_map), 28.0500, 75.1487);
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, Html.fromHtml(shareText+mapLocation));
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(intent, "Share with"));
I'm trying to send some HTML formatted text via the ACION_SEND Intent in my app. The HTML file is located in my assets directory and it has links to some images and contains other CSS stylings. Thus far I've tried the following:
private Intent getEmailIntent(String deepLink) {
Intent sharingIntent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
// sharingIntent.setType("text/html");
sharingIntent.setType("text/plain");
// sharingIntent.setType("message/rfc822");
sharingIntent.putExtra(android.content.Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, getShareSubject());
sharingIntent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, Html.fromHtml(getHtmlTextFromAssetsFile("myHtml.html")));
return sharingIntent;
}
As you can see from the above method, I've tried using all three of the IntentTypes in the code, without success.
The HTML file has CSS within a <style> tag , and that is not applied. It just shows up as plain text in all cases. No images (remotely located) are loaded. And </br> tags are ignored.
Has anyone worked with this? How can I get my app to send such an email? Any pointers would be helpful.
Probably not many email clients on Android support HTML. What you can do is providing plain text in EXTRA_TEXT and putting the HTML in EXTRA_HTML_TEXT as documented here: https://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/Intent.html#ACTION_SEND
In my android app i want to share a Link to my website using intent but i dont want it to be visible to other user
example i want to share "smoe website link"
But to user it should look like "Click me to see it".
I tried this but wasnt successfull it just shows the simple text and was not clickable
<string name="app_link">Click me!</string>
Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
intent.setType("text/plain");
intent.putExtra("PostID", postID);
intent.putExtra("UserID", userID);
intent.putExtra(android.content.Intent.EXTRA_TEXT,activity.getString(R.string.app_link);
activity.startActivity(Intent.createChooser(intent, "Share"));
Any help will be really appreciated.
What you want is not realistically possible right now.
EXTRA_TEXT must always be interpreted as plain text by the receiving app. You could try using EXTRA_HTML_TEXT which was added with API 16. But many apps don't support HTML and will simply use EXTRA_TEXT instead (or not show any text at all if you omit EXTRA_TEXT).
I want to send a html mail from my application.
I know that not all mail clients allow html tags.
But I found the constant Intent.EXTRA_HTML_TEXT in the API (http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/Intent.html#EXTRA_HTML_TEXT).
My code looks like this, but it shows always just the text and not the html formatted text whatever mail client I use:
Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_SUBJECT, subject);
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, "Hello World");
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_HTML_TEXT, "<html><body><h1>Hello World</h1></body><html>");
intent.setType("text/html"); // intent.setType("plain/text");
startActivity(Intent.createChooser(intent, "Choose Email Client:"));
So where is the mistake?
Sorry, not a positive answer because it doesn't seem to work, at least not in a way that's really universal and reliable. Some mailers are happy with this:
String body = "<html>something</html>";
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, Html.fromHtml(body));
Note that you don't need the new EXTRA_HTML_TEXT, it works with the older one as well. If this covers all you need then you might be OK. But if you also want to address many other possible intent receivers like Facebook, Skype or even apps like Drive or Keep, unfortunately, I couldn't find a perfect solution but I'd very much like to be proven wrong.
Basically, we have three different formats:
String body = "<html>something</html>";
Spanned html = Html.fromHtml(body);
String stripped = html.toString();
and two possible recipients:
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.JELLY_BEAN)
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_HTML_TEXT, ???);
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, ???);
I tried all possible combinations but in any of those, there will be some well known and widely used app that doesn't want to play nicely. Either we get HTML tags embedded, or no formatting, or even no text at all...
I am sending emails from my application.
I want to know if there is a way to define templates for eg :
subject: Regarding {{title}}
Body: You may be interested in the product {{title}} \b {{desc}}
I would like to define this templates in some resource file.
Thanks for your help and time.
Just construct mailto URL in accordance with RFC-2368, which includes subject and other fields. So in the end you'll have URI which can be used to start email sender activity:
Uri uri=Uri.parse("mailto:example#example.com?subject=Here goes test message");
intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SENDTO, uri);
activity.startActivity(intent);
Futhero you can programmatically construct mailto URL as you want
You can put in strings.xml w/ string format character like %d %s %f..., and make use of String.format().
It's nice if others have better ideas :)