I have a scenario where, after logging in through a login page, there will be a sign-out button on each activity.
On clicking sign-out, I will be passing the session id of the signed in user to sign-out. Can anyone guide me on how to keep session id available to all activities?
Any alternative to this case
In your current Activity, create a new Intent:
String value="Hello world";
Intent i = new Intent(CurrentActivity.this, NewActivity.class);
i.putExtra("key",value);
startActivity(i);
Then in the new Activity, retrieve those values:
Bundle extras = getIntent().getExtras();
if (extras != null) {
String value = extras.getString("key");
//The key argument here must match that used in the other activity
}
Use this technique to pass variables from one Activity to the other.
The easiest way to do this would be to pass the session id to the signout activity in the Intent you're using to start the activity:
Intent intent = new Intent(getBaseContext(), SignoutActivity.class);
intent.putExtra("EXTRA_SESSION_ID", sessionId);
startActivity(intent);
Access that intent on the next activity:
String sessionId = getIntent().getStringExtra("EXTRA_SESSION_ID");
The docs for Intents has more information (look at the section titled "Extras").
Passing Intent extras is a good approach as Erich noted.
The Application object is another way though, and it is sometimes easier when dealing with the same state across multiple activities (as opposed to having to get/put it everywhere), or objects more complex than primitives and Strings.
You can extend Application, and then set/get whatever you want there and access it from any Activity (in the same application) with getApplication().
Also keep in mind that other approaches you might see, like statics, can be problematic because they can lead to memory leaks. Application helps solve this too.
Source class:
Intent myIntent = new Intent(this, NewActivity.class);
myIntent.putExtra("firstName", "Your First Name Here");
myIntent.putExtra("lastName", "Your Last Name Here");
startActivity(myIntent)
Destination Class (NewActivity class):
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.view);
Intent intent = getIntent();
String fName = intent.getStringExtra("firstName");
String lName = intent.getStringExtra("lastName");
}
You just have to send extras while calling your intent.
Like this:
Intent intent = new Intent(getApplicationContext(), SecondActivity.class);
intent.putExtra("Variable name", "Value you want to pass");
startActivity(intent);
Now on the OnCreate method of your SecondActivity you can fetch the extras like this.
If the value you sent was in long:
long value = getIntent().getLongExtra("Variable name which you sent as an extra", defaultValue(you can give it anything));
If the value you sent was a String:
String value = getIntent().getStringExtra("Variable name which you sent as an extra");
If the value you sent was a Boolean:
Boolean value = getIntent().getBooleanExtra("Variable name which you sent as an extra", defaultValue);
It helps me to see things in context. Here are two examples.
Passing Data Forward
Main Activity
Put the data you want to send in an Intent with a key-value pair. See this answer for naming conventions for the key.
Start the Second Activity with startActivity.
MainActivity.java
public class MainActivity extends AppCompatActivity {
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
}
// "Go to Second Activity" button click
public void onButtonClick(View view) {
// get the text to pass
EditText editText = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.editText);
String textToPass = editText.getText().toString();
// start the SecondActivity
Intent intent = new Intent(this, SecondActivity.class);
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, textToPass);
startActivity(intent);
}
}
Second Activity
You use getIntent() to get the Intent that started the second activity. Then you can extract the data with getExtras() and the key you defined in the first activity. Since our data is a String we will just use getStringExtra here.
SecondActivity.java
public class SecondActivity extends AppCompatActivity {
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_second);
// get the text from MainActivity
Intent intent = getIntent();
String text = intent.getStringExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT);
// use the text in a TextView
TextView textView = (TextView) findViewById(R.id.textView);
textView.setText(text);
}
}
Passing Data Back
Main Activity
Start the Second Activity with startActivityForResult, providing it an arbitrary result code.
Override onActivityResult. This is called when the Second Activity finishes. You can make sure that it is actually the Second Activity by checking the result code. (This is useful when you are starting multiple different activities from the same main activity.)
Extract the data you got from the return Intent. The data is extracted using a key-value pair. I could use any string for the key but I'll use the predefined Intent.EXTRA_TEXT since I'm sending text.
MainActivity.java
public class MainActivity extends AppCompatActivity {
private static final int SECOND_ACTIVITY_REQUEST_CODE = 0;
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
}
// "Go to Second Activity" button click
public void onButtonClick(View view) {
// Start the SecondActivity
Intent intent = new Intent(this, SecondActivity.class);
startActivityForResult(intent, SECOND_ACTIVITY_REQUEST_CODE);
}
// This method is called when the second activity finishes
#Override
protected void onActivityResult(int requestCode, int resultCode, Intent data) {
super.onActivityResult(requestCode, resultCode, data);
// check that it is the SecondActivity with an OK result
if (requestCode == SECOND_ACTIVITY_REQUEST_CODE) {
if (resultCode == RESULT_OK) {
// get String data from Intent
String returnString = data.getStringExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT);
// set text view with string
TextView textView = (TextView) findViewById(R.id.textView);
textView.setText(returnString);
}
}
}
}
Second Activity
Put the data that you want to send back to the previous activity into an Intent. The data is stored in the Intent using a key-value pair. I chose to use Intent.EXTRA_TEXT for my key.
Set the result to RESULT_OK and add the intent holding your data.
Call finish() to close the Second Activity.
SecondActivity.java
public class SecondActivity extends AppCompatActivity {
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_second);
}
// "Send text back" button click
public void onButtonClick(View view) {
// get the text from the EditText
EditText editText = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.editText);
String stringToPassBack = editText.getText().toString();
// put the String to pass back into an Intent and close this activity
Intent intent = new Intent();
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, stringToPassBack);
setResult(RESULT_OK, intent);
finish();
}
}
Updated Note that I had mentioned the use of SharedPreference. It has a simple API and is accessible across an application's activities. But this is a clumsy solution, and is a security risk if you pass around sensitive data. It's best to use intents. It has an extensive list of overloaded methods that can be used to better transfer many different data types between activities. Have a look at intent.putExtra. This link presents the use of putExtra quite well.
In passing data between activities, my preferred approach is to create a static method for the relevant activity that includes the required parameters launch the intent. Which then provides easily setup and retrieve parameters. So it can look like this
public class MyActivity extends Activity {
public static final String ARG_PARAM1 = "arg_param1";
...
public static getIntent(Activity from, String param1, Long param2...) {
Intent intent = new Intent(from, MyActivity.class);
intent.putExtra(ARG_PARAM1, param1);
intent.putExtra(ARG_PARAM2, param2);
return intent;
}
....
// Use it like this.
startActivity(MyActvitiy.getIntent(FromActivity.this, varA, varB, ...));
...
Then you can create an intent for the intended activity and ensure you have all the parameters. You can adapt for fragments to. A simple example above, but you get the idea.
Try to do the following:
Create a simple "helper" class (factory for your Intents), like this:
import android.content.Intent;
public class IntentHelper {
public static final Intent createYourSpecialIntent(Intent src) {
return new Intent("YourSpecialIntent").addCategory("YourSpecialCategory").putExtras(src);
}
}
This will be the factory for all your Intents. Everytime you need a new Intent, create a static factory method in IntentHelper. To create a new Intent you should just say it like this:
IntentHelper.createYourSpecialIntent(getIntent());
In your activity. When you want to "save" some data in a "session" just use the following:
IntentHelper.createYourSpecialIntent(getIntent()).putExtra("YOUR_FIELD_NAME", fieldValueToSave);
And send this Intent. In the target Activity your field will be available as:
getIntent().getStringExtra("YOUR_FIELD_NAME");
So now we can use Intent like same old session (like in servlets or JSP).
You can also pass custom class objects by making a parcelable class. Best way to make it parcelable is to write your class and then simply paste it to a site like http://www.parcelabler.com/. Click on build and you will get new code. Copy all of this and replace the original class contents.
Then-
Intent intent = new Intent(getBaseContext(), NextActivity.class);
Foo foo = new Foo();
intent.putExtra("foo", foo);
startActivity(intent);
and get the result in NextActivity like-
Foo foo = getIntent().getExtras().getParcelable("foo");
Now you can simply use the foo object like you would have used.
Another way is to use a public static field in which you store data, i.e.:
public class MyActivity extends Activity {
public static String SharedString;
public static SomeObject SharedObject;
//...
The most convenient way to pass data between activities is by passing intents. In the first activity from where you want to send data, you should add code,
String str = "My Data"; //Data you want to send
Intent intent = new Intent(FirstActivity.this, SecondActivity.class);
intent.setFlags(Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK);
intent.putExtra("name",str); //Here you will add the data into intent to pass bw activites
v.getContext().startActivity(intent);
You should also import
import android.content.Intent;
Then in the next Acitvity(SecondActivity), you should retrieve the data from the intent using the following code.
String name = this.getIntent().getStringExtra("name");
You can use SharedPreferences...
Logging. Time store session id in SharedPreferences
SharedPreferences preferences = getSharedPreferences("session",getApplicationContext().MODE_PRIVATE);
Editor editor = preferences.edit();
editor.putString("sessionId", sessionId);
editor.commit();
Signout. Time fetch session id in sharedpreferences
SharedPreferences preferences = getSharedPreferences("session", getApplicationContext().MODE_PRIVATE);
String sessionId = preferences.getString("sessionId", null);
If you don't have the required session id, then remove sharedpreferences:
SharedPreferences settings = context.getSharedPreferences("session", Context.MODE_PRIVATE);
settings.edit().clear().commit();
That is very useful, because one time you save the value and then retrieve anywhere of activity.
From Activity
int n= 10;
Intent in = new Intent(From_Activity.this,To_Activity.class);
Bundle b1 = new Bundle();
b1.putInt("integerNumber",n);
in.putExtras(b1);
startActivity(in);
To Activity
Bundle b2 = getIntent().getExtras();
int m = 0;
if(b2 != null){
m = b2.getInt("integerNumber");
}
The standard approach.
Intent i = new Intent(this, ActivityTwo.class);
AutoCompleteTextView textView = (AutoCompleteTextView) findViewById(R.id.autocomplete);
String getrec=textView.getText().toString();
Bundle bundle = new Bundle();
bundle.putString(“stuff”, getrec);
i.putExtras(bundle);
startActivity(i);
Now in your second activity retrieve your data from the bundle:
Get the bundle
Bundle bundle = getIntent().getExtras();
Extract the data…
String stuff = bundle.getString(“stuff”);
Kotlin
Pass from First Activity
val intent = Intent(this, SecondActivity::class.java)
intent.putExtra("key", "value")
startActivity(intent)
Get in Second Activity
val value = intent.getStringExtra("key")
Suggestion
Always put keys in constant file for more managed way.
companion object {
val KEY = "key"
}
You can send data between activities using intent object.
Consider you have two activities namely FirstActivity and SecondActivity.
Inside FirstActivity:
Using Intent:
i = new Intent(FirstActivity.this,SecondActivity.class);
i.putExtra("key", value);
startActivity(i)
Inside SecondActivity
Bundle bundle= getIntent().getExtras();
Now you can use different bundle class methods to get values passed from FirstActivity by Key.
E.g.
bundle.getString("key"),bundle.getDouble("key") ,bundle.getInt("key") etc.
If you want to tranfer bitmap between Activites/Fragments
Activity
To pass a bitmap between Activites
Intent intent = new Intent(this, Activity.class);
intent.putExtra("bitmap", bitmap);
And in the Activity class
Bitmap bitmap = getIntent().getParcelableExtra("bitmap");
Fragment
To pass a bitmap between Fragments
SecondFragment fragment = new SecondFragment();
Bundle bundle = new Bundle();
bundle.putParcelable("bitmap", bitmap);
fragment.setArguments(bundle);
To receive inside the SecondFragment
Bitmap bitmap = getArguments().getParcelable("bitmap");
Transfering Large Bitmaps
If you are getting failed binder transaction, this means you are exceeding the binder transaction buffer by transferring large element from one activity to another activity.
So in that case you have to compress the bitmap as an byte's array and then uncompress it in another activity, like this
In the FirstActivity
Intent intent = new Intent(this, SecondActivity.class);
ByteArrayOutputStream stream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
bitmap.compress(Bitmap.CompressFormat.JPG, 100, stream);
byte[] bytes = stream.toByteArray();
intent.putExtra("bitmapbytes",bytes);
And in the SecondActivity
byte[] bytes = getIntent().getByteArrayExtra("bitmapbytes");
Bitmap bmp = BitmapFactory.decodeByteArray(bytes, 0, bytes.length);
Intent intent = new Intent(YourCurrentActivity.this, YourActivityName.class);
intent.putExtra("NAme","John");
intent.putExtra("Id",1);
startActivity(intent);
You can retrieve it in another activity. Two ways:
int id = getIntent.getIntExtra("id", /* defaltvalue */ 2);
The second way is:
Intent i = getIntent();
String name = i.getStringExtra("name");
Supplemental Answer: Naming Conventions for the Key String
The actual process of passing data has already been answered, however most of the answers use hard coded strings for the key name in the Intent. This is usually fine when used only within your app. However, the documentation recommends using the EXTRA_* constants for standardized data types.
Example 1: Using Intent.EXTRA_* keys
First activity
Intent intent = new Intent(getActivity(), SecondActivity.class);
intent.putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT, "my text");
startActivity(intent);
Second activity:
Intent intent = getIntent();
String myText = intent.getExtras().getString(Intent.EXTRA_TEXT);
Example 2: Defining your own static final key
If one of the Intent.EXTRA_* Strings does not suit your needs, you can define your own at the beginning of the first activity.
static final String EXTRA_STUFF = "com.myPackageName.EXTRA_STUFF";
Including the package name is just a convention if you are only using the key in your own app. But it is a necessity to avoid naming conflicts if you are creating some sort of service that other apps can call with an Intent.
First activity:
Intent intent = new Intent(getActivity(), SecondActivity.class);
intent.putExtra(EXTRA_STUFF, "my text");
startActivity(intent);
Second activity:
Intent intent = getIntent();
String myText = intent.getExtras().getString(FirstActivity.EXTRA_STUFF);
Example 3: Using a String resource key
Although not mentioned in the documentation, this answer recommends using a String resource to avoid dependencies between activities.
strings.xml
<string name="EXTRA_STUFF">com.myPackageName.MY_NAME</string>
First activity
Intent intent = new Intent(getActivity(), SecondActivity.class);
intent.putExtra(getString(R.string.EXTRA_STUFF), "my text");
startActivity(intent);
Second activity
Intent intent = getIntent();
String myText = intent.getExtras().getString(getString(R.string.EXTRA_STUFF));
Here is my best practice and it helps a lot when the project is huge and complex.
Suppose that I have 2 activities, LoginActivity and HomeActivity.
I want to pass 2 parameters (username & password) from LoginActivity to HomeActivity.
First, I create my HomeIntent
public class HomeIntent extends Intent {
private static final String ACTION_LOGIN = "action_login";
private static final String ACTION_LOGOUT = "action_logout";
private static final String ARG_USERNAME = "arg_username";
private static final String ARG_PASSWORD = "arg_password";
public HomeIntent(Context ctx, boolean isLogIn) {
this(ctx);
//set action type
setAction(isLogIn ? ACTION_LOGIN : ACTION_LOGOUT);
}
public HomeIntent(Context ctx) {
super(ctx, HomeActivity.class);
}
//This will be needed for receiving data
public HomeIntent(Intent intent) {
super(intent);
}
public void setData(String userName, String password) {
putExtra(ARG_USERNAME, userName);
putExtra(ARG_PASSWORD, password);
}
public String getUsername() {
return getStringExtra(ARG_USERNAME);
}
public String getPassword() {
return getStringExtra(ARG_PASSWORD);
}
//To separate the params is for which action, we should create action
public boolean isActionLogIn() {
return getAction().equals(ACTION_LOGIN);
}
public boolean isActionLogOut() {
return getAction().equals(ACTION_LOGOUT);
}
}
Here is how I pass the data in my LoginActivity
public class LoginActivity extends AppCompatActivity {
#Override
protected void onCreate(#Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_login);
String username = "phearum";
String password = "pwd1133";
final boolean isActionLogin = true;
//Passing data to HomeActivity
final HomeIntent homeIntent = new HomeIntent(this, isActionLogin);
homeIntent.setData(username, password);
startActivity(homeIntent);
}
}
Final step, here is how I receive the data in HomeActivity
public class HomeActivity extends AppCompatActivity {
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_home);
//This is how we receive the data from LoginActivity
//Make sure you pass getIntent() to the HomeIntent constructor
final HomeIntent homeIntent = new HomeIntent(getIntent());
Log.d("HomeActivity", "Is action login? " + homeIntent.isActionLogIn());
Log.d("HomeActivity", "username: " + homeIntent.getUsername());
Log.d("HomeActivity", "password: " + homeIntent.getPassword());
}
}
Done! Cool :) I just want to share my experience. If you working on small project this shouldn't be the big problem. But when your working on big project, it really pain when you want to do refactoring or fixing bugs.
The passing of data between activities is mainly by means of an intent object.
First you have to attach the data to the intent object with the use of the Bundle class. Then call the activity using either startActivity() or startActivityForResult() methods.
You can find more information about it, with an example from the blog post Passing data to an Activity.
You can try Shared Preference, it may be a good alternative for sharing data between the activities
To save session id -
SharedPreferences pref = myContexy.getSharedPreferences("Session
Data",MODE_PRIVATE);
SharedPreferences.Editor edit = pref.edit();
edit.putInt("Session ID", session_id);
edit.commit();
To get them -
SharedPreferences pref = myContexy.getSharedPreferences("Session Data", MODE_PRIVATE);
session_id = pref.getInt("Session ID", 0);
You can use Intent
Intent mIntent = new Intent(FirstActivity.this, SecondActivity.class);
mIntent.putExtra("data", data);
startActivity(mIntent);
Another way could be using singleton pattern also:
public class DataHolder {
private static DataHolder dataHolder;
private List<Model> dataList;
public void setDataList(List<Model>dataList) {
this.dataList = dataList;
}
public List<Model> getDataList() {
return dataList;
}
public synchronized static DataHolder getInstance() {
if (dataHolder == null) {
dataHolder = new DataHolder();
}
return dataHolder;
}
}
From your FirstActivity
private List<Model> dataList = new ArrayList<>();
DataHolder.getInstance().setDataList(dataList);
On SecondActivity
private List<Model> dataList = DataHolder.getInstance().getDataList();
Write following code in CurrentActivity.java
Intent i = new Intent(CurrentActivity.this, SignOutActivity.class);
i.putExtra("SESSION_ID",sessionId);
startActivity(i);
Access SessionId in SignOutActivity.java is following way
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState){
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_sign_out);
Intent intent = getIntent();
// check intent is null or not
if(intent != null){
String sessionId = intent.getStringExtra("SESSION_ID");
Log.d("Session_id : " + sessionId);
}
else{
Toast.makeText(SignOutActivity.this, "Intent is null", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
}
}
Start another activity from this activity pass parameters via Bundle Object
Intent intent = new Intent(getBaseContext(), YourActivity.class);
intent.putExtra("USER_NAME", "xyz#gmail.com");
startActivity(intent);
Retrieve on another activity (YourActivity)
String s = getIntent().getStringExtra("USER_NAME");
This is ok for simple kind data type.
But if u want to pass complex data in between activity u need to serialize it first.
Here we have Employee Model
class Employee{
private String empId;
private int age;
print Double salary;
getters...
setters...
}
You can use Gson lib provided by google to serialize the complex data
like this
String strEmp = new Gson().toJson(emp);
Intent intent = new Intent(getBaseContext(), YourActivity.class);
intent.putExtra("EMP", strEmp);
startActivity(intent);
Bundle bundle = getIntent().getExtras();
String empStr = bundle.getString("EMP");
Gson gson = new Gson();
Type type = new TypeToken<Employee>() {
}.getType();
Employee selectedEmp = gson.fromJson(empStr, type);
1st way: In your current Activity, when you create an object of intent to open a new screen:
String value="xyz";
Intent intent = new Intent(CurrentActivity.this, NextActivity.class);
intent.putExtra("key", value);
startActivity(intent);
Then in the nextActivity in the onCreate method, retrieve those values which you pass from the previous activity:
if (getIntent().getExtras() != null) {
String value = getIntent().getStringExtra("key");
//The key argument must always match that used send and retrieve value from one activity to another.
}
2nd way: You can create a bundle object and put values in a bundle and then put the bundle object in intent from your current activity -
String value="xyz";
Intent intent = new Intent(CurrentActivity.this, NextActivity.class);
Bundle bundle = new Bundle();
bundle.putInt("key", value);
intent.putExtra("bundle_key", bundle);
startActivity(intent);
Then in the nextActivity in the onCreate method, retrieve those values which you pass from the previous activity:
if (getIntent().getExtras() != null) {
Bundle bundle = getIntent().getStringExtra("bundle_key");
String value = bundle.getString("key");
//The key argument must always match that used send and retrieve value from one activity to another.
}
You can also use the bean class to pass data between classes using serialization.
/*
* If you are from transferring data from one class that doesn't
* extend Activity, then you need to do something like this.
*/
public class abc {
Context context;
public abc(Context context) {
this.context = context;
}
public void something() {
context.startactivity(new Intent(context, anyone.class).putextra("key", value));
}
}
I recently released Vapor API, a jQuery flavored Android framework that makes all sorts of tasks like this simpler. As mentioned, SharedPreferences is one way you could do this.
VaporSharedPreferences is implemented as Singleton so that is one option, and in Vapor API it has a heavily overloaded .put(...) method so you don't have to explicitly worry about the datatype you are committing - providing it is supported. It is also fluent, so you can chain calls:
$.prefs(...).put("val1", 123).put("val2", "Hello World!").put("something", 3.34);
It also optionally autosaves changes, and unifies the reading and writing process under-the-hood so you don't need to explicitly retrieve an Editor like you do in standard Android.
Alternatively you could use an Intent. In Vapor API you can also use the chainable overloaded .put(...) method on a VaporIntent:
$.Intent().put("data", "myData").put("more", 568)...
And pass it as an extra, as mentioned in the other answers. You can retrieve extras from your Activity, and furthermore if you are using VaporActivity this is done for you automatically so you can use:
this.extras()
To retrieve them at the other end in the Activity you switch to.
Hope that is of interest to some :)
First Activity:
Intent intent = new Intent(getApplicationContext(), ClassName.class);
intent.putExtra("Variable name", "Value you want to pass");
startActivity(intent);
Second Activity:
String str= getIntent().getStringExtra("Variable name which you sent as an extra");
Use a global class:
public class GlobalClass extends Application
{
private float vitamin_a;
public float getVitaminA() {
return vitamin_a;
}
public void setVitaminA(float vitamin_a) {
this.vitamin_a = vitamin_a;
}
}
You can call the setters and the getters of this class from all other classes.
Do do that, you need to make a GlobalClass-Object in every Actitity:
GlobalClass gc = (GlobalClass) getApplication();
Then you can call for example:
gc.getVitaminA()
I have a problem, I want to click on the list, calling a new activity and rename the button to another name.
I tried several things, nothing worked, can someone please help me?
My class EditarTimes:
private AdapterView.OnItemClickListener selecionarTime = new AdapterView.OnItemClickListener() {
public void onItemClick(AdapterView arg0, View arg1, int pos, long id) {
t = times.get(pos);
CadastroTimes cad = new CadastroTimes();
CadastroTimes.salvar.setText("Alterar");
Intent intent = new Intent(EditarTimes.this, CadastroTimes.class);
startActivity(intent);
}
};
public class CadastroTimes extends AppCompatActivity {
private Time t;
private timeDatabase db;
private EditText edID;
private EditText edNome;
public Button salvar;
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_cadastro_times);
edID = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.edID);
edNome = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.edNome);
db = new timeDatabase(getApplicationContext());
salvar = (Button) findViewById(R.id.btnCadastrar);
salvar.setText("Cadastrar");
String newString;
if (savedInstanceState == null) {
Bundle extras = getIntent().getExtras();
if(extras == null) {
newString= null;
} else {
newString= extras.getString("Alterar");
}
} else {
newString= (String) savedInstanceState.getSerializable("Alterar");
}
//button in CadastroTimes activity to have that String as text
System.out.println(newString + " AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA");
salvar.setText(newString);
}
public void salvarTime(View v) {
t = new Time();
t.setNome(edNome.getText().toString());
if (salvar.getText().equals("Alterar")) {
db.atualizar(t);
exibirMensagem("Time atualizado com sucesso!");
} else {
db.salvar(t);
exibirMensagem("Time cadastrado com sucesso!");
}
Intent intent = new Intent(this, EditarTimes.class);
startActivity(intent);
}
private void limparDados() {
edID.setText("");
edNome.setText("");
edNome.requestFocus();
}
private void exibirMensagem(String msg) {
Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), msg, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
}
public class EditarTimes extends AppCompatActivity {
private Time t;
private List<Time> times;
private timeDatabase db;
private ListView lvTimes;
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_editar_times);
lvTimes = (ListView) findViewById(R.id.lvTimes);
lvTimes.setOnItemClickListener(selecionarTime);
lvTimes.setOnItemLongClickListener(excluirTime);
times = new ArrayList<Time>();
db = new timeDatabase(getApplicationContext());
atualizarLista();
}
private void excluirTime(final int idTime) {
AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(this);
builder.setTitle("Excluir time?")
.setIcon(android.R.drawable.ic_dialog_alert)
.setMessage("Deseja excluir esse time?")
.setCancelable(false)
.setPositiveButton(getString(R.string.sim),
new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) {
if (db.deletar(idTime)) {
atualizarLista();
exibirMensagem(getString(R.string.msgExclusao));
} else {
exibirMensagem(getString(R.string.msgFalhaExclusao));
}
}
})
.setNegativeButton(getString(R.string.nao),
new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) {
dialog.cancel();
}
});
builder.create();
builder.show();
atualizarLista();
}
private void atualizarLista() {
times = db.listAll();
if (times != null) {
if (times.size() > 0) {
TimeListAdapter tla = new TimeListAdapter(
getApplicationContext(), times);
lvTimes.setAdapter(tla);
}
}
}
private AdapterView.OnItemClickListener selecionarTime = new AdapterView.OnItemClickListener() {
public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> arg0, View arg1, int pos, long id) {
t = times.get(pos);
Intent intent = new Intent(EditarTimes.this, CadastroTimes.class);
String strName = "Alterar";
intent.putExtra("Alterar", strName);
startActivity(intent);
}
};
private AdapterView.OnItemLongClickListener excluirTime = new AdapterView.OnItemLongClickListener() {
public boolean onItemLongClick(AdapterView<?> arg0, View arg1,
int pos, long arg3) {
excluirTime(times.get(pos).getId());
return true;
}
};
private void exibirMensagem(String msg) {
Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), msg, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
public void telaCadastrar(View view) {
Intent intent = new Intent(this, CadastroTimes.class);
startActivity(intent);
}
public void botaoSair(View view) {
Intent intent = new Intent(this, TelaInicial.class);
startActivity(intent);
}
}
You can pass the button caption to CadastroTimes with intent as
Intent intent = new Intent(EditarTimes.this, CadastroTimes.class);
intent.putExtra("buttontxt","Changed Text");
startActivity(intent);
Then in CadastroTimes.java set the text of the button to the new value that you passed. The code will look like:
button = (Button)findViewById(R.id.button); // This is your reference from the xml. button is my name, you might have your own id given already.
Bundle extras = getIntent().getExtras();
String value = ""; // You can do it in better and cleaner way
if (extras != null) {
value = extras.getString("buttontxt");
}
button.setText(value);
Do remember to do it in onCreate after setContentView
//From Activity
Intent intent = new Intent(EditarTimes.this, CadastroTimes.class);
intent.putExtra("change_tag", "text to change");
startActivity(intent);
//To Activity
public void onCreate(..){
Button changeButton = (Button)findViewById(R.id.your_button);
// Button to set received text
Intent intent = getIntent();
if(null != intent &&
!TextUtils.isEmpty(intent.getStringExtra("change_tag"))) {
String changeText = intent.getStringExtra("change_tag");
// Extracting sent text from intent
changeButton.setText(changeText);
// Setting received text on Button
}
}
1: Use intent.putExtra() to share a value from one activity another activity, as:
In ActivityOne.class :
startActivity(
Intent(
applicationContext,
ActivityTwo::class.java
).putExtra(
"key",
"value"
)
)
In ActivityTwo.class :
var value = ""
if (intent.hasExtra("key")
value = intent.getStringExtra("key")
2: Modify button text programatically as:
btn_object.text = value
Hope this will help you
For changing the button text:
Use a static method to call from the other activity to directly modify the button caption.
Use an intent functionality, which is preferable.
Use an Interface and implement it, which is used for communicating between activities or fragment in a manner of fire and forget principle.
Now, i got you:
Your EditarTimes activity with listview:
//set setOnItemClickListener
youtListView.setOnItemClickListener(new android.widget.AdapterView.OnItemClickListener() {
#Override
public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> parent, View view,int position, long id) {
Intent i = new Intent(EditarTimes.this, CadastroTimes.class);
//text which you want to display on the button to CadastroTimes activity
String strName = "hello button";
i.putExtra("STRING_I_NEED", strName);
}
});
In CadastroTimes activity,
under onCreate() method, get the text string as:-
String newString;
if (savedInstanceState == null) {
Bundle extras = getIntent().getExtras();
if(extras == null) {
newString= null;
} else {
newString= extras.getString("STRING_I_NEED");
}
} else {
newString= (String) savedInstanceState.getSerializable("STRING_I_NEED");
}
//button in CadastroTimes activity to have that String as text
yourButton.setText(newString);
Ok, so the first step would be to take the button you want and make it a public static object (and put it at the top of the class).
public static Button button;
Then you can manipulate that using this in another class:
ClassName.button.setText("My Button");
In your case it is
CadastroTimes.salvar.setText("Alterar");
if you want to change value from that do not do not go the activity via intent you can use file to save value to file or you have multiple values the use database and access
the value oncreate to set the value of text....
In my case, I had to send an EditText value from a Dialog styled Activity, which then got retrieved from a Service.. My Example is similar to some of the above answers, which are also viable.
TimerActivity.class
public void buttonClick_timerOK(View view) {
// Identify the (EditText) for reference:
EditText editText_timerValue;
editText_timerValue = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.et_timerValue);
// Required 'if' statement (to avoid NullPointerException):
if (editText_timerValue != null) {
// Continue with Button code..
// Convert value of the (EditText) to a (String)
String string_timerValue;
string_timerValue = editText_timerValue.getText().toString();
// Declare Intent for starting the Service
Intent intent = new Intent(this, TimerService.class);
// Add Intent-Extras as data from (EditText)
intent.putExtra("TIMER_VALUE", string_timerValue);
// Start Service
startService(intent);
// Close current Activity
finish();
} else {
Toast.makeText(TimerActivity.this, "Please enter a Value!", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
}
And then inside my Service class, I retrieved the value, and use it inside onStartCommand.
TimerService.class
// Retrieve the user-data from (EditText) in TimerActivity
intent.getStringExtra("TIMER_VALUE"); // IS THIS NEEDED, SINCE ITS ASSIGNED TO A STRING BELOW TOO?
// Assign a String value to the (EditText) value you retrieved..
String timerValue;
timerValue = intent.getStringExtra("TIMER_VALUE");
// You can also convert the String to an int, if needed.
// Now you can reference "timerValue" for the value anywhere in the class you choose.
Hopefully my contribution helps!
Happy coding!
Accessing view reference of another Activity is a bad practice. Because there is no guarantee if the reference is still around by the time you access it (considering the null reference risk).
What you need to do is to make your other Activity read values (which you want to display) from a data source (e.g. persistence storage or shared preferences), and the other Activity manipulates these values. So it appears as if it changes the value of another activity, but in reality it takes values from a data source.
Using SharedPreferences:
Note: SharedPreferences saves data in the app if you close it but it will be lost when it has been deleted.
In EditarTimes.java:
private AdapterView.OnItemClickListener selecionarTime = new AdapterView.OnItemClickListener() {
public void onItemClick(AdapterView arg0, View arg1, int pos, long id) {
t = times.get(pos);
SharedPreferences.Editor editor = getSharedPreferences("DATA", MODE_PRIVATE).edit();
editor.putString("btnText", "Your desired text");
editor.apply();
Intent intent = new Intent(EditarTimes.this, CadastroTimes.class);
startActivity(intent);
}
};
In CadastroTimes.java
public Button salvar;
salvar.setText(getSharedPreferences("DATA", MODE_PRIVATE).getString("btnText", ""));
//note that default value should be blank
As far as my thoughts go, I can realize that the problem is not with the code you provided as it seems to be implemented correctly. It is possible that you have saved the activityState somewhere in your actual code and because it is not implemented properly, the savedInstanceState found in the onCreate method is not null but the required information is missing or not correct. That's why newString is getting null and salvar textview is getting blank.
Here, I need to know which one is more useful to you - information from getIntent() or from savedInstanceState? The code you provided insists me to assume that savedInstanceState has got the preference.
If you prefer savedInstanceState, then you may use SharedPreferences like this to get the same value you want:
private SharedPreferences mPrefs;
private String newString;
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
........
// try to get the value of alterarValue from preference
mPrefs = getSharedPreferences("MyData", MODE_PRIVATE);
newString = mPrefs.getString("alterarValue", "");
if (newString.equals("")){
// we have not received the value
// move forward to get it from bundle
newString = getIntent().getStringExtra("Alterar");
}
// now show it in salvar
salvar.setText(newString);
}
protected void onPause() {
super.onPause();
// you may save activity state or other info in this way
SharedPreferences.Editor ed = mPrefs.edit();
ed.putString("alterarValue", newString);
ed.commit();
}
Or if you don't need to get it from savedInstanceState, please use it:
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
........
// try to get the value of alterarValue from bundle
String newString = getIntent().getStringExtra("Alterar");
// now show it in salvar
salvar.setText(newString);
}
That's all I know. Hope it will help. If anything goes wrong, please let me know.
I have a ListView of contacts and each contact is a Java object with a bunch of information associated with it. Some of that info is shown in the ListView, but the rest is meant for the DetailView. I'm trying to write a method that will take me to a DetailView for any contact I click on, but I also need to take the object with me. I store all of the contacts in an ArrayList in my MainActivity.java
My questions: Do I need to take the contact object with me or is there actually some way to access my ArrayList in another Activity?
If I can/have to take it with me, how would I do so, since the putExtra() methods don't take objects as arguments.
The beginning of my MainActivity looks like this:
public class MainActivity extends Activity implements AdapterView.OnItemClickListener {
ListView list;
I have a very basic onClickListener right now but don't know what to put into it:
#Override
public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> adapterView, View view, int i, long l) {
Intent intent = new Intent(MainActivity.this, DetailView.class);
intent.putExtra("contact", i);
startActivity(intent);
}
I feel like my initial definition of the MainActivity class doesn't correspond to the onItemClick method or something, which is why it doesn't execute and take me to another screen.
Intent intent = new Intent(ActivityA.this, DetailView.class);
intent.putExtra("extra_name","extra");
startActivity(intent);
Then in the other Activity :
/*onCreate*/
Object extra = getIntent().getExtra().get("extra_name");
I would recommend to pass an ID of some sort pointing to the description, passing complex data structure with intents is not recommended
Simply, use Intent.putExtra() to pass the information and getIntent().getExtras() to receive the information.
// call a new intent
myIntent = new Intent(ActivityA.this, ActivityB.class);
// put an extra (like this following string)
String userid = "User A";
myIntent.putExtra("TAG_CONTACT_ID", userid);
startActivity(myIntent);
// receive the info in your onCreate method in ActivityB
Bundle extras = getIntent().getExtras();
if(extras != null) {
String newUserID = extras.getString("TAG_CONTACT_ID");
}
See this short example for more information.
If you want to pass an Integer, you can do it as the following: myIntent.putExtra("value", i); and take it with: int myValue = extras.getInt("value");.
Hope this help.
Try something like this:
public void onItemClick(AdapterView<?> parent, View view,
int position, long id) {
Contact c = (Contact)contacts.get(position);
Intent i = new Intent();
i.putExtras("contact", c);
i.setClass(this, Activity2.class);
startActivity(i);
}
Create java object with parcelable
Check the below code to create parcelable object in Android.
public class ObjFeedImages implements Parcelable {
public int image_id;
public boolean like_status = false;
public String image_url = null;
#Override
public int describeContents() {
return 0;
}
#Override
public void writeToParcel(Parcel dest, int flags) {
dest.writeStringArray(new String[] {
String.valueOf(image_id),
String.valueOf(like_status),
image_url, });
}
public ObjFeedImages(Parcel in) {
String[] data = new String[3];
int i = 0;
in.readStringArray(data);
image_id = Integer.parseInt(data[i++]);//
like_status = Boolean.parseBoolean(data[i++]);
image_url = data[i++];
}
public static final Parcelable.Creator<ObjFeedImages> CREATOR = new Parcelable.Creator<ObjFeedImages>() {
#Override
public ObjFeedImages createFromParcel(Parcel source) {
try {
return new ObjFeedImages(source);
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
return null;
}
}
#Override
public ObjFeedImages[] newArray(int size) {
try {
return new ObjFeedImages[size];
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
return null;
}
}
};
}
After creating some list of such object say
ObjFeedImages object = new ObjFeedImages();
object.image_id = 1;
object.like_status = true;
object.image_url="http://some image url";
Intent intent = new Intent(/*Your Intent Info*/);
intent.putExtras("key_name",object);
startActivity(intent);
Here is the complete description.
To retrive object in other activity you have to write below code.
ObjFeedImages objectOnOtherActivity = (ObjFeedImages)getIntent().getParcelableExtra("key_name");
So ready to enjoy code.
Happy coding....