Book Image

Android Application Development Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Kyle Mew
Book Image

Android Application Development Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Kyle Mew

Overview of this book

The Android OS has the largest installation base of any operating system in the world; there has never been a better time to learn Android development to write your own applications, or to make your own contributions to the open source community! This “cookbook” will make it easy for you to jump to a topic of interest and get what you need to implement the feature in your own application. If you are new to Android and learn best by “doing,” then this book will provide many topics of interest. Starting with the basics of Android development, we move on to more advanced concepts, and we’ll guide you through common tasks developers struggle to solve. The first few chapters cover the basics including Activities, Layouts, Widgets, and the Menu. From there, we cover fragments and data storage (including SQLite), device sensors, the camera, and GPS. Then we move on more advanced topics such as graphics and animation (including OpenGL), multi-threading with AsyncTask, and Internet functionality with Volley. We’ll also demonstrate Google Maps and Google Cloud Messaging (also known as Push Notifications) using the Google API Library. Finally, we’ll take a look at several online services designed especially for Android development. Take your application big-time with full Internet web services without having to become a server admin by leveraging the power of Backend as a Service (BaaS) providers.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Android Application Development Cookbook Second Edition
Credits
Disclaimer
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Enabling Contextual Action Mode for a view


A Context Menu provides additional options related to a specific view—the same concept as a right-click on the desktop. Android currently supports two different approaches: the floating Context Menu and Contextual Mode. Contextual Action Mode was introduced in Android 3.0. The older floating Context Menu could lead to confusion since there was no indication of the currently selected item and it didn't support actions on multiple items—such as selecting multiple emails to delete in one action.

Creating a Floating Context Menu

If you need to use the old style Context Menu, for example, to support preAndroid 3.0 devices, it's very similar to the Option Menu API, just different method names. To create the menu, use onCreateContextMenu() instead of onCreateOptionsMenu(). To handle the menu item selection, use onContextItemSelected() instead of onOptionsItemSelected(). Finally, call registerForContextMenu() to let the system know you want Context Menu events...