Book Image

Android Sensor Programming By Example

By : Varun Nagpal
Book Image

Android Sensor Programming By Example

By: Varun Nagpal

Overview of this book

Android phones available in today’s market have a wide variety of powerful and highly precise sensors. Interesting applications can be built with them such as a local weather app using weather sensors, analyzing risky driving behavior using motion sensors, a fitness tracker using step-counter sensors, and so on. Sensors in external devices such as Android Watch, Body Analyzer & Weight Machine, Running Speed Cell, and so on can also be connected and used from your Android app running on your phone. Moving further, this book will provide the skills required to use sensors in your Android applications. It will walk you through all the fundamentals of sensors and will provide a thorough understanding of the Android Sensor Framework. You will also get to learn how to write code for the supportive infrastructure such as background services, scheduled and long running background threads, and databases for saving sensor data. Additionally, you will learn how to connect and use sensors in external devices from your Android app using the Google Fit platform. By the end of the book, you will be well versed in the use of Android sensors and programming to build interactive applications.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
Android Sensor Programming By Example
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

What just happened?


We just created three small applications using three different sensors. The first one detects physical shakes using the accelerometer sensor, the second one tells the earth's magnetic direction using the orientation sensor, and the third one uses the fingerprint sensor to authenticate the user. A few important points to note are that the orientation sensor has been deprecated, so in place of it we should use the getRotationMatrix()and getOrientation() APIs to get the orientation values. Fingerprint APIs were introduced in Android Marshmallow (API Level 23), which uses both runtime and install time permissions. Thus, to use the fingerprint sensor, we should include both runtime and install time permissions.