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Appcelerator Titanium Smartphone App Development Cookbook Second Edition

You're reading from   Appcelerator Titanium Smartphone App Development Cookbook Second Edition Over 100 recipes to help you develop cross-platform, native applications in JavaScript

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781849697705
Length 368 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building Apps Using Native UI Components FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with Local and Remote Data Sources 3. Integrating Maps and GPS 4. Enhancing Your Apps with Audio, Video, and Cameras 5. Connecting Your Apps to Social Media and E-mail 6. Getting to Grips with Properties and Events 7. Creating Animations, Transformations and Implementing Drag and Drop 8. Interacting with Native Phone Applications and APIs 9. Integrating Your Apps with External Services 10. Extending Your Apps with Custom Modules 11. Platform Differences, Device Information, and Quirks 12. Preparing Your App for Distribution and Getting It Published 13. Implementing and Using URL Schemes 14. Introduction to Alloy MVC Index

Transferring binary data between apps using a URL scheme

One of the limitations of iOS has always been the isolation of apps and the ability to share data between them. Typically, this has been achieved by developing native extensions or using app groups, but the latter work only between your own apps.

So far, we have sent text data between apps, so let's look at how we can use the same techniques to transfer binary data: images, documents, or any file.

How to do it…

In order to transfer a file via a URL, you have to turn it into text. To do this, you need to base64 encode the binary data into a string:

var fileAsText = Ti.Utils.base64encode(binaryData);

The binaryData in this case could be a blob, the result of a .toImage()method of a view, or a binary file loaded from the filesystem:

var binaryData = Ti.Filesystem.getFile('photo.png');

Once you have the file converted into a string, it needs to be encoded so that it can be sent via a URL:

var encodedText = encodeURI(fileAsText...
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