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Android Sensor Programming By Example

You're reading from   Android Sensor Programming By Example Take your Android applications to the next level of interactivity by exploring the wide variety of Android sensors

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785285509
Length 194 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Varun Nagpal Varun Nagpal
Author Profile Icon Varun Nagpal
Varun Nagpal
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Table of Contents (8) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Sensor Fundamentals FREE CHAPTER 2. Playing with Sensors 3. The Environmental Sensors – The Weather Utility App 4. The Light and Proximity Sensors 5. The Motion, Position, and Fingerprint Sensors 6. The Step Counter and Detector Sensors – The Pedometer App 7. The Google Fit Platform and APIs – The Fitness Tracker App

Dealing with specific sensor configuration

There might be some scenarios in which certain features of your application might depend on a specific sensor, and that sensor is not present on the device. In such cases, a good option would be to either turn off that dependent feature or not allow the user to install the application. Let's explore each option in detail.

Checking the availability of the sensor at runtime

If you have a weather utility app, and it uses the pressure sensor on the phone to check the atmospheric pressure, then it's not a good idea to directly use the sensor. There are many Android phones that don't have a pressure sensor on them. If such cases are not handled properly, your application might even crash, which will be a bad user experience.

It's always recommended to check the availability of a sensor before using it in the application. The following code snippet shows how to check the availability of the sensor:

private SensorManager mSensorManager; 
... 
mSensorManager= 
(SensorManager)getSystemService(Context.SENSOR_SERVICE); 
if(mSensorManager.getDefaultSensor(Sensor.TYPE_PRESSURE)!=null){ 
  // Success! There's a pressure sensor. 
}else{ 
  // Failure! No pressure sensor. 
} 

Declaring the sensor as mandatory feature

If measuring atmospheric pressure using the phone pressure sensor is the main feature of your application, then you may not want to support those devices that don't have a pressure sensor in them. The Android platform supports this functionality by declaring uses-feature filters in the AndroidManifest.xml file:

<uses-feature android:name="android.hardware.sensor.barometer"  android:required="true" /> 

This code snippet informs the Android platform that the pressure sensor is required for this app to function. Google Play uses this uses-feature to filter out those devices that don't have the pressure sensor in them, and hence your app is only installed on the supported devices. The sensors that are supported by uses-feature are the accelerometer, gyroscope, light, barometer (pressure), compass (geomagnetic field), and proximity sensors.

If your application uses a sensor for some feature, but can still run without that sensor by turning off that feature, then it's advisable to declare the sensor in  uses-feature but still set the required value to false (android:required="false"). This informs the operating system that your application uses that sensor, but it can still function without it. It's the developer's responsibility to check the availability of the sensor at runtime.

You have been reading a chapter from
Android Sensor Programming By Example
Published in: Apr 2016
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781785285509
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