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Android Application Development Cookbook

You're reading from   Android Application Development Cookbook Over 100 recipes to help you solve the most common problems faced by Android Developers today

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785886195
Length 428 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Rick Boyer Rick Boyer
Author Profile Icon Rick Boyer
Rick Boyer
Kyle Mew Kyle Mew
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Kyle Mew
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Activities FREE CHAPTER 2. Layouts 3. Views, Widgets, and Styles 4. Menus 5. Exploring Fragments, AppWidgets, and the System UI 6. Working with Data 7. Alerts and Notifications 8. Using the Touchscreen and Sensors 9. Graphics and Animation 10. A First Look at OpenGL ES 11. Multimedia 12. Telephony, Networks, and the Web 13. Getting Location and Using Geofencing 14. Getting your app ready for the Play Store 15. The Backend as a Service Options 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...

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