I wrote a blog post recently on Android Accessibility on my work tech blog around how we went about reviewing the accessibility of one part of the app I worked on for the JustEatTakeaway.com app.
Recently I released another app that I’ve been meaning to create for a while.
App dev toolbox is a collection of tools that I have used over the years to help with Android app development which I have merged into one app from other open source projects (Huge thanks to those projects for creating such useful tools!)
I have also tweaked some of the project to meet my needs and added a few other simple features like the deep link tester. Here are the projects that the app includes;
As I tend to regularly get new devices and always create new Android emulators for development, I decided that it would be really useful to have one app that I could install on a device that had all the tools I needed to make development easier.
This app is currently the first iteration of that idea and I hope to improve it over time by adding and removing tools that I find useful.
I have also made the app open source so people can contribute if needed and report any issues that they find. You can find the code here – https://github.com/andyb129/AppDevToolbox
I hope this is useful to other Android dev’s & feel free to get in touch if there are any other great development tools people can recommend that I could add to this app.
While writing another app to help me with Android app development I thought it would be great to have the functionality of an app that I had used in the past in the app also.
That app is called Texpand and it allows you to save multiple files of text with associated abbreviations so that you can recall them in other apps on your device.
I always wondered how they achieved that functionality, so as Texpand was closed source, I set out to find out if I could replicate it in my own app.
This led to the creation of the app above that I’ve called Snippet. As well as publishing it on the play store it’s open source so feel free to take a look at the code on my Github account – https://github.com/andyb129/Snippet
Texpand still has its place as it has more functionality, but hopefully this simple implementation will be useful to people as well and as it’s open source I hope it helps other dev’s learn about the AccessibilityService in Android that they could use in their own apps.
How it works
Essentially the app centers around the AccessibilityService class that is available in Android. You can create your own AccessibilityService and provide the user with information depending on the events that happen as show below (either across all android apps or specific ones).
class SnippetTextAccessibilityService: AccessibilityService() {
override fun onAccessibilityEvent(accessibilityEvent: AccessibilityEvent?) {
if (rootInActiveWindow != null) {
if (accessibilityEvent.eventType == TYPE_VIEW_TEXT_CHANGED) {
//perform action
}
}
}
}
Once we have isolated the event, in this case TYPE_VIEW_TEXT_CHANGED , then we can use the information in that event to display the overlay to the user that you see in Snippet.
The overlay is the second part of the puzzle in this app and is generated by creating a Service and displaying a layout to the user that they can tap which then pastes the snippet of text.
The text snippets are searched and retrieved from a simple Room database that is mainly based on this excellent example provided by the team at Google (with a few tweaks) –
Here’s a quick post to just share a cool, but simple, portable Lego device stand that I found on the Instructables website.
After putting together my Lego device lab , I’ve sometimes found the need to have a stand for a device thats more portable.
After searching a little bit I found that there are loads of different solutions, but I thought I’d stick with the Lego theme as they are sometimes the cheaper solution (and look cool as well 🙂 )
So here’s a list of parts for my modified version (The original was slightly wider and better for tablets) of the stand here on the Instructables website by BrickSmith (thanks for sharing in the first place!). While making this I also found a great place to by the individual Lego bricks were I got all the parts from called bricklink. (you’ll have to register and pick a seller as there are a few, I filtered seller by location in ‘more options’ e.g. UK). Cost of each brick is cheap (2/3p) but postage will be majority of cost, so if you can get them posted by the same seller then you can save more.
Note: the size of the last two Axel’s can be doubled to make a stand for a tablet to make the stand wider (i.e. 2 x Axel 6 & 1 x Axel 8).
Another quick tip to finish it off is to put a bit of sellotape on either side of the Lego were the device sits to stop it slipping out/tilting when adding and removing the phone.
I hope people find this useful and it gives dev’s a cheap way of adding a new portable stand to their desks.
This is the second part of sharing a few of resources I’ve collected over time, see the first part here on Android Studio plugins.
Here I’ve pulled together a list of Apps I’ve found that can be useful to Android App developers. I also found another article a while back providing a similar list of apps with a few cool different ones here.
Over time as an Android developer I’ve collected a list of a lot of resources as I’m sure all dev’s have. But I just thought I’d put a couple of posts together with a few of the cool ones that I’ve found along the way in case others find them useful.
Being surrounded by Open Source libraries when developing Android apps (in my mind I always hear ‘Open Sauce’ – once read never forgotten, ha.), I’ve always been trying to create a semi useful library and also learn more about the process behind getting your code up to a central repo so other dev’s can benefit from it. When working on another library contribution, I came up with some code that I thought would be a good candidate.
As most Android developers will know, working on the platform sometimes requires testing your app on a stupid amount of different devices. This usually leads to a scene similar to this on your desk.
I decided last year that I needed to find out for myself what all the fuss was about owning an iPhone and take a bite of the Apple myself!
There has always been a rivalry between iPhone and Android developers/users and I’ve experienced my fair share of debates arguing which is the better platform, so being an Android developer & daily user, I thought the only way to find out myself was to buy an iPhone and experiencing the OS first hand.
The Google Cloud Test Lab first came to my attention in Google I/O 2015 and was one of announcements that was ‘coming soon’ at the time. It wasn’t until about a month ago that I received an email after signing up on the Google Test Lab website telling me that it was available to try out.
The Cloud Test Lab is made up of two features at the moment;
Cloud Test Lab can run instrumentation tests that you write using Espresso or Robotium
Use the Cloud Test Lab Robo test to simulate user actions and find crashes in your app