Huge improvements! Amongst them:
* Pressing Up is just as fast as pressing Back
* Like Back, it keeps the scroll position and everything
* Now FDroid behaves like the other activities that an user may navigate up to
Inconsistent formatting types for argument #1 in format string
searchres_napps ('%s'): Found both 'd' and 's' (in values/strings.xml)
This lint check ensures the following: (1) If there are multiple
translations of the format string, then all translations use the same type
for the same numbered arguments (2) The usage of the format string in Java
consistent with the format string, meaning that the parameter types passed
to String.format matches those in the format string.
<string name="searchres_napps">Sa gasit o aplicatie potrivita cu %s\'</string>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Having the pre-configured Eclipse files in git will make it easier for
other people to work with FDroid in Eclipse, and should not affect anything
else. The key files are .classpath and .project. The .settings/ folder is
for user-specific settings, so its ignored.
This is another easy method to send FDroid to a device that doesn't have it
yet. Unfortunately, stock Android blocks the receiving of APKs, but many
ROMs and even some Samsung devices do not have this block.
You can find the lengthy backstory on this work here:
https://dev.guardianproject.info/issues/2084
Setting android.permission.ACCESS_WIFI_STATE automatically sets up
uses-feature to require wifi. Therefore, we have to manually say that
wifi is not actually required.
This adds the command to update the embedded Android Test Project, so that
it can be run using `cd test/; ant clean emma debug install test`
It also changes -p to --path just to make things a little easier to read.
This pre-configures a file:// URI that points to the installed location of
the FDroid.apk. When users put two devices together, and touch the screen
on the device with FDroid on it, it will "beam" over the APK, and prompt
the user to install it.
To reproduce the crash:
0. click a fdroidrepo:// URI to bring up the "app repo" dialog
1. rotate the device
2. click back to make the keyboard go away
3. click back to make the dialog go away
4. click back on Manage Repos screen
5. boom!
Otherwise we get errors like this upon rotation:
"android.support.v4.app.Fragment$InstantiationException: Unable to
instantiate fragment org.fdroid.fdroid.RepoListFragment: make sure class
name exists, is public, and has an empty constructor that is public"
It is now possible to beam a repo config via NFC but just selecting the
repo in FDroid, then touching two NFC devices together, and clicking on the
FDroid one. There is no indication that NFC is off, so this commit adds a
menu item that makes it easy to enable the required NFC settings for
sending a repo to another device via NFC.
This is the framework for easily swapping repos. The idea is that a user
can send the URL with the fingerprint for trusted bootstrapping of the repo
on a new user's device. This will be essential for p2p repos provided
by Bazaar/Kerplapp.
The required NFC APIs were introduced in android-14. So android-14 and below
skip the NFC stuff.
this makes sure that the repo fingerprints are always going to have the
same case, no matter how they were added. Repo.fingerprint probably should
be converted to a BigInteger so that the comparison can be numeric rather
than String. Then when the fingerprint needs to be displayed, it can be
formatted appropriately.
This saves the currently selected category in the Available apps view, and
restores that category when the user returns to the Available screen. It
drives me totally nuts that it always forgets the category when I nav away
from that screen, always returning to What's New.
* If the info is taller than the icon, grow larger to fit it in
* Center icon vertically
* Move padding out of the header
* Revert some font sizes to how they were some time ago, a bit smaller