Implementing the bare bones of a generic "peer finder" framework. This
may or may not eventuate to something which can live in its own library
and be used by other projects. Might go hand in hand with Carries idea
of having a common UI to be shared among projects.
Got Bluetooth and Bonjour kinda working, but the UI is crud,
and it doesn't remove items and ends up with duplicates. Otherwise,
on our way to a proper "nearby peers" screen.
The Toolbar is the new thing from Google which acts as an ActionBar.
It is not a special view like the action bar is, it is
implemented and added to your layout the same as any view.
The InnerView classes of the swap workflow have the choice of what
colour to make the toolbar, so that they can distinguish themselves
as per the mockups (some deep blue, others bright blue).
Added icons for close, but they don't do anything yet.
Minor tweaks to layout so that it looks more like the latest mockups.
- App icon is now 72dp x 72dp
- Description is expandable
- License, categories, Website, Source Code, Issues and Donate (#232) are moved from header to summary
- Buttons to install, update and run are moved from action bar to header
- Permissions are expandable and always shown
- Add myself to copyright holders of "F-Droid/res/layout/app_details_header.xml", "F-Droid/res/layout/app_details_summary.xml" and
"F-Droid/src/org/fdroid/fdroid/AppDetails.java"
"Confirm swap" background was white but should have been blue.
SwapWorkflowActivity now extends ActionBarActivity instead of
FragmentActivity so older devices have an action bar (though it is
not styled with blue action buttons on android-10 devices).
All the code from the activity and the fragments has been successfully
ported to the SwapWorkflowActivity + Views. Thus, the code is no longer
useful, as it was only kept over the previous WIP commits so that it
can be referred to to help re-implement fragments with views.
As per the select apps list, there is quite a bit of business logic
in this class, which is now spread between the activity and the view.
The activity needs to handle some stuff, because the zxing library
routes intents to either an activity or a fragment.
There is quite a lot of business logic that was moved directly from
the fragment to the view. Before this feature is complete, that logic
should either be moved into the activity, or into some sort of
associated Presenter class for the JoinWifiView.
Not worrying about styling yet, just functionality. Added an InnerView
interface that these views can implement. Currently it asks them to
populate the menu. It may be slightly inefficient if we end up with a
popup menu, because it is called onPrepareOptionsMenu, but expects the
inner view to inflate the menu. However, for swap this shouldn't be an
issue, as all the menus pretty much fit in the action bar of most screen
sizes.
Added a SwapWorkflowActivity to re-implement the SwapActivity.
Once all the fragments have been refactored into views, then the
SwapActivity will be removed.
Previously it would only compare the details of a new repo to existing
ones if the new repo came via an intent. Now it does it whenever you
change the text in the new repo dialog (shouldn't be too much of a
performance hit, it isn't doing very much).
The things it (still) doesn't do is:
* verify that the url looks like a url
* sanitize the newly input uri and compare it to sanitized saved repos
The second point means that you can end up with:
http://10.0.1.50/ and
http://10.0.1.50
both in the list. I'm going to log an issue for this, because it should
be fixed, but doesn't need to hold this up.
* Provide CheckBox for selected items
Newer API's highlight the background using the "activated" state. Older
APIs need this to be implemented differently, so there are now checkboxes
on the left of the list view items to provide this functionality.
* Clean up IDE warnings
Diamond operator for generics, remove unused imports and unused method.
* Adapter class created for installed apps
Cleaned up the code to do with binding views to the adapter in this view.
Previously it made quite a few assumptions about the structure of the layout,
e.g. "layout.getParent().getParent() is a LinearLayout", which would cause
crashes if the layout changed slightly.
* Cleaned up text alignment styles for API < 17.
API v17 has a textAlignment style, wherease previous verisons rely on
the "gravity" property. This change includes gravity="center" where there
was previously only textAlignment="center".
* Fragments get added properly on 2.3 device.
For some reason, when adding the fragment to android.R.id.content, it
wouldn't work on my 2.3 device. This change includes a (almost) empty
activity layout with a single FrameLayout. The fragments are added to
this rather than "content", and it works better. It is not perfect - it
still adds the fargments behind the action bar, and so the action bar
appears blue. But at least they are there :)
* Added translatable strings where constants were used before.
Not related to v2.3 support, but stil important for a stable release,
that is fully translated.
Previously, a few people have been confused by an empty list when they first
open F-Droid (e.g. if they are not connected to the internet, and repos didn't
update). This provides some feedback so that there is never a blank screen.
Fixes Issue #34.
When adding repositories using the Manage Repos activity, firstly look
for an /index.jar appended on the URL provided by the user. If that
doesn't work (HTTP status code other than 200) then it will try
/fdroid/repo/index.jar, then /repo/index.jar. If it can't establish a
connection to the server, or if none of the above attempts results
in a 200, then the path provided by the user is kept (even though we
have a hunch it might be wrong).
This is to cover for the case where people arn't connected to the net.
Another way to deal with no internet connectivity is provided by a
"Skip" button on the dialog while searching for the index.jar.
The searching for index.jar is done by doing a HTTP HEAD request, so
the entire jar needn't be downloaded.
Finally, to make this happen in a clean sort of way, I refactored the
ManageReposActivity a little bit to encapsulate all of the add repo
dialog handling into a subclass. This way, the outer class doesn't
need to know things like: Is the dialog showing, what state is it in,
is the background task to search for index.jar files running, how and
when to cancel that task, etc.