Hmm, I'm thinking of creating an array of class names, which are just collection of their names(but not strings though) so later on, I could instantiate each one of them. How is this possible in Java?
Type mClasses[] = { A.class, B.class, C.class, ... };
Yes, you can load a class on your classpath given the String name using reflection, using Class.forName(name), grabbing the constructor and invoking it. I'll do you an example.
Consider I have a class:
com.crossedstreams.thingy.Foo
Which has a constructor with signature:
Foo(String a, String...
I have implemented Twilio in my android app for outgoing and incoming calls. But I'm facing an issue while getting incoming call with the background service. The issue is that I get calls in first 30-40 mins only. After sometime phone stops getting incoming calls. I tried so much. Please respond ...
android.content.ActivityNotFoundException: No Activity found to handle Intent { act=android.intent.action.VIEW dat=file:///storage/sdcard0/recordings/[an mp3 file] }
why handling audio has to be so hard?
I have to specify MIME manually, really Android? I thought you were smart...
what I try to say is: there is no one who manages any magic numbers and it wouldn't make sense to invest time there. Just to spare a developer to provide a mime type...
Quote from the docs: > * (Usually optional) Set the data for the intent along with an explicit > * MIME data type. This method should very rarely be used -- it allows you > * to override the MIME type that would ordinarily be inferred from the > * data with your own type given here.
I've also noticed that when I supply audio/* the chooser will pop up to ask me for default player (presumably because I have both 'Music' and 'ES Music Player'), but when I supply the exact type, audio/mp3 the file will just open like a dialog, with a line denoting length and current audio position + pause/play button
jokes aside, if you are playing some music through headphones, hardware failure causes a file to become corrupt and the player decides to play everything without checking checksums, the result can be physically devastating
as long as the music itself is not just as loud (I mean, no "modern mastering" with everything squished to 0dBFS with tons of clipping, etc)
If I have MyClass extends MyBaseClass and MyBaseClass has a method called doThis() I needed to override doThis() for MyClass but I didn't so whenever I called MyClass.doThis() it was just going to the base class implementation, so it never crashed it just gave me weird preformance.
Okay cool. And remember, Cash Caretaker is open source, but I have all the stuff I'm working on now on a separate branch. If you ever want some specific sample code I can link you
so now I can't use git with AS since I updated xcode because I get "Agreeing to the Xcode/iOS license requires admin privileges, please re-run as root via sudo. "
Okay, I need to fetch some stuff from the Internet and I don't need to cache them (so no database entry necessary); my first thought Volley would be nice, but should I write an Adapter using a List or using a Cursor?
All advice I found on Google suggest against using Volley by itself, but I really don't need anything advanced here
I am moving from Windows over to Ubuntu 14.04 for my Android application development. By biggest worry was to figure out how to make Android devices work with adb on Ubuntu. Various articles on the Internet talk about creating /etc/udev/rules.d/51-android.rules file and adding specific informatio...