4

I have this webview code and I want to make it possible to have the PDF files opened when a user clicks on a PDF link. Here is the code, can you tell me what I have to put inside the PDF area of this? I've tried many different ways and I cannot get the PDF to view at all. Thanks for the help.

webview.setWebViewClient ( new WebViewClient() {
    public boolean shouldOverrideUrlLoading(WebView view, String url) {
        // do your handling codes here, which url is the requested url
        // probably you need to open that url rather than redirect:
        if (url.startsWith("tel:")) {
            startActivity(new Intent(Intent.ACTION_DIAL, Uri.parse(url)));
        } else if (url.startsWith("mailto:")) {
            url = url.replaceFirst("mailto:", "");
            url = url.trim();
            Intent i = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_SEND);
            i.setType("plain/text").putExtra(Intent.EXTRA_EMAIL,
                    new String[]{url});
            startActivity(i);

        } else if (url.startsWith("geo:")) {
            try {
            } catch (Exception e) {
                System.out.println(e);
            }

        } else if (url.endsWith("pdf")) {

            try {

            } catch (Exception e) {
                System.out.println(e);
            }

        } else {
            view.loadUrl(url);
        }
        return true;
        // then it is not handled by default action
    }
});

5 Answers 5

11

This could be as simple as:

try
{
 Intent intentUrl = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW);
 intentUrl.setDataAndType(url, "application/pdf");
 intentUrl.setFlags(Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_CLEAR_TOP);
 myActivity.startActivity(intentUrl);
}
catch (ActivityNotFoundException e)
{
 Toast.makeText(myActivity, "No PDF Viewer Installed", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}

though I've not tried this.

In our apps, we DOWNLOAD the PDF to the apps file system, make it world readable, then pass the path in an Intent to open a PDF viewing app (e.g. Acrobat Reader). Please note that you'd also need to also be concerned with cleaning up these downloaded PDF's!

in your try block put

new DownloadPDFTask().execute(url);

DownloadPDFTask class:

public class DownloadPDFTask extends AsyncTask<String, Void, Integer> 
{
    protected ProgressDialog mWorkingDialog;    // progress dialog
    protected String mFileName;         // downloaded file
    protected String mError;            // for errors

    @Override
    protected Integer doInBackground(String... urls)
    {

     try
     {
      byte[] dataBuffer = new byte[4096];
          int nRead = 0;

          // set local filename to last part of URL
          String[] strURLParts = urls[0].split("/");
          if (strURLParts.length > 0)
            mFileName = strURLParts[strURLParts.length - 1];
          else
                mFileName = "REPORT.pdf";

          // download URL and store to strFileName

          // connection to url
      java.net.URL urlReport = new java.net.URL(urls[0]);
          URLConnection urlConn = urlReport.openConnection();
          InputStream streamInput = urlConn.getInputStream();
          BufferedInputStream bufferedStreamInput = new BufferedInputStream(streamInput);
          FileOutputStream outputStream = myActivity.openFileOutput(mFileName,Context.MODE_WORLD_READABLE); // must be world readable so external Intent can open!
          while ((nRead = bufferedStreamInput.read(dataBuffer)) > 0)
                outputStream.write(dataBuffer, 0, nRead);
          streamInput.close();
          outputStream.close();
      }
      catch (Exception e)
      {
       Log.e("myApp", e.getMessage());
       mError = e.getMessage();
       return (1);
      }

     return (0);
    }

    //-------------------------------------------------------------------------
    // PreExecute - UI thread setup
    //-------------------------------------------------------------------------

    @Override
    protected void onPreExecute()
    {
     // show "Downloading, Please Wait" dialog
     mWorkingDialog = ProgressDialog.show(myActivity, "", "Downloading PDF Document, Please Wait...", true);
     return;
    }

    //-------------------------------------------------------------------------
    // PostExecute - UI thread finish
    //-------------------------------------------------------------------------

    @Override
    protected void onPostExecute (Integer result)
    {
         if (mWorkingDialog != null)
      {
       mWorkingDialog.dismiss();
       mWorkingDialog = null;
      }

         switch (result)
         {
         case 0:                            // a URL

            // Intent to view download PDF
            Uri uri  = Uri.fromFile(myActivity.getFileStreamPath(mFileName));

            try
            {
                Intent intentUrl = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW);
                intentUrl.setDataAndType(uri, "application/pdf");
                intentUrl.setFlags(Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_CLEAR_TOP);
                myActivity.startActivity(intentUrl);
            }
            catch (ActivityNotFoundException e)
            {
                Toast.makeText(myActivity, "No PDF Viewer Installed", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
            }

            break;

        case 1:                         // Error

            Toast.makeText(myActivity, mError, Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
            break;

        }

    }

}

any reference to "myActivity" must be replaced with a reference to your Activity class

4
  • Is it possible to just show the PDF file form the webview without running a async download task? May 9, 2012 at 18:16
  • 1
    No, unlike UIWebView on iOS, the Android WebView does not display PDF content. You can try directly calling the intent (i.e. no AsyncDownloadTask), though you'll be leaving your activity no matter what.
    – CSmith
    May 9, 2012 at 19:37
  • Hmm, so the best way in android would be to call the async to download the file and save it. Do you know if the process can automatically find the filename and save as that name on the SD card? I always have specified the name when using this. Thanks! May 9, 2012 at 21:52
  • I would try just handing your http://{file}.pdf url to the intent, I would think the PDF viewer program (e.g. Acrobat) will take care of the rest. If it doesn't, the downloader task should give you a good starting point. This part of the code handles the file naming, it extracts the filename from your URL: // set local filename to last part of URL String[] strURLParts = urls[0].split("/"); if (strURLParts.length > 0) mFileName = strURLParts[strURLParts.length - 1]; else mFileName = "REPORT.pdf";
    – CSmith
    May 10, 2012 at 12:40
2

Please checkout the example for handling redirect urls and open PDF without download, in webview.

private void init()
{
    WebView webview = (WebView) findViewById(R.id.webview);
    WebSettings settings = webview.getSettings();
    settings.setJavaScriptEnabled(true);
    webview.setScrollBarStyle(WebView.SCROLLBARS_OUTSIDE_OVERLAY);

    PdfWebViewClient pdfWebViewClient = new PdfWebViewClient(this, webview);
    pdfWebViewClient.loadPdfUrl(
                "https://www.google.co.in/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0ahUKEwjgwIfp3KXSAhXrhFQKHQqEDHYQFggZMAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.orimi.com%2Fpdf-test.pdf&usg=AFQjCNERYYcSfMLS5ukBcT2Qy11YxEhXqw&cad=rja");
}

private class PdfWebViewClient extends WebViewClient
{
    private static final String TAG = "PdfWebViewClient";
    private static final String PDF_EXTENSION = ".pdf";
    private static final String PDF_VIEWER_URL = "http://docs.google.com/gview?embedded=true&url=";

    private Context mContext;
    private WebView mWebView;
    private ProgressDialog mProgressDialog;
    private boolean isLoadingPdfUrl;

    public PdfWebViewClient(Context context, WebView webView)
    {
        mContext = context;
        mWebView = webView;
        mWebView.setWebViewClient(this);
    }

    public void loadPdfUrl(String url)
    {
        mWebView.stopLoading();

        if (!TextUtils.isEmpty(url))
        {
            isLoadingPdfUrl = isPdfUrl(url);
            if (isLoadingPdfUrl)
            {
                mWebView.clearHistory();
            }

            showProgressDialog();
        }

        mWebView.loadUrl(url);
    }

    @SuppressWarnings("deprecation")
    @Override
    public boolean shouldOverrideUrlLoading(WebView webView, String url)
    {
        return shouldOverrideUrlLoading(url);
    }

    @SuppressWarnings("deprecation")
    @Override
    public void onReceivedError(WebView webView, int errorCode, String description, String failingUrl)
    {
        handleError(errorCode, description.toString(), failingUrl);
    }

    @TargetApi(Build.VERSION_CODES.N)
    @Override
    public boolean shouldOverrideUrlLoading(WebView webView, WebResourceRequest request)
    {
        final Uri uri = request.getUrl();
        return shouldOverrideUrlLoading(webView, uri.toString());
    }

    @TargetApi(Build.VERSION_CODES.N)
    @Override
    public void onReceivedError(final WebView webView, final WebResourceRequest request, final WebResourceError error)
    {
        final Uri uri = request.getUrl();
        handleError(error.getErrorCode(), error.getDescription().toString(), uri.toString());
    }

    @Override
    public void onPageFinished(final WebView view, final String url)
    {
        Log.i(TAG, "Finished loading. URL : " + url);
        dismissProgressDialog();
    }

    private boolean shouldOverrideUrlLoading(final String url)
    {
        Log.i(TAG, "shouldOverrideUrlLoading() URL : " + url);

        if (!isLoadingPdfUrl && isPdfUrl(url))
        {
            mWebView.stopLoading();

            final String pdfUrl = PDF_VIEWER_URL + url;

            new Handler().postDelayed(new Runnable()
            {
                @Override
                public void run()
                {
                    loadPdfUrl(pdfUrl);
                }
            }, 300);

            return true;
        }

        return false; // Load url in the webView itself
    }

    private void handleError(final int errorCode, final String description, final String failingUrl)
    {
        Log.e(TAG, "Error : " + errorCode + ", " + description + " URL : " + failingUrl);
    }

    private void showProgressDialog()
    {
        dismissProgressDialog();
        mProgressDialog = ProgressDialog.show(mContext, "", "Loading...");
    }

    private void dismissProgressDialog()
    {
        if (mProgressDialog != null && mProgressDialog.isShowing())
        {
            mProgressDialog.dismiss();
            mProgressDialog = null;
        }
    }

    private boolean isPdfUrl(String url)
    {
        if (!TextUtils.isEmpty(url))
        {
            url = url.trim();
            int lastIndex = url.toLowerCase().lastIndexOf(PDF_EXTENSION);
            if (lastIndex != -1)
            {
                return url.substring(lastIndex).equalsIgnoreCase(PDF_EXTENSION);
            }
        }
        return false;
    }
}
1

I was trying to handle this exact same scenario. The solution I came up with is below.

public boolean shouldOverrideUrlLoading(WebView view, String url) {
            String cleanUrl = url;
            if (url.contains("?")) {
                // remove the query string
                cleanUrl = url.substring(0,url.indexOf("?"));
            }

            if (cleanUrl.endsWith("pdf")) {

                try {
                    Uri uriUrl = Uri.parse(cleanUrl);
                    Intent intentUrl = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW, uriUrl);
                    startActivity(intentUrl);
                    return true;

                } catch (Exception e) {
                    System.out.println(e);
                    Toast.makeText(context,"No PDF Viewer Installed", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
                }
            }

            return false;
        }

I needed to make sure it would handle pdf links, even if there was a query string. Still a bit hacky as the cleanUrl needs to end in "pdf", but so long as that is true, this should work. If you're serving up pdf's through a php script or something, you might want to dig a little deeper, handle things based on MIME type or something.

1

Loading pdf within a webview:

WebView wv = (WebView) view.findViewById(R.id.webPage);
            wv.getSettings().setJavaScriptEnabled(true);
            wv.setWebViewClient(new WebClient());
            wv.loadUrl("http://drive.google.com/viewerng/viewer?embedded=true&url=" + mUrl);
            wv.getSettings().setBuiltInZoomControls(true);

mUrl - will be your pdf link

0
0

FWIW, mozilla has a PDF-reader-entirely-in-JavaScript that's apache licensed. Might be worth looking into if you don't mind the extra size. That way you can do everything in-browser and won't have to rely on a 3rd party PDF reader.

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