The way to have some functionality that's in every Activity
is to make them all inherit a common superclass, something like this:
class LoginActivity extends Activity {
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
if (getIntent().hasExtra(...)) {
doLogin();
}
}
class MyActivity extends LoginActivity {
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
// user is now logged in
setContentView(...);
}
}
The LoginActivity
is only there for your other activities to inherit, so don't mention it in your AndroidManifest.xml
. You can't get the Intent
in your Application
because such a thing would make no sense. The Application
object exists for as long as your process is running. At any given time there may be zero, one, or more than one of your activities live, so what Intent
would it return?
I must admit I'm a bit puzzled about what the launching Intent
has to do with logging in, though. It seems like you need a global object with the session state/credentials, rather than anything to do with intents.