Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I'm currently rendering HTML input in a TextView like so:

tv.setText(Html.fromHtml("<a href='test'>test</a>"));

The HTML being displayed is provided to me via an external resource, so I cannot change things around as I will, but I can, of course, do some regex tampering with the HTML, to change the href value, say, to something else.

What I want is to be able to handle a link click directly from within the app, rather than having the link open a browser window. Is this achievable at all? I'm guessing it would be possible to set the protocol of the href-value to something like "myApp://", and then register something that would let my app handle that protocol. If this is indeed the best way, I'd like to know how that is done, but I'm hoping there's an easier way to just say, "when a link is clicked in this textview, I want to raise an event that receives the href value of the link as an input parameter"

share|improve this question
I found something else at [Here][1] [1]: stackoverflow.com/questions/7255249/… Hope that can help you ^^ – Mr_DK Oct 11 '12 at 17:07

5 Answers

up vote 60 down vote accepted

Coming at this almost a year later, there's a different manner in which I solved my particular problem. Since I wanted the link to be handled by my own app, there is a solution that is a bit simpler.

Besides the default intent filter, I simply let my target activity listen to ACTION_VIEW intents, and specifically, those with the scheme com.package.name

<intent-filter>
    <category android:name="android.intent.category.DEFAULT" />
    <action android:name="android.intent.action.VIEW" />
    <data android:scheme="com.package.name" />  
</intent-filter>

This means that links starting with com.package.name:// will be handled by my activity.

So all I have to do is construct a URL that contains the information I want to convey:

com.package.name://action-to-perform/id-that-might-be-needed/

In my target activity, I can retrieve this address:

Uri data = getIntent().getData();

In my example, I could simply check data for null values, because when ever it isn't null, I'll know it was invoked by means of such a link. From there, I extract the instructions I need from the url to be able to display the appropriate data.

share|improve this answer
Hey your answer is perfect. Working fine.But further can we send data of passed data with this? – user861973 Aug 7 '12 at 11:44
2  
@user861973: Yes, getData gives you the full URI, you could also use getDataString that yields a text representation. Either way, you could construct the URL so as to contain all the data you need com.package.name://my-action/1/2/3/4, and you could extract the information from that string. – David Hedlund Aug 7 '12 at 12:03
Thanks David,I got what you are saying. It's working. My problem Solved. – user861973 Aug 7 '12 at 12:08
Very elegant solution! – Tomo Aug 25 '12 at 13:31
2  
It took me a day to understand this idea, but I tell you what - that was well worth it. Well-designed solution – Dennis Sep 30 '12 at 22:54
show 1 more comment

Another way, borrows a bit from Linkify but allows you to customize your handling.

Custom Span Class:

public class ClickSpan extends ClickableSpan {

    private OnClickListener mListener;

    public ClickSpan(OnClickListener listener) {
        mListener = listener;
    }

    @Override
    public void onClick(View widget) {
       if (mListener != null) mListener.onClick();
    }

    public interface OnClickListener {
        void onClick();
    }
}

Helper function:

public static void clickify(TextView view, final String clickableText, 
    final ClickSpan.OnClickListener listener) {

    CharSequence text = view.getText();
    String string = text.toString();
    ClickSpan span = new ClickSpan(listener);

    int start = string.indexOf(clickableText);
    int end = start + clickableText.length();
    if (start == -1) return;

    if (text instanceof Spannable) {
        ((Spannable)text).setSpan(span, start, end, Spanned.SPAN_EXCLUSIVE_EXCLUSIVE);
    } else {
        SpannableString s = SpannableString.valueOf(text);
        s.setSpan(span, start, end, Spanned.SPAN_EXCLUSIVE_EXCLUSIVE);
        view.setText(s);
    }

    MovementMethod m = view.getMovementMethod();
    if ((m == null) || !(m instanceof LinkMovementMethod)) {
        view.setMovementMethod(LinkMovementMethod.getInstance());
    }
}

Usage:

 clickify(textView, clickText,new ClickSpan.OnClickListener()
     {
        @Override
        public void onClick() {
            // do something
        }
    });
share|improve this answer
Another solution is to replace the Spans with your custom Spans, view stackoverflow.com/a/11417498/792677 – A-Live Jul 10 '12 at 16:38
+1 Works great! – Luis Quijada May 7 at 21:48

The best way I used and it always worked for me

android:autoLink="web"

Hope this will help you all.

Thanks,

rohit

share|improve this answer

its very simple add this line to your code:

tv.setMovementMethod(LinkMovementMethod.getInstance());
share|improve this answer
Thanks for your reply, jonathan. Yes, I knew about MovementMethod; what I wasn't sure about was how to specify that my own app should handle the link click, rather than just opening a browser, as the default movement method would (see the accepted answer). Thanks anyway. – David Hedlund Aug 15 '10 at 20:49

I changed the TextView's color to blue by using for example:

android:textColor="#3399FF"

in the xml file. How to make it underlined is explained here.

Then use its onClick property to specify a method (I'm guessing you could call setOnClickListener(this) as another way), e.g.:

myTextView.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {
public void onClick(View v) {
    doSomething();
}
});

In that method, I can do whatever I want as normal, such as launch an intent. Note that you still have to do the normal myTextView.setMovementMethod(LinkMovementMethod.getInstance()); thing, like in your acitivity's onCreate() method.

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.