I have a WebViewClient attached to my WebView like so:

webView.setWebViewClient(new MyWebViewClient());

Here is my implementation of MyWebViewClient:

private class MyWebViewClient extends WebViewClient {

@Override
public boolean shouldOverrideUrlLoading(WebView view, String url) {
  webView.loadUrl(url);
  return true;
}    

}

I give the webView a URL to load via loadUrl(). If I have a link ("a href...") in the page, my shouldOverrideUrlLoading method is called and I can intercept the link click.

However, if I have a form whose method is "POST", the shouldOverrideUrlLoading method is not called.

I noticed a similar issue here: http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=9122 which seems to suggest overriding postUrl in my webView. However, this API is only available starting from API level 5.

What can I do if I'm on API level 4? Is there any other way to intercept form posts?

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You can try overriding onPageStarted callback in the WebViewClient. – bhups Sep 8 '10 at 3:27
Thanks. I tried that and it works alright, but the problem is that I don't want the form's page to load - it's a fake URL so I end up getting the webview error page. I worked around this by checking in onPageStarted if the URL matches my form URL, and if so, handle this in my app and then tell the webViewClient to go back. Does that sound reasonable? – manisha Sep 9 '10 at 17:07
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1 Answer

Do you really need to use a POST? If you want to handle formdata locally, why not have a piece of javascript handle your form and interface with "native" java code using addJavascriptInterface. E.g.

WebView engine = (WebView) findViewById(R.id.web_engine);       
engine.getSettings().setJavaScriptEnabled(true); 
engine.addJavascriptInterface(new MyBridge(this), "bridge");
engine.loadUrl(...)

Your bridge can be any class basically and you should be able to access its methods directly from javascript. E.g.

public class MyBridge {

    public MyBridge(Context context) {
         // ...
    }

    public String doIt(String a, String b) {
            JSONArray result = new JSONArray();
            result.put("Hello " + a);
            result.put("Hello " + b);
            return result.toString();       
    }

Your html / javascript could look like:

<script type="text/javascript">
    $("#button").click(function() {
        var a = $("#a").val();
        var b = $("#b").val();

        var result=JSON.parse(bridge.doIt(a, b));
        // ...
    }
</script>

<input id="a"><input id="b"><button id="button">click</button>
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That is the ideal solution but unfortunately does not seem to work on the 2.3 emulator and various phones of that generation. Look for VM crashes with the following error: JNI WARNING: jarray 0x40533560 points to non-array object (Ljava/lang/String;) Google for that for more information – EtienneSky Jan 30 at 7:05
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