5

I´m working on a project which should show a little presentation on a secondary display (API 4.2). Till now all is working fine. But if I close the application I can´t prevent presentation from being closed. I would like to create a application which is starting a background service which is initializing the presentation. So that the user just see a notification icon in the statusbar but the service is streaming the content to the secondary display.

Any ideas if this could be realized? I tried it with the backgroundservice but don´t know which context I should use. Tried it with

getApplicationContext()

but then I just get a exception:

Unable to add window -- token null is not for an application

If I use a static method like getAppContext() (I know such a ugly hack) it will show the presentation but will also hide it if i close the application.

Any ideas?

1
  • Great question! I'm trying to to do the same with no success!
    – zaxy78
    Feb 25, 2014 at 8:34

2 Answers 2

9

Create a Service that uses the Context.createDisplayContext(Display) to obtain a new Window manager for your secondary display - this is how Presentation works

take a look at this link as an example: http://www.java2s.com/Open-Source/Android/android-core/platform-frameworks-base/com/android/server/LoadAverageService.java.htm

In onCreate() instead of getting the WindowManagerImpl:

public void onCreate(){
    ... 
    WindowManagerImpl wm = (WindowManagerImpl)getSystemService(WINDOW_SERVICE);
    wm.addView(mView, params); 
}

call a method like this:

private void addView(WindowManager.LayoutParams params){
    DisplayManager dm = (DisplayManager) getApplicationContext().getSystemService(DISPLAY_SERVICE);
    if (dm != null){
        Display dispArray[] = dm.getDisplays(); 

        if (dispArray.length>0){
            Context displayContext = getApplicationContext().createDisplayContext(dispArray[1]);
            WindowManager wm = (WindowManager)displayContext.getSystemService(WINDOW_SERVICE);
            wm.addView(mView, params);
        }
    }
}

Your view will be added to the secondary display and since this runs by a Service, your activity running on the main display is not paused

2
5

Any ideas if this could be realized?

Since Presentation is a subclass of Dialog, your Presentation can only be visible when you have the activity hosting it in the foreground.


UPDATE

icarmel's answer works, though it is missing some details. I have a PresentationService now in my CWAC-Presentation library that offers a complete working implementation of the technique. To answer my question in my comment on icarmel's answer, you use WindowManager.LayoutParams.TYPE_SYSTEM_ALERT in the WindowManager.LayoutParams, which in turn requires the SYSTEM_ALERT_WINDOW permission (unfortunately).

6
  • Okay thank you. But do you have any idea how i can show the presentation if the screen is off? It´s really strange that the presentation dismiss if i turn off the display. Strange use case if I´m sitting on the couch streaming some videos with mirracast and the tv fade to black because the display of the smartphone turn off...
    – mkl
    Apr 22, 2013 at 14:15
  • @mkl: "But do you have any idea how i can show the presentation if the screen is off?" -- I'll be a bit surprised if this is possible, and I certainly do not know how it can be done. "Strange use case if I´m sitting on the couch streaming some videos with mirracast and the tv fade to black because the display of the smartphone turn off" -- keep the screen on, using android:keepScreenOn="true". Apr 22, 2013 at 14:27
  • Yeah i thought there must be a solution like that (example: youtube). But thats ugly :( Thought google would create a more powerful API. I think I have to do it like you mentioned and try to decrease the display brightness and show a black rectangle which will save power on AMOLED displays. Thank you!
    – mkl
    Apr 22, 2013 at 14:37
  • @mkl: There's no question that making Presentation extend Dialog has its side effects, and there may be tricks here of which I am unaware. Apr 22, 2013 at 14:46
  • @CommonsWare I seem to be able to use a service to add a view to a secondary display (based on your PresentationService class) without WindowManager.LayoutParams.TYPE_SYSTEM_ALERT in the layout params and without the SYSTEM_ALERT_WINDOW permission. I've tested both on API 17 (emulator using secondary display developer option) and API 19 (actual device using Chromecast mirroring). Any ideas why this is working without the permission? Is the permission really needed?
    – ashughes
    Jul 20, 2014 at 23:34

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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