52

How can I get the application version information from google play store for prompting the user for force/recommended an update of the application when play store application is updated i.e. in case of the user is using old version application. I have already gone through andorid-market-api which is not the official way and also requires oauth login authentication from google. I have also gone through android query which provides in-app version check, but it is not working in my case. I found the following two alternatives:

  • Use server API which will store version info
  • Use google tags and access it in-app, which is not a preferred way to go.

Are there any other ways to do it easily?

10

22 Answers 22

51

I recommend to not use a library just create a new class

1.

public class VersionChecker extends AsyncTask<String, String, String>{

String newVersion;

@Override
protected String doInBackground(String... params) {

    try {
        newVersion = Jsoup.connect("https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=" + "package name" + "&hl=en")
                .timeout(30000)
                .userAgent("Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; WindowsNT 5.1; en-US; rv1.8.1.6) Gecko/20070725 Firefox/2.0.0.6")
                .referrer("http://www.google.com")
                .get()
                .select("div.hAyfc:nth-child(4) > span:nth-child(2) > div:nth-child(1) > span:nth-child(1)")
                .first()
                .ownText();
    } catch (IOException e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }

    return newVersion;
}
  1. In your activity:

         VersionChecker versionChecker = new VersionChecker();
         String latestVersion = versionChecker.execute().get();
    

THAT IS ALL

20
  • 3
    This is a hack. But it's a really nice hack that doesn't require much effort, especially considering that Google makes it hard to work with their apis. +1. :) Apr 29, 2016 at 19:05
  • 2
    Nice hack, but not necessary anymore since this: github.com/googlesamples/android-play-publisher-api/tree/master/… Sep 10, 2016 at 23:44
  • 4
    This just broken. If you're using regular expression instead you can use <div[^>]*?>Current Version</div><div><span[^>]*?>(.*?)</span></div>
    – vincent
    Mar 22, 2018 at 20:41
  • 1
    For android user add this dependency in gradle file, compile 'org.jsoup:jsoup:1.11.3'
    – Vrajesh
    Apr 30, 2018 at 4:37
  • 2
    This is also downloading a huge pile of HTML data (as of today it's 780 Kilobytes) over the user's mobile data connection. Not everybody is in California and has an unlimited data plan. This code is not just not robust, it's also a huge nuisance to users.
    – ge0rg
    Feb 18, 2020 at 18:51
23

Current solution

This is super hacky, but best I could come up quickly. Seemed to work with all apps I tried. PHP solution, but you can just pick the preg_match() regex part for any other language.

public function getAndroidVersion(string $storeUrl): string
{
    $html = file_get_contents($storeUrl);
    $matches = [];
    preg_match('/\[\[\[\"\d+\.\d+\.\d+/', $html, $matches);
    if (empty($matches) || count($matches) > 1) {
        throw new Exception('Could not fetch Android app version info!');
    }
    return substr(current($matches), 4);
}

Solution until May 2022 (NO LONGER WORKS)

Using PHP backend. This has been working for a year now. It seems Google does not change their DOM that often.

public function getAndroidVersion(string $storeUrl): string
{
    $dom = new DOMDocument();
    $dom->loadHTML(file_get_contents($storeUrl));
    libxml_use_internal_errors(false);
    $elements = $dom->getElementsByTagName('span');

    $depth = 0;
    foreach ($elements as $element) {
        foreach ($element->attributes as $attr) {
            if ($attr->nodeName === 'class' && $attr->nodeValue === 'htlgb') {
                $depth++;
                if ($depth === 7) {
                    return preg_replace('/[^0-9.]/', '', $element->nodeValue);
                    break 2;
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

Even older version (NO LONGER WORKS)

Here is jQuery version to get the version number if anyone else needs it.

    $.get("https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=" + packageName + "&hl=en", function(data){
        console.log($('<div/>').html(data).contents().find('div[itemprop="softwareVersion"]').text().trim());
    });
6
  • i need for ionic but when i am using it then getting some cors issue ,
    – Anuj
    Nov 2, 2017 at 9:34
  • 6
    This is super brittle. How do I know? An app I've inherited does this and has started crashing hard today.
    – Drarok
    Apr 1, 2018 at 13:59
  • I don't see softwareVersion in output of this command. It's probably changed
    – Gi0rgi0s
    Oct 21, 2020 at 14:43
  • 1
    @Gi0rgi0s This has not been working for long time now. Their DOM has been stable thou. I have been parsing the DOM. Currently looking for class: htlgb
    – Firze
    Oct 23, 2020 at 8:34
  • thank you for the current solution, you saved me lot of time after Google updated the UI in May 2022
    – Martinedo
    Jun 1, 2022 at 7:05
16

I suspect that the main reason for requesting app's version is for prompting user for update. I am not in favour of scraping the response, because this is something that could break functionality in future versions.

If app's minimum version is 5.0, you can implement in-app update according to the documentation https://developer.android.com/guide/app-bundle/in-app-updates

If the reason of requesting apps version is different, you can still use the appUpdateManager in order to retrieve the version and do whatever you want (e.g. store it in preferences).

For example we can modify the snippet of the documentation to something like that:

// Creates instance of the manager.
val appUpdateManager = AppUpdateManagerFactory.create(context)

// Returns an intent object that you use to check for an update.
val appUpdateInfoTask = appUpdateManager.appUpdateInfo

// Checks that the platform will allow the specified type of update.
appUpdateInfoTask.addOnSuccessListener { appUpdateInfo ->
    val version = appUpdateInfo.availableVersionCode()
    //do something with version. If there is not a newer version it returns an arbitary int
}
2
  • Best solution, this is an official way to get app update information
    – amoljdv06
    Nov 2, 2021 at 21:21
  • This one still only gives the versionCode, not the versionName where we have the semantic versioning (major,minor,patch) and based on that we can easily decide the soft/hard update. Feb 26 at 8:26
8

Use this code its perfectly working fine.

public void forceUpdate(){
    PackageManager packageManager = this.getPackageManager();
    PackageInfo packageInfo = null;
    try {
        packageInfo =packageManager.getPackageInfo(getPackageName(),0);
    } catch (PackageManager.NameNotFoundException e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }
    String currentVersion = packageInfo.versionName;
    new ForceUpdateAsync(currentVersion,TodayWork.this).execute();
}

public class ForceUpdateAsync extends AsyncTask<String, String, JSONObject> {

    private String latestVersion;
    private String currentVersion;
    private Context context;
    public ForceUpdateAsync(String currentVersion, Context context){
        this.currentVersion = currentVersion;
        this.context = context;
    }

    @Override
    protected JSONObject doInBackground(String... params) {

        try {
            latestVersion = Jsoup.connect("https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=" + context.getPackageName()+ "&hl=en")
                    .timeout(30000)
                    .userAgent("Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; WindowsNT 5.1; en-US; rv1.8.1.6) Gecko/20070725 Firefox/2.0.0.6")
                    .referrer("http://www.google.com")
                    .get()
                    .select("div.hAyfc:nth-child(3) > span:nth-child(2) > div:nth-child(1) > span:nth-child(1)")
                    .first()
                    .ownText();
            Log.e("latestversion","---"+latestVersion);

        } catch (IOException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
        return new JSONObject();
    }

    @Override
    protected void onPostExecute(JSONObject jsonObject) {
        if(latestVersion!=null){
            if(!currentVersion.equalsIgnoreCase(latestVersion)){
                // Toast.makeText(context,"update is available.",Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
                if(!(context instanceof SplashActivity)) {
                    if(!((Activity)context).isFinishing()){
                        showForceUpdateDialog();
                    }
                }
            }
        }
        super.onPostExecute(jsonObject);
    }

    public void showForceUpdateDialog(){

        context.startActivity(new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW, Uri.parse("market://details?id=" + context.getPackageName())));
    }

}
0
7

Firebase Remote Config can help best here,

Please refer this answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/45750132/2049384

5

Working in 2022

JS example (can be ported to any other language):

import { JSDOM } from 'jsdom'; 
import axios from 'axios';

const res = await axios('https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.yourapp');
const dom = new JSDOM(res.data);
const scripts = Array.from(dom.window.document.querySelectorAll('script'));
const script = scripts.find(s => s.textContent && s.textContent.includes('/store/apps/developer'));
const versionStringRegex = /"[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9.]+"/g;
const matches = script.textContent.match(versionStringRegex);
const match = matches[0];
const version = match.replace(/"/g, '');

console.log(version); // '1.2.345'

Unfortunately, the play store recently changed their DOM layout such that the version number is not visible unless you open a modal.

However - buried as metadata in one of the script tags - the data that eventually gets rendered into that modal does indeed exist. It's not keyed in any way, but rather it's just buried in an array so this solution relies on some data in the same vicinity that is unlikely to change.

7
  • I think your solution work with new Play Console update but I want android native code for same answer. Can you please provide me Android Native code so I will check.
    – ravi152
    Jun 1, 2022 at 4:51
  • @cooper-maruyama What is versionStringRegex? Jun 3, 2022 at 22:20
  • @Larry Aasen Do you have Android Native code for this?
    – ravi152
    Jun 4, 2022 at 7:41
  • @ravi152 No, I was planning to reproduce this in Dart for Flutter. Jun 4, 2022 at 11:49
  • @Larry Aasen Okay then share dart code i will convert it in Android Native code.
    – ravi152
    Jun 6, 2022 at 4:19
4

Apart from using JSoup, we can alternatively do pattern matching for getting the app version from playStore.

To match the latest pattern from google playstore ie <div class="BgcNfc">Current Version</div><span class="htlgb"><div><span class="htlgb">X.X.X</span></div> we first have to match the above node sequence and then from above sequence get the version value. Below is the code snippet for same:

    private String getAppVersion(String patternString, String inputString) {
        try{
            //Create a pattern
            Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(patternString);
            if (null == pattern) {
                return null;
            }

            //Match the pattern string in provided string
            Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(inputString);
            if (null != matcher && matcher.find()) {
                return matcher.group(1);
            }

        }catch (PatternSyntaxException ex) {

            ex.printStackTrace();
        }

        return null;
    }


    private String getPlayStoreAppVersion(String appUrlString) {
        final String currentVersion_PatternSeq = "<div[^>]*?>Current\\sVersion</div><span[^>]*?>(.*?)><div[^>]*?>(.*?)><span[^>]*?>(.*?)</span>";
        final String appVersion_PatternSeq = "htlgb\">([^<]*)</s";
        String playStoreAppVersion = null;

        BufferedReader inReader = null;
        URLConnection uc = null;
        StringBuilder urlData = new StringBuilder();

        final URL url = new URL(appUrlString);
        uc = url.openConnection();
        if(uc == null) {
           return null;
        }
        uc.setRequestProperty("User-Agent", "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; WindowsNT 5.1; en-US; rv1.8.1.6) Gecko/20070725 Firefox/2.0.0.6");
        inReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(uc.getInputStream()));
        if (null != inReader) {
            String str = "";
            while ((str = inReader.readLine()) != null) {
                           urlData.append(str);
            }
        }

        // Get the current version pattern sequence 
        String versionString = getAppVersion (currentVersion_PatternSeq, urlData.toString());
        if(null == versionString){ 
            return null;
        }else{
            // get version from "htlgb">X.X.X</span>
            playStoreAppVersion = getAppVersion (appVersion_PatternSeq, versionString);
        }

        return playStoreAppVersion;
    }

I got this solved through this. This also solves the latest changes done by Google in PlayStore. Hope that helps.

2
  • I'll post the full code using AsynsTask with your permission Sep 24, 2018 at 15:12
  • Not relaying on the word "Current Version" is more robust as the user may have different locacle preference
    – Beeno Tung
    Mar 2, 2020 at 1:46
3

Use server API which will store version info

Like you said.This is an easy way to detect an update. Pass your version info with every API calls. When playstore is updated change the version in server. Once the server version is higher than installed app version, you can return a status code/message in API response which can be handled and update message can be showed. You can also block users from using very old app like WhatsApp do if u use this method.

Or you can use push notification, which is easy to do...Also

6
3

C# solution at 2022 for my Xamarin app

var url = $"https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id={_packageName}";
using (var request = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Get, url))
{
   using (var handler = new HttpClientHandler())
   {
      using (var client = new HttpClient(handler))
      {
         using (var response = await client.SendAsync(request, HttpCompletionOption.ResponseContentRead))
         {
            try
            {
               if (response.IsSuccessStatusCode)
               {
                  var content = response.Content == null ? null : await response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();
                  var versionMatch = Regex.Match(content, @"\[\[""\d+.\d+.\d+""\]\]"); //look for pattern [["X.Y.Z"]]
                  if (versionMatch.Groups.Count == 1)
                  {
                     var versionMatchGroup = versionMatch.Groups.FirstOrDefault();
                     if (versionMatchGroup.Success)
                        return versionMatch.Value.Replace("[", "").Replace("]", "").Replace("\"", "");
                  }
               }
            }
            catch
            { }
         }
      }
   }
}
return null;
3

Full source code for this solution: https://stackoverflow.com/a/50479184/5740468

import android.os.AsyncTask;
import android.support.annotation.Nullable;

import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.net.URL;
import java.net.URLConnection;
import java.util.regex.Matcher;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;
import java.util.regex.PatternSyntaxException;

public class GooglePlayAppVersion extends AsyncTask<String, Void, String> {

    private final String packageName;
    private final Listener listener;
    public interface Listener {
        void result(String version);
    }

    public GooglePlayAppVersion(String packageName, Listener listener) {
        this.packageName = packageName;
        this.listener = listener;
    }

    @Override
    protected String doInBackground(String... params) {
        return getPlayStoreAppVersion(String.format("https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=%s", packageName));
    }

    @Override
    protected void onPostExecute(String version) {
        listener.result(version);
    }

    @Nullable
    private static String getPlayStoreAppVersion(String appUrlString) {
        String
              currentVersion_PatternSeq = "<div[^>]*?>Current\\sVersion</div><span[^>]*?>(.*?)><div[^>]*?>(.*?)><span[^>]*?>(.*?)</span>",
              appVersion_PatternSeq = "htlgb\">([^<]*)</s";
        try {
            URLConnection connection = new URL(appUrlString).openConnection();
            connection.setRequestProperty("User-Agent", "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; WindowsNT 5.1; en-US; rv1.8.1.6) Gecko/20070725 Firefox/2.0.0.6");
            try (BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(connection.getInputStream()))) {
                StringBuilder sourceCode = new StringBuilder();
                String line;
                while ((line = br.readLine()) != null) sourceCode.append(line);

                // Get the current version pattern sequence
                String versionString = getAppVersion(currentVersion_PatternSeq, sourceCode.toString());
                if (versionString == null) return null;

                // get version from "htlgb">X.X.X</span>
                return getAppVersion(appVersion_PatternSeq, versionString);
            }

        } catch (IOException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
        return null;
    }

    @Nullable
    private static String getAppVersion(String patternString, String input) {
        try {
            Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(patternString);
            if (pattern == null) return null;
            Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(input);
            if (matcher.find()) return matcher.group(1);
        } catch (PatternSyntaxException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
        return null;
    }

}

Usage:

new GooglePlayAppVersion(getPackageName(), version -> 
    Log.d("TAG", String.format("App version: %s", version)
).execute();
2

Kotlin 2022

Google updated the layout that was unchanged for years and old parsers don't work anymore. Here is my parser from 2022

import io.ktor.client.*
import io.ktor.client.features.*
import io.ktor.client.request.*
import io.ktor.http.*

class AppVersionParser {

 private val client = HttpClient {
    install(HttpTimeout.Feature)
 }

 suspend fun versionForIdentifier(bundleID: String, privacyUrl: String): String? {
    val userAgent = "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 12_3_1) AppleWebKit/605.1.15 (KHTML, like Gecko) " +
        "Version/15.3 Safari/605.1.15"
    val referrer = "https://www.google.com"

    val url = "https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=$bundleID&hl=en"

    return try {
        val response: String = client.get(url) {
            headers {
                this.append(HttpHeaders.UserAgent, userAgent)
                this.append(HttpHeaders.Referrer, referrer)
            }

            timeout {
                this.requestTimeoutMillis = 10000
            }
        }

        parseDocument(response, privacyUrl)
    } catch (e: Exception) {
        return null
    }
  }

  private fun parseDocument(html: String, privacyUrl: String): String {
    val policyMarker = "\"${privacyUrl}\""
    val policyUrlIndex = html.lastIndexOf(policyMarker)
    val versionStart = html.indexOf("\"", startIndex = policyUrlIndex + policyMarker.length + 1) + 1 // "
    val versionEnd = html.indexOf("\"", startIndex = versionStart + 1)
    return html.substring(startIndex = versionStart, endIndex = versionEnd)
  }
}
9
  • does it work on the new play store design
    – austin
    May 28, 2022 at 3:04
  • does it work on the new play store design
    – austin
    May 28, 2022 at 3:04
  • @austin Yes, it is made exactly for the new play store design. Vote up if it works for you to show others.
    – Vlad
    May 28, 2022 at 9:26
  • Can you share android native code ?
    – ravi152
    Jun 3, 2022 at 11:53
  • @ravi152 this is Kotlin already
    – Vlad
    Jun 11, 2022 at 14:31
1

User Version Api in Server Side:

This is the best way still now to get the market version. When you will upload new apk, update the version in api. So you will get the latest version in your app. - This is best because there is no google api to get the app version.

Using Jsoup Library:

This is basically web scraping. This is not a convenient way because if google changes their code This process will not work. Though the possiblity is less. Anyway, To get the version with Jsop library.

  1. add this library in your build.gradle

    implementation 'org.jsoup:jsoup:1.11.1'

  2. Creat a class for version check:

import android.os.AsyncTask import org.jsoup.Jsoup import java.io.IOException

class PlayStoreVersionChecker(private val packageName: String) : AsyncTask() {

private var playStoreVersion: String = ""

override fun doInBackground(vararg params: String?): String {
    try {
        playStoreVersion =
                Jsoup.connect("https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=$packageName&hl=en")
                    .timeout(30000)
                    .userAgent("Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; WindowsNT 5.1; en-US; rv1.8.1.6) Gecko/20070725 Firefox/2.0.0.6")
                    .referrer("http://www.google.com")
                    .get()
                    .select("div.hAyfc:nth-child(4) > span:nth-child(2) > div:nth-child(1) > span:nth-child(1)")
                    .first()
                    .ownText()
    } catch (e: IOException) {
    }
    return playStoreVersion
} }
  1. Now use the class as follows:

    val playStoreVersion = PlayStoreVersionChecker("com.example").execute().get()

1

With the new google play page, it's possible to extract the data in the AF_initDataCallback calls, parse it to get the version string. Here is the code in ts/js code to parse the data:

import json5 from "json5";

const packageId = "com.and.games505.TerrariaPaid";
const gplayResponse = await fetch(`https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=${packageId}`);
const siteText = await gplayResponse.text();
const matches = siteText.matchAll(/<script nonce=\"\S+\">AF_initDataCallback\((.*?)\);/g);

for (const match of matches) {
    const data = json5.parse(match[1]); // json5 parse or js eval should work here
    try {
        return data["data"][1][2][140][0][0][0];
    } catch {}
}

I have a cloudflare worker hosted here that returns the version code: https://gplay-ver.atlasacademy.workers.dev/?id=com.and.games505.TerrariaPaid

Source code

1

For PHP It helps for the php developers to get the version code of a particular play store app serverside

$package='com.whatsapp';
$html = file_get_contents('https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id='.$package.'&hl=en');
preg_match_all('/<span class="htlgb"><div class="IQ1z0d"><span class="htlgb">(.*?)<\/span><\/div><\/span>/s', $html, $output);
print_r($output[1][3]);
0
0

I will recommend to use ex. push notification to notify your app that there is a new update, OR use your own server to enable your app read version from there.

Yes its additional work each time you update your app, but in this case your are not depended on some "unofficial" or third party things that may run out of service.

Just in case you missed something - previous discussion of your topic query the google play store for the version of an app?

3
0

You can call the following WebService: http://carreto.pt/tools/android-store-version/?package=[YOUR_APP_PACKAGE_NAME]

Example Using Volley:

String packageName = "com.google.android.apps.plus";
String url = "http://carreto.pt/tools/android-store-version/?package=";
JsonObjectRequest jsObjRequest = new JsonObjectRequest
    (Request.Method.GET, url+packageName, null, new Response.Listener<JSONObject>() {
                    @Override
                    public void onResponse(JSONObject response) {
                        /*
                                here you have access to:

                                package_name, - the app package name
                                status - success (true) of the request or not (false)
                                author - the app author
                                app_name - the app name on the store
                                locale - the locale defined by default for the app
                                publish_date - the date when the update was published
                                version - the version on the store
                                last_version_description - the update text description
                             */
                        try{
                            if(response != null && response.has("status") && response.getBoolean("status") && response.has("version")){
                                Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(), response.getString("version").toString(), Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
                            }
                            else{
                                //TODO handling error
                            }
                        }
                        catch (Exception e){
                            //TODO handling error
                        }

                    }
                }, new Response.ErrorListener() {
                    @Override
                    public void onErrorResponse(VolleyError error) {
                        //TODO handling error
                    }
        });
2
0

the easiest way is using firebase package from google and using remote notifications or realtime config with the new version and sent id to the users below up version number see more https://firebase.google.com/

0

the benefits here thay you'll be able to check version number instead of name, that should be more convinient :) At the other hand - you should take care of updating version in api/firebase each time after release.

  • take version from google play web page. I have implemented this way, and it works more that 1 year, but during this time i have to change 'matcher' 3-4 times, because content on the web page were changed. Also it some head ache to check it from time to time, because you can't know where it can be changed. but if you still want to use this way, here is my kotlin code based on okHttp:

    private fun getVersion(onChecked: OnChecked, packageName: String) {
    
    Thread {
        try {
            val httpGet = HttpGet("https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id="
                    + packageName + "&hl=it")
    
            val response: HttpResponse
            val httpParameters = BasicHttpParams()
            HttpConnectionParams.setConnectionTimeout(httpParameters, 10000)
            HttpConnectionParams.setSoTimeout(httpParameters, 10000)
            val httpclient = DefaultHttpClient(httpParameters)
            response = httpclient.execute(httpGet)
    
            val entity = response.entity
            val `is`: InputStream
            `is` = entity.content
            val reader: BufferedReader
            reader = BufferedReader(InputStreamReader(`is`, "iso-8859-1"), 8)
            val sb = StringBuilder()
            var line: String? = null
            while ({ line = reader.readLine(); line }() != null) {
                sb.append(line).append("\n")
            }
    
            val resString = sb.toString()
            var index = resString.indexOf(MATCHER)
            index += MATCHER.length
            val ver = resString.substring(index, index + 6) //6 is version length
            `is`.close()
            onChecked.versionUpdated(ver)
            return@Thread
        } catch (ignore: Error) {
        } catch (ignore: Exception) {
        }
    
        onChecked.versionUpdated(null)
    }.start()
    }
    
0

My workaround is to parse the Google Play website and extract the version number. If you're facing CORS issue or want to save bandwidth on the user's device, consider to run it from your web server.

let ss = [html];

for (let p of ['div', 'span', '>', '<']) {
  let acc = [];
  ss.forEach(s => s.split(p).forEach(s => acc.push(s)));
  ss = acc;
}

ss = ss
  .map(s => s.trim())
  .filter(s => {
    return parseFloat(s) == +s;
  });

console.log(ss); // print something like [ '1.10' ]

You can get the html text by fetching https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=your.package.name. For comparability, you may use https://www.npmjs.com/package/cross-fetch which works on both browser and node.js.

Others have mentioned parsing the html from Google Play website with certain css class or pattern like "Current Version" but these methods may not be as robust. Because Google could change the class name any time. It may as well return text in different language according to the users' locale preference, so you may not get the word "Current Version".

0

Dart example. August 2023

import 'dart:core';
import 'package:dio/dio.dart';

Future<void> main() async {
  print(await getAndroidVersionFromGooglePlay('com.intervale.tips')); // 1.1.1
  print(await getAndroidVersionFromGooglePlay('game.rpg.action.cyber')); // 2.0.7-rc609
}

Future<String?> getAndroidVersionFromGooglePlay(String package) async {
  final Dio dio = Dio();

  // Get html containing code with application version. For example:
  // ...
  // ,[[["2.0.7-rc609"]]
  // ...
  final response = await dio.get('https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=$package');

  // Look for all ,[[[ pattern and split all matches into an array
  List<String> splitted = response.data.split(',[[["');

  // In each element, remove everything after "]] pattern
  List<String> removedLast = splitted.map((String e) {
    return e.split('"]],').first;
  }).toList();

  // We are looking for a version in the array that satisfies the regular expression:
  // starts with one or more digits (\d), followed by a period (.), followed by one or more digits.
  List<String> filteredByVersion = removedLast
      .map((String e) {
        RegExp regex = RegExp(r'^\d+\.\d+');
        if (regex.hasMatch(e)) {
          return e;
        }
      })
      .whereType<String>()
      .toList();

  if (filteredByVersion.length == 1) {
    return filteredByVersion.first;
  }

  return null;
}
0

One fairly simple solution would be to put the version info into a publicly available file and just let your app download it. You just have to remember to update the file whenever you update your app. You could put it into a publicly available AWS S3 file, for instance. If you have your own server, you could put it there. Basically, make your own API that you know will never break.

-1

According to Cooper Maruyama's answer I implemented a solution in python:

import urllib3
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup

def get_current_android_version_from_playstore(app_id: str):
    http = urllib3.PoolManager()
    url = 'https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=' + app_id + '&hl=de'

    r = http.request('GET', url)

    html_string = r.data.decode('utf-8')

    soup = BeautifulSoup(html_string, 'html.parser')
    scripts = soup.find_all('script')
    script_contents = list(map(lambda s: s.text, scripts))
    version_script_contents = list(filter(lambda s: '/store/apps/developer' in s, script_contents))

    if len(version_script_contents) != 1:
        raise Exception('Could not identify version script')

    # May update regex currently it supports only two digits after the last point
    results = re.findall(r"\"\d+\.\d+\.\d\d?\"", version_script_contents[0])
    if len(results) != 1:
        raise Exception('Could not find matching version regex')

    version = results[0].replace('"', '')

    return version
4
  • Is it working with Google New Design?
    – ravi152
    Jun 6, 2022 at 10:24
  • Yes it’s written for the new design. Jun 7, 2022 at 14:44
  • Marco Weber I want android native code. I check this code in online tool it gives me error in regex. File <string>, line 18 results = re.findall(r"\"\d+\.\d+\.\d\d?\"", version_script_contents[0]) ^ SyntaxError: EOL while scanning string literal
    – ravi152
    Jun 8, 2022 at 5:58
  • yes I am also facing error, can you give me working code Oct 10, 2023 at 16:38

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