I have tried using onReceivedError both inside shouldOverrideUrlLoading() and outside that method but in the WebViewClient. I even tried outside in the main Activity class. I was not happy with the inconsistent results. So I settled on using a test method, isOnline(), and calling that before calling loadUrl().
public boolean isOnline() {
ConnectivityManager cm = (ConnectivityManager) getBaseContext()
.getSystemService(Context.CONNECTIVITY_SERVICE);
NetworkInfo i = cm.getActiveNetworkInfo();
if ((i == null) || (!i.isConnected())) {
Toast toast = Toast.makeText(getBaseContext(),
"Error: No connection to Internet", Toast.LENGTH_SHORT);
toast.setGravity(Gravity.TOP | Gravity.CENTER, 0, 0);
toast.show();
return false;
}
return true;
}
Then this onReceivedError is in the WebViewClient but outside the overloadurlthingy method. This seems to consistently prevent the stupid, smirking-android error pages.
@Override
public void onReceivedError(WebView view, int errorCode,
String description, String failingUrl) {
if (view.canGoBack()) {
view.goBack();
}
Toast toast = Toast.makeText(getBaseContext(), description,
Toast.LENGTH_SHORT);
toast.setGravity(Gravity.TOP | Gravity.CENTER, 0, 0);
toast.show();
}
Some people might consider this resource-heavy. Well, not heavy the way the Android Facebook and Google+ apps are. And not the way Google services are. I frankly don't mind using up a little of those apps oxygen. Call me a bad boy...