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According to the android docs, the KeyEvent ACTION_MULTIPLE (=2) constant and getCharacters() functions are deprecated at API 29. They claim these features are no longer used by the input system. I want to know the correct way to receive accented characters which the user types on the soft keyboard. Currently these come through in onKeyMultiple() with a KeyEvent with action code ACTION_MULTIPLE, and the String returned by getCharacters() contains the accented character. In fact, I am testing on a tablet running Android 10 (API 29) and this is exactly what happens, despite the statements to the contrary in the documentation. This is annoying because my code gets deprecation warnings, even though it works. For accented characters onKeyUp() is not called, only onKeyMultiple().

So is the documentation incorrect? I note also that the documentation does not explain how we should be receiving non-ascii characters such as European accented vowels. I might perhaps expect the getUnicodeChar() function to return the Unicode codepoint for the accented character, but this function just returns 0 for such characters. The keyCode argument is also 0 for non-ascii characters.

I am writing a native application using my own proprietory cross-platform engine. I am overriding the following functions in my java NativeActivity.

@Override
public boolean onKeyUp( int keyCode, KeyEvent event )
{
    // When press 'e' get keyCode 33, action 1, and unicode char 101.
    // Not called for non-ascii characters
    Log.i( "MyApp", "onKeyUp " + keyCode );
    Log.i( "MyApp", "action " + event.getAction() );
    Log.i( "MyApp", "unicode " + event.getUnicodeChar() );

    return true;
}

@Override
public boolean onKeyMultiple( int keyCode, int repeatCount, KeyEvent event )
{
    // When type 'e' with grave accent get keyCode 0, action 2, unicode 0
    // and getCharacters() returns String containing the accented character.
    // only called for non-ascii characters.
    Log.i( "MyApp", "onKeyMultiple " + keyCode );
    Log.i( "MyApp", "action " + event.getAction() );
    Log.i( "MyApp", "unicode " + event.getUnicodeChar() );
    Log.i( "MyApp", "chars " + event.getCharacters() );
    return true;
}
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  • Just testing on a device running API 33 and the behaviour is still exactly as described above, and still no clue in the android documentation as to the 'correct', undeprecated way to receive accented characters
    – drjon
    Mar 29, 2023 at 11:59

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