While developing a sample android application i have constructed two activities 1)Activity 1 2)Activity 2
Now Activity 2 is the foreground activity whereas Activity
when you press the home button the application will be disappear , when relaunch the application the foreground activity will be resumed ,
the reason is its the behavior of android operating system
Does the platform maintain any history entry when pressed home key?
Yes. Activities when launched/finished are pushed/pop'd onto/from a History Stack.
How do we take the user to the last launch activity on relaunching the application?
AFAICT, that should be the default behavior. When you relaunch your application you are taken to the last Activity on the stack unless you alter the stack.
Read this for details: Application Fundamentals - Activities and Tasks
You cannot handle Home Button... Android development page says home button newer handling.. it is easy to understand..Thank you
I've struggled with this odd behavior for more than a month but I finally found out the explanation by trial and error.
This behavior happens when you start your application from Eclipse, from command line or if you install an application and press on the Open button(instead of the Done button) to start the application right after you installed it.
If in one of those cases, you start your apllication, go to Activity1 and then to Activity 2, press HOME button and then press the application icon, it will open a new instance of Activity1. Don't take my word for it. Just press BACK and see that it gets you to your Activity2 that you left when you pressed HOME.
It seems that the launcher activity is not put on the activity stack if the application is started in one of those ways mentioned above so that's why it creates a new instance of the launcher activity on top of the current activities in the application's stack. This looks to me like a bug.
So, the workaround would be to exit the application, the first time it was started from Eclipse or command line or Open button etc., by pressing the BACK button as many times as needed, and then enter the application again. From then on, the behavior will be as expected.
EDIT:
A better workaround would be this: Create a DummyActivity and set it up as the main entry point into the application. Also, add the flag android:noHistory="true"
. The DummyActivity
is simple and would look like this:
public class DummyActivity extends Activity {
@Override protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) { super.onCreate(savedInstanceState); if (!MyApplication.startedApp) { Intent intent = new Intent(this, HomeActivity.class); startActivity(intent); } finish(); } }
MyApplication
is a class that extends android.app.Application and is defined inside AndroidManifest.xml. In HomeActivity.class
you set inside the onCreate()
method the boolean field startedApp
to true. If the user presses BACK from the screen, you need to move the value for startedApp to false.
public class HomeActivity extends Activity {
@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
MyApplication.startedApp = true;
}
@Override
public void onBackPressed() {
MacawApplication.startedApp = false;
super.onBackPressed();
}
}
So, the first time the app is launched it enters the if block and launches the first real activity in our application. If you navigate through the app, then press HOME and then launch the app again, DummyActivity
will get called a second time and it will just call finish()
on itself and the app will show the last activity before you pressed HOME.
This is a bug with Android OS.
Please perform following steps.
1)Delete your application and reinstall it.
2) After installing the application, it will display two option "Done" & "Open" click on Done button.
3) Now open the application from the application menu. Your problem will be solved.
When ever the HOME button is pressed, the application will start from the state where it left.
I can also recommend reading Activity and Task Design Guidelines. These are the user interface guidelines on how to behave when the Home button pressed, when the Back button is pressed, and so on.
It's not very technical, but it illustrates very well how your app should behave and what the OS expects.