|
Android example source code file (attrs_manifest.xml)
This example Android source code file (attrs_manifest.xml) is included in the DevDaily.com
"Java Source Code
Warehouse" project. The intent of this project is to help you "Learn
Android by Example" TM.
The attrs_manifest.xml Android example source code
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!--
/* Copyright 2006, The Android Open Source Project
**
** Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
** you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
** You may obtain a copy of the License at
**
** http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
**
** Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
** distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
** WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
** See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
** limitations under the License.
*/
-->
<resources>
<!-- **************************************************************** -->
<!-- These are the attributes used in AndroidManifest.xml. -->
<!-- **************************************************************** -->
<eat-comment />
<!-- The overall theme to use for an activity. Use with either the
application tag (to supply a default theme for all activities) or
the activity tag (to supply a specific theme for that activity).
<p>This automatically sets
your activity's Context to use this theme, and may also be used
for "starting" animations prior to the activity being launched (to
better match what the activity actually looks like). It is a reference
to a style resource defining the theme. If not set, the default
system theme will be used. -->
<attr name="theme" format="reference" />
<!-- A user-legible name for the given item. Use with the
application tag (to supply a default label for all application
components), or with the activity, receiver, service, or instrumentation
tag (to supply a specific label for that component). It may also be
used with the intent-filter tag to supply a label to show to the
user when an activity is being selected based on a particular Intent.
<p>The given label will be used wherever the user sees information
about its associated component; for example, as the name of a
main activity that is displayed in the launcher. You should
generally set this to a reference to a string resource, so that
it can be localized, however it is also allowed to supply a plain
string for quick and dirty programming. -->
<attr name="label" format="reference|string" />
<!-- A Drawable resource providing a graphical representation of its
associated item. Use with the
application tag (to supply a default icon for all application
components), or with the activity, receiver, service, or instrumentation
tag (to supply a specific icon for that component). It may also be
used with the intent-filter tag to supply an icon to show to the
user when an activity is being selected based on a particular Intent.
<p>The given icon will be used to display to the user a graphical
representation of its associated component; for example, as the icon
for main activity that is displayed in the launcher. This must be
a reference to a Drawable resource containing the image definition. -->
<attr name="icon" format="reference" />
<!-- Name of the activity to be launched to manage application's space on
device. The specified activity gets automatically launched when the
application's space needs to be managed and is usually invoked
through user actions. Applications can thus provide their own custom
behavior for managing space for various scenarios like out of memory
conditions. This is an optional attribute and
applications can choose not to specify a default activity to
manage space. -->
<attr name="manageSpaceActivity" format="string" />
<!-- Option to let applications specify that user data can/cannot be
cleared. Some applications might not want to clear user data. Such
applications can explicitly set this value to false. This flag is
turned on by default unless explicitly set to false
by applications. -->
<attr name="allowClearUserData" format="boolean" />
<!-- Option to indicate this application is only for testing purposes.
For example, it may expose functionality or data outside of itself
that would cause a security hole, but is useful for testing. This
kind of application can not be installed without the
INSTALL_ALLOW_TEST flag, which means only through adb install. -->
<attr name="testOnly" format="boolean" />
<!-- A unique name for the given item. This must use a Java-style naming
convention to ensure the name is unique, for example
"com.mycompany.MyName". -->
<attr name="name" format="string" />
<!-- Specify a permission that a client is required to have in order to
use the associated object. If the client does not hold the named
permission, its request will fail. See the
<a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/security/security.html">Security and Permissions
document for more information on permissions. -->
<attr name="permission" format="string" />
<!-- A specific {@link android.R.attr#permission} name for read-only
access to a {@link android.content.ContentProvider}. See the
<a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/security/security.html">Security and Permissions
document for more information on permissions. -->
<attr name="readPermission" format="string" />
<!-- A specific {@link android.R.attr#permission} name for write
access to a {@link android.content.ContentProvider}. See the
<a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/security/security.html">Security and Permissions
document for more information on permissions. -->
<attr name="writePermission" format="string" />
<!-- If true, the {@link android.content.Context#grantUriPermission
Context.grantUriPermission} or corresponding Intent flags can
be used to allow others to access specific URIs in the content
provider, even if they do not have an explicit read or write
permission. If you are supporting this feature, you must be
sure to call {@link android.content.Context#revokeUriPermission
Context.revokeUriPermission} when URIs are deleted from your
provider.-->
<attr name="grantUriPermissions" format="boolean" />
<!-- Characterizes the potential risk implied in a permission and
indicates the procedure the system should follow when determining
whether to grant the permission to an application requesting it. {@link
android.Manifest.permission Standard permissions} have a predefined and
permanent protectionLevel. If you are creating a custom permission in an
application, you can define a protectionLevel attribute with one of the
values listed below. If no protectionLevel is defined for a custom
permission, the system assigns the default ("normal"). -->
<attr name="protectionLevel">
<!-- A lower-risk permission that gives an application access to isolated
application-level features, with minimal risk to other applications,
the system, or the user. The system automatically grants this type
of permission to a requesting application at installation, without
asking for the user's explicit approval (though the user always
has the option to review these permissions before installing). -->
<enum name="normal" value="0" />
<!-- A higher-risk permission that would give a requesting application
access to private user data or control over the device that can
negatively impact the user. Because this type of permission
introduces potential risk, the system may not automatically
grant it to the requesting application. For example, any dangerous
permissions requested by an application may be displayed to the
user and require confirmation before proceeding, or some other
approach may be taken to avoid the user automatically allowing
the use of such facilities. -->
<enum name="dangerous" value="1" />
<!-- A permission that the system is to grant only if the requesting
application is signed with the same certificate as the application
that declared the permission. If the certificates match, the system
automatically grants the permission without notifying the user or
asking for the user's explicit approval. -->
<enum name="signature" value="2" />
<!-- A permission that the system is to grant only to packages in the
Android system image <em>or that are signed with the same
certificates. Please avoid using this option, as the
signature protection level should be sufficient for most needs and
works regardless of exactly where applications are installed. This
permission is used for certain special situations where multiple
vendors have applications built in to a system image which need
to share specific features explicitly because they are being built
together. -->
<enum name="signatureOrSystem" value="3" />
</attr>
<!-- Specified the name of a group that this permission is associated
with. The group must have been defined with the
{@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestPermissionGroup permission-group} tag. -->
<attr name="permissionGroup" format="string" />
<!-- Specify the name of a user ID that will be shared between multiple
packages. By default, each package gets its own unique user-id.
By setting this value on two or more packages, each of these packages
will be given a single shared user ID, so they can for example run
in the same process. Note that for them to actually get the same
user ID, they must also be signed with the same signature. -->
<attr name="sharedUserId" format="string" />
<!-- Specify a label for the shared user UID of this package. This is
only used if you have also used android:sharedUserId. This must
be a reference to a string resource; it can not be an explicit
string. -->
<attr name="sharedUserLabel" format="reference" />
<!-- Internal version code. This is the number used to determine whether
one version is more recent than another: it has no other meaning than
that higher numbers are more recent. You could use this number to
encode a "x.y" in the lower and upper 16 bits, make it a build
number, simply increase it by one each time a new version is
released, or define it however else you want, as long as each
successive version has a higher number. This is not a version
number generally shown to the user, that is usually supplied
with {@link android.R.attr#versionName}. -->
<attr name="versionCode" format="integer" />
<!-- The text shown to the user to indicate the version they have. This
is used for no other purpose than display to the user; the actual
significant version number is given by {@link android.R.attr#versionCode}. -->
<attr name="versionName" format="string" />
<!-- Flag to control special persistent mode of an application. This should
not normally be used by applications; it requires that the system keep
your application running at all times. -->
<attr name="persistent" format="boolean" />
<!-- Flag indicating whether the application can be debugged, even when
running on a device that is running in user mode. -->
<attr name="debuggable" format="boolean" />
<!-- Flag indicating whether the given application component is available
to other applications. If false, it can only be accessed by
applications with its same user id (which usually means only by
code in its own package). If true, it can be invoked by external
entities, though which ones can do so may be controlled through
permissions. The default value is false for activity, receiver,
and service components that do not specify any intent filters; it
is true for activity, receiver, and service components that do
have intent filters (implying they expect to be invoked by others
who do not know their particular component name) and for all
content providers. -->
<attr name="exported" format="boolean" />
<!-- Specify a specific process that the associated code is to run in.
Use with the application tag (to supply a default process for all
application components), or with the activity, receiver, service,
or provider tag (to supply a specific icon for that component).
<p>Application components are normally run in a single process that
is created for the entire application. You can use this tag to modify
where they run. If the process name begins with a ':' character,
a new process private to that application will be created when needed
to run that component (allowing you to spread your application across
multiple processes). If the process name begins with a lower-case
character, the component will be run in a global process of that name,
provided that you have permission to do so, allowing multiple
applications to share one process to reduce resource usage. -->
<attr name="process" format="string" />
<!-- Specify a task name that activities have an "affinity" to.
Use with the application tag (to supply a default affinity for all
activities in the application), or with the activity tag (to supply
a specific affinity for that component).
<p>The default value for this attribute is the same as the package
name, indicating that all activities in the manifest should generally
be considered a single "application" to the user. You can use this
attribute to modify that behavior: either giving them an affinity
for another task, if the activities are intended to be part of that
task from the user's perspective, or using an empty string for
activities that have no affinity to a task. -->
<attr name="taskAffinity" format="string" />
<!-- Specify that an activity can be moved out of a task it is in to
the task it has an affinity for when appropriate. Use with the
application tag (to supply a default for all activities in the
application), or with an activity tag (to supply a specific
setting for that component).
<p>Normally when an application is started, it is associated with
the task of the activity that started it and stays there for its
entire lifetime. You can use the allowTaskReparenting feature to force an
activity to be re-parented to a different task when the task it is
in goes to the background. Typically this is used to cause the
activities of an application to move back to the main task associated
with that application. The activity is re-parented to the task
with the same {@link android.R.attr#taskAffinity} as it has. -->
<attr name="allowTaskReparenting" format="boolean" />
<!-- Specify whether a component is allowed to have multiple instances
of itself running in different processes. Use with the activity
and provider tags.
<p>Normally the system will ensure that all instances of a particular
component are only running in a single process. You can use this
attribute to disable that behavior, allowing the system to create
instances wherever they are used (provided permissions allow it).
This is most often used with content providers, so that instances
of a provider can be created in each client process, allowing them
to be used without performing IPC. -->
<attr name="multiprocess" format="boolean" />
<!-- Specify whether an activity should be finished when its task is
brought to the foreground by relaunching from the home screen.
<p>If both this option and {@link android.R.attr#allowTaskReparenting} are
specified, the finish trumps the affinity: the affinity will be
ignored and the activity simply finished. -->
<attr name="finishOnTaskLaunch" format="boolean" />
<!-- Specify whether an activity's task should be cleared when it
is re-launched from the home screen. As a result, every time the
user starts the task, they will be brought to its root activity,
regardless of whether they used BACK or HOME to last leave it.
This flag only applies to activities that
are used to start the root of a new task.
<p>An example of the use of this flag would be for the case where
a user launches activity A from home, and from there goes to
activity B. They now press home, and then return to activity A.
Normally they would see activity B, since that is what they were
last doing in A's task. However, if A has set this flag to true,
then upon going to the background all of the tasks on top of it (B
in this case) are removed, so when the user next returns to A they
will restart at its original activity.
<p>When this option is used in conjunction with
{@link android.R.attr#allowTaskReparenting}, the allowTaskReparenting trumps the
clear. That is, all activities above the root activity of the
task will be removed: those that have an affinity will be moved
to the task they are associated with, otherwise they will simply
be dropped as described here. -->
<attr name="clearTaskOnLaunch" format="boolean" />
<!-- Specify whether an activity should be kept in its history stack.
If this attribute is set, then as soon as the user navigates away
from the activity it will be finished and they will no longer be
able to return to it. -->
<attr name="noHistory" format="boolean" />
<!-- Specify whether an acitivty's task state should always be maintained
by the system, or if it is allowed to reset the task to its initial
state in certain situations.
<p>Normally the system will reset a task (remove all activities from
the stack and reset the root activity) in certain situations when
the user re-selects that task from the home screen. Typically this
will be done if the user hasn't visited that task for a certain
amount of time, such as 30 minutes.
<p>By setting this attribute, the user will always return to your
task in its last state, regardless of how they get there. This is
useful, for example, in an application like the web browser where there
is a lot of state (such as multiple open tabs) that the application
would not like to lose. -->
<attr name="alwaysRetainTaskState" format="boolean" />
<!-- Indicates that an Activity does not need to have its freeze state
(as returned by {@link android.app.Activity#onSaveInstanceState}
retained in order to be restarted. Generally you use this for activities
that do not store any state. When this flag is set, if for some reason
the activity is killed before it has a chance to save its state,
then the system will not remove it from the activity stack like
it normally would. Instead, the next time the user navigates to
it its {@link android.app.Activity#onCreate} method will be called
with a null icicle, just like it was starting for the first time.
<p>This is used by the Home activity to make sure it does not get
removed if it crashes for some reason. -->
<attr name="stateNotNeeded" format="boolean" />
<!-- Indicates that an Activity should be excluded from the list of
recently launched activities. -->
<attr name="excludeFromRecents" format="boolean" />
<!-- Specify the authorities under which this content provider can be
found. Multiple authorities may be supplied by separating them
with a semicolon. Authority names should use a Java-style naming
convention (such as <code>com.google.provider.MyProvider)
in order to avoid conflicts. Typically this name is the same
as the class implementation describing the provider's data structure. -->
<attr name="authorities" format="string" />
<!-- Flag indicating whether this content provider would like to
participate in data synchronization. -->
<attr name="syncable" format="boolean" />
<!-- Specify the order in which content providers hosted by a process
are instantiated when that process is created. Not needed unless
you have providers with dependencies between each other, to make
sure that they are created in the order needed by those dependencies.
The value is a simple integer, with higher numbers being
initialized first. -->
<attr name="initOrder" format="integer" />
<!-- Specify the relative importance or ability in handling a particular
Intent. For receivers, this controls the order in which they are
executed to receive a broadcast (note that for
asynchronous broadcasts, this order is ignored). For activities,
this provides information about how good an activity is handling an
Intent; when multiple activities match an intent and have different
priorities, only those with the higher priority value will be
considered a match.
<p>Only use if you really need to impose some specific
order in which the broadcasts are received, or want to forcibly
place an activity to always be preferred over others. The value is a
single integer, with higher numbers considered to be better. -->
<attr name="priority" format="integer" />
<!-- Specify how an activity should be launched. See the
<a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/fundamentals.html#acttask">Application Fundamentals
documentation for important information on how these options impact
the behavior of your application.
<p>If this attribute is not specified, standard launch
mode will be used. Note that the particular launch behavior can
be changed in some ways at runtime through the
{@link android.content.Intent} flags
{@link android.content.Intent#FLAG_ACTIVITY_SINGLE_TOP},
{@link android.content.Intent#FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK}, and
{@link android.content.Intent#FLAG_ACTIVITY_MULTIPLE_TASK}. -->
<attr name="launchMode">
<!-- The default mode, which will usually create a new instance of
the activity when it is started, though this behavior may change
with the introduction of other options such as
{@link android.content.Intent#FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK
Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK}. -->
<enum name="standard" value="0" />
<!-- If, when starting the activity, there is already an
instance of the same activity class in the foreground that is
interacting with the user, then
re-use that instance. This existing instance will receive a call to
{@link android.app.Activity#onNewIntent Activity.onNewIntent()} with
the new Intent that is being started. -->
<enum name="singleTop" value="1" />
<!-- If, when starting the activity, there is already a task running
that starts with this activity, then instead of starting a new
instance the current task is brought to the front. The existing
instance will receive a call to {@link android.app.Activity#onNewIntent
Activity.onNewIntent()}
with the new Intent that is being started, and with the
{@link android.content.Intent#FLAG_ACTIVITY_BROUGHT_TO_FRONT
Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_BROUGHT_TO_FRONT} flag set. This is a superset
of the singleTop mode, where if there is already an instance
of the activity being started at the top of the stack, it will
receive the Intent as described there (without the
FLAG_ACTIVITY_BROUGHT_TO_FRONT flag set). See the
<a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/fundamentals.html#acttask">Application Fundamentals
documentation for more details on tasks.-->
<enum name="singleTask" value="2" />
<!-- Only allow one instance of this activity to ever be
running. This activity gets a unique task with only itself running
in it; if it is ever launched again with the same Intent, then that
task will be brought forward and its
{@link android.app.Activity#onNewIntent Activity.onNewIntent()}
method called. If this
activity tries to start a new activity, that new activity will be
launched in a separate task. See the
<a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/fundamentals.html#acttask">Application Fundamentals
documentation for more details on tasks. -->
<enum name="singleInstance" value="3" />
</attr>
<!-- Specify the orientation an activity should be run in. If not
specified, it will run in the current preferred orientation
of the screen. -->
<attr name="screenOrientation">
<!-- No preference specified: let the system decide the best
orientation. This will either be the orientation selected
by the activity below, or the user's preferred orientation
if this activity is the bottom of a task. If the user
explicitly turned off sensor based orientation through settings
sensor based device rotation will be ignored. If not by default
sensor based orientation will be taken into account and the
orientation will changed based on how the user rotates the device -->
<enum name="unspecified" value="-1" />
<!-- Would like to have the screen in a landscape orientation: that
is, with the display wider than it is tall. -->
<enum name="landscape" value="0" />
<!-- Would like to have the screen in a portrait orientation: that
is, with the display taller than it is wide. -->
<enum name="portrait" value="1" />
<!-- Use the user's current preferred orientation of the handset. -->
<enum name="user" value="2" />
<!-- Keep the screen in the same orientation as whatever is behind
this activity. -->
<enum name="behind" value="3" />
<!-- Orientation is determined by a physical orientation sensor:
the display will rotate based on how the user moves the device. -->
<enum name="sensor" value="4" />
<!-- Always ignore orientation determined by orientation sensor:
tthe display will not rotate when the user moves the device. -->
<enum name="nosensor" value="5" />
</attr>
<!-- Specify one or more configuration changes that the activity will
handle itself. If not specified, the activity will be restarted
if any of these configuration changes happen in the system. Otherwise,
the activity will remain running and its
{@link android.app.Activity#onConfigurationChanged Activity.onConfigurationChanged}
method called with the new configuration.
<p>Note that all of these configuration changes can impact the
resource values seen by the application, so you will generally need
to re-retrieve all resources (including view layouts, drawables, etc)
to correctly handle any configuration change.
<p>These values must be kept in sync with those in
{@link android.content.pm.ActivityInfo} and
include/utils/ResourceTypes.h. -->
<attr name="configChanges">
<!-- The IMSI MCC has changed, that is a SIM has been detected and
updated the Mobile Country Code. -->
<flag name="mcc" value="0x0001" />
<!-- The IMSI MNC has changed, that is a SIM has been detected and
updated the Mobile Network Code. -->
<flag name="mnc" value="0x0002" />
<!-- The locale has changed, that is the user has selected a new
language that text should be displayed in. -->
<flag name="locale" value="0x0004" />
<!-- The touchscreen has changed. Should never normally happen. -->
<flag name="touchscreen" value="0x0008" />
<!-- The keyboard type has changed, for example the user has plugged
in an external keyboard. -->
<flag name="keyboard" value="0x0010" />
<!-- The keyboard accessibility has changed, for example the user has
slid the keyboard out to expose it. -->
<flag name="keyboardHidden" value="0x0020" />
<!-- The navigation type has changed. Should never normally happen. -->
<flag name="navigation" value="0x0040" />
<!-- The screen orientation has changed, that is the user has
rotated the device. -->
<flag name="orientation" value="0x0080" />
<!-- The screen orientation has changed, that is the user has
rotated the device. -->
<flag name="screenLayout" value="0x0100" />
<!-- The font scaling factor has changed, that is the user has
selected a new global font size. -->
<flag name="fontScale" value="0x40000000" />
</attr>
<!-- A longer descriptive text about a particular application or
permission that can be granted. This must be a reference
to a string resource; unlike
the {@link android.R.attr#label} attribute, this can not be a
raw string. -->
<attr name="description" format="reference" />
<!-- The name of the application package that an Instrumentation object
will run against. -->
<attr name="targetPackage" format="string" />
<!-- Flag indicating that an Instrumentation class wants to take care
of starting/stopping profiling itself, rather than relying on
the default behavior of profiling the complete time it is running.
This allows it to target profiling data at a specific set of
operations. -->
<attr name="handleProfiling" format="boolean" />
<!-- Flag indicating that an Instrumentation class should be run as a
functional test. -->
<attr name="functionalTest" format="boolean" />
<!-- The touch screen type used by an application. -->
<attr name="reqTouchScreen">
<enum name="undefined" value="0" />
<enum name="notouch" value="1" />
<enum name="stylus" value="2" />
<enum name="finger" value="3" />
</attr>
<!-- The input method preferred by an application. -->
<attr name="reqKeyboardType">
<enum name="undefined" value="0" />
<enum name="nokeys" value="1" />
<enum name="qwerty" value="2" />
<enum name="twelvekey" value="3" />
</attr>
<!-- Application's requirement for a hard keyboard -->
<attr name="reqHardKeyboard" format="boolean" />
<!-- The navigation device preferred by an application. -->
<attr name="reqNavigation">
<enum name="undefined" value="0" />
<enum name="nonav" value="1" />
<enum name="dpad" value="2" />
<enum name="trackball" value="3" />
<enum name="wheel" value="4" />
</attr>
<!-- Application's requirement for five way navigation -->
<attr name="reqFiveWayNav" format="boolean" />
<!-- The name of the class implementing to manage
backup and restore of the application's settings to external storage. -->
<attr name="backupAgent" format="string" />
<!-- This is not the attribute you are looking for. -->
<attr name="allowBackup" format="boolean" />
<!-- The tag is the root of an
<code>AndroidManifest.xml file,
describing the contents of an Android package (.apk) file. One
attribute must always be supplied: <code>package gives a
unique name for the package, using a Java-style naming convention
to avoid name collisions. For example, applications published
by Google could have names of the form
<code>com.google.app.appname
<p>Inside of the manifest tag, may appear the following tags
in any order: {@link #AndroidManifestPermission permission},
{@link #AndroidManifestPermissionGroup permission-group},
{@link #AndroidManifestPermissionTree permission-tree},
{@link #AndroidManifestUsesSdk uses-sdk},
{@link #AndroidManifestUsesPermission uses-permission},
{@link #AndroidManifestUsesConfiguration uses-configuration},
{@link #AndroidManifestApplication application},
{@link #AndroidManifestInstrumentation instrumentation},
{@link #AndroidManifestUsesFeature uses-feature}. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifest">
<attr name="versionCode" />
<attr name="versionName" />
<attr name="sharedUserId" />
<attr name="sharedUserLabel" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag describes application-level components
contained in the package, as well as general application
attributes. Many of the attributes you can supply here (such
as theme, label, icon, permission, process, taskAffinity,
and allowTaskReparenting) serve
as default values for the corresponding attributes of components
declared inside of the application.
<p>Inside of this element you specify what the application contains,
using the elements {@link #AndroidManifestProvider provider},
{@link #AndroidManifestService service},
{@link #AndroidManifestReceiver receiver},
{@link #AndroidManifestActivity activity},
{@link #AndroidManifestActivityAlias activity-alias}, and
{@link #AndroidManifestUsesLibrary uses-library}. The application tag
appears as a child of the root {@link #AndroidManifest manifest} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestApplication" parent="AndroidManifest">
<!-- An optional name of a class implementing the overall
{@link android.app.Application} for this package. When the
process for your package is started, this class is instantiated
before any of the other application components. Note that this
is not required, and in fact most applications will probably
not need it. -->
<attr name="name" />
<attr name="theme" />
<attr name="label" />
<attr name="icon" />
<attr name="description" />
<attr name="permission" />
<attr name="process" />
<attr name="taskAffinity" />
<attr name="allowTaskReparenting" />
<!-- Indicate whether this application contains code. If set to false,
there is no code associated with it and thus the system will not
try to load its code when launching components. The default is true
for normal behavior. -->
<attr name="hasCode" format="boolean" />
<attr name="persistent" />
<!-- Specify whether the components in this application are enabled or not (i.e. can be
instantiated by the system).
If "false", it overrides any component specific values (a value of "true" will not
override the component specific values). -->
<attr name="enabled" />
<attr name="debuggable" />
<!-- Name of activity to be launched for managing the application's space on the device. -->
<attr name="manageSpaceActivity" />
<attr name="allowClearUserData" />
<attr name="testOnly" />
<attr name="backupAgent" />
<attr name="allowBackup" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag declares a security permission that can be
used to control access from other packages to specific components or
features in your package (or other packages). See the
<a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/security/security.html">Security and Permissions
document for more information on permissions.
<p>This appears as a child tag of the root
{@link #AndroidManifest manifest} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestPermission" parent="AndroidManifest">
<!-- Required public name of the permission, which other components and
packages will use when referring to this permission. This is a string using
Java-style scoping to ensure it is unique. The prefix will often
be the same as our overall package name, for example
"com.mycompany.android.myapp.SomePermission". -->
<attr name="name" />
<attr name="label" />
<attr name="icon" />
<attr name="permissionGroup" />
<attr name="description" />
<attr name="protectionLevel" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag declares a logical grouping of
related permissions.
<p>Note that this tag does not declare a permission itself, only
a namespace in which further permissions can be placed. See
the {@link #AndroidManifestPermission <permission>} tag for
more information.
<p>This appears as a child tag of the root
{@link #AndroidManifest manifest} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestPermissionGroup" parent="AndroidManifest">
<!-- Required public name of the permission group, permissions will use
to specify the group they are in. This is a string using
Java-style scoping to ensure it is unique. The prefix will often
be the same as our overall package name, for example
"com.mycompany.android.myapp.SomePermission". -->
<attr name="name" />
<attr name="label" />
<attr name="icon" />
<attr name="description" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag declares the base of a tree of
permission values: it declares that this package has ownership of
the given permission name, as well as all names underneath it
(separated by '.'). This allows you to use the
{@link android.content.pm.PackageManager#addPermission
PackageManager.addPermission()} method to dynamically add new
permissions under this tree.
<p>Note that this tag does not declare a permission itself, only
a namespace in which further permissions can be placed. See
the {@link #AndroidManifestPermission <permission>} tag for
more information.
<p>This appears as a child tag of the root
{@link #AndroidManifest manifest} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestPermissionTree" parent="AndroidManifest">
<!-- Required public name of the permission tree, which is the base name
of all permissions under it. This is a string using
Java-style scoping to ensure it is unique. The prefix will often
be the same as our overall package name, for example
"com.mycompany.android.myapp.SomePermission". A permission tree name
must have more than two segments in its path; that is,
"com.me.foo" is okay, but not "com.me" or "com". -->
<attr name="name" />
<attr name="label" />
<attr name="icon" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag requests a
{@link #AndroidManifestPermission <permission>} that the containing
package must be granted in order for it to operate correctly.
See the <a href="{@docRoot}guide/topics/security/security.html">Security and Permissions
document for more information on permissions. Also available is a
{@link android.Manifest.permission list of permissions} included
with the base platform.
<p>This appears as a child tag of the root
{@link #AndroidManifest manifest} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestUsesPermission" parent="AndroidManifest">
<!-- Required name of the permission you use, as published with the
corresponding name attribute of a
{@link android.R.styleable#AndroidManifestPermission <permission>}
tag; often this is one of the {@link android.Manifest.permission standard
system permissions}. -->
<attr name="name" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag specifies
a specific hardware configuration value used by the application.
For example an application might specify that it requires
a physical keyboard or a particular navigation method like
trackball. Multiple such attribute values can be specified by the
application.
<p>This appears as a child tag of the root
{@link #AndroidManifest manifest} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestUsesConfiguration" parent="AndroidManifest">
<!-- The type of touch screen used by an application. -->
<attr name="reqTouchScreen" />
<attr name="reqKeyboardType" />
<attr name="reqHardKeyboard" />
<attr name="reqNavigation" />
<attr name="reqFiveWayNav" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag specifies
a specific feature used by the application.
For example an application might specify that it requires
specific version of open gl. Multiple such attribute
values can be specified by the application.
<p>This appears as a child tag of the root
{@link #AndroidManifest manifest} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestUsesFeature" parent="AndroidManifest">
<!-- The GLES driver version number needed by an application.
The higher 16 bits represent the major number and the lower 16 bits
represent the minor number. For example for GL 1.2 referring to
0x00000102, the actual value should be set as 0x00010002. -->
<attr name="glEsVersion" format="integer"/>
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag describes the SDK features that the
containing package must be running on to operate correctly.
<p>This appears as a child tag of the root
{@link #AndroidManifest manifest} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestUsesSdk" parent="AndroidManifest">
<!-- This is the minimum SDK version number that the application
requires. This number is an abstract integer, from the list
in {@link android.os.Build.VERSION_CODES} If
not supplied, the application will work on any SDK. This
may also be string (such as "Donut") if the application was built
against a development branch, in which case it will only work against
the development builds. -->
<attr name="minSdkVersion" format="integer|string" />
<!-- This is the SDK version number that the application is targeting.
It is able to run on older versions (down to minSdkVersion), but
was explicitly tested to work with the version specified here.
Specifying this version allows the platform to disable compatibility
code that are not required or enable newer features that are not
available to older applications. This may also be a string
(such as "Donut") if this is built against a development
branch, in which case minSdkVersion is also forced to be that
string. -->
<attr name="targetSdkVersion" format="integer|string" />
<!-- This is the maximum SDK version number that an application works
on. You can use this to ensure your application is filtered out
of later versions of the platform when you know you have
incompatibility with them. -->
<attr name="maxSdkVersion" format="integer" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The specifies a shared library that this
package requires to be linked against. Specifying this flag tells the
system to include this library's code in your class loader.
<p>This appears as a child tag of the
{@link #AndroidManifestApplication application} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestUsesLibrary" parent="AndroidManifestApplication">
<!-- Required name of the library you use. -->
<attr name="name" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The specifies the screen dimensions an
application supports. By default a modern application supports all
screen sizes and must explicitly disable certain screen sizes here;
older applications are assumed to only support the traditional normal
(HVGA) screen size. Note that screen size is a separate axis from
density, and is determined as the available pixels to an application
after density scaling has been applied.
<p>This appears as a child tag of the
{@link #AndroidManifest manifest} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestSupportsScreens" parent="AndroidManifest">
<!-- Indicates whether the application supports smaller screen form-factors.
A small screen is defined as one with a smaller aspect ratio than
the traditional HVGA screen; that is, for a portrait screen, less
tall than an HVGA screen. In practice, this means a QVGA low
density or VGA high density screen. An application that does
not support small screens <em>will not be available for
small screen devices, since there is little the platform can do
to make such an application work on a smaller screen. -->
<attr name="smallScreens" format="boolean" />
<!-- Indicates whether an application supports the normal screen
form-factors. Traditionally this is an HVGA normal density
screen, but WQVGA low density and WVGA high density are also
considered to be normal. This attribute is true by default,
and applications currently should leave it that way. -->
<attr name="normalScreens" format="boolean" />
<!-- Indicates whether the application supports larger screen form-factors.
A large screen is defined as a screen that is significantly larger
than a normal phone screen, and thus may require some special care
on the application's part to make good use of it. An example would
be a VGA <em>normal density screen, though even larger screens
are certainly possible. An application that does not support
large screens will be placed as a postage stamp on such a
screen, so that it retains the dimensions it was originally
designed for. -->
<attr name="largeScreens" format="boolean" />
<!-- Indicates whether the application can resize itself to newer
screen sizes. This is mostly used to distinguish between old
applications that may not be compatible with newly introduced
screen sizes and newer applications that should be; it will be
set for you automatically based on whether you are targeting
a newer platform that supports more screens. -->
<attr name="resizeable" format="boolean" />
<!-- Indicates whether the application can accommodate any screen
density. Older applications are assumed to not be able to,
new ones able to. You can explicitly supply your abilities
here. -->
<attr name="anyDensity" format="boolean" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- Private tag to declare system protected broadcast actions.
<p>This appears as a child tag of the root
{@link #AndroidManifest manifest} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestProtectedBroadcast" parent="AndroidManifest">
<attr name="name" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag declares a
{@link android.content.ContentProvider} class that is available
as part of the package's application components, supplying structured
access to data managed by the application.
<p>This appears as a child tag of the
{@link #AndroidManifestApplication application} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestProvider" parent="AndroidManifestApplication">
<!-- Required name of the class implementing the provider, deriving from
{@link android.content.ContentProvider}. This is a fully
qualified class name (i.e., com.mycompany.myapp.MyProvider); as a
short-hand if the first character of the class
is a period then it is appended to your package name. -->
<attr name="name" />
<attr name="label" />
<attr name="icon" />
<attr name="process" />
<attr name="authorities" />
<attr name="syncable" />
<attr name="readPermission" />
<attr name="writePermission" />
<attr name="grantUriPermissions" />
<attr name="permission" />
<attr name="multiprocess" />
<attr name="initOrder" />
<!-- Specify whether this provider is enabled or not (i.e. can be instantiated by the system).
It can also be specified for an application as a whole, in which case a value of "false"
will override any component specific values (a value of "true" will not override the
component specific values). -->
<attr name="enabled" />
<attr name="exported" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- Attributes that can be supplied in an AndroidManifest.xml
<code>grant-uri-permission tag, a child of the
{@link #AndroidManifestProvider provider} tag, describing a specific
URI path that can be granted as a permission. This tag can be
specified multiple time to supply multiple paths. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestGrantUriPermission" parent="AndroidManifestProvider">
<!-- Specify a URI path that must exactly match, as per
{@link android.os.PatternMatcher} with
{@link android.os.PatternMatcher#PATTERN_LITERAL}. -->
<attr name="path" format="string" />
<!-- Specify a URI path that must be a prefix to match, as per
{@link android.os.PatternMatcher} with
{@link android.os.PatternMatcher#PATTERN_PREFIX}. -->
<attr name="pathPrefix" format="string" />
<!-- Specify a URI path that matches a simple pattern, as per
{@link android.os.PatternMatcher} with
{@link android.os.PatternMatcher#PATTERN_SIMPLE_GLOB}.
Note that because '\' is used as an escape character when
reading the string from XML (before it is parsed as a pattern),
you will need to double-escape: for example a literal "*" would
be written as "\\*" and a literal "\" would be written as
"\\\\". This is basically the same as what you would need to
write if constructing the string in Java code. -->
<attr name="pathPattern" format="string" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- Attributes that can be supplied in an AndroidManifest.xml
<code>path-permission tag, a child of the
{@link #AndroidManifestProvider provider} tag, describing a permission
that allows access to a specific path in the provider. This tag can be
specified multiple time to supply multiple paths. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestPathPermission" parent="AndroidManifestProvider">
<attr name="path" />
<attr name="pathPrefix" />
<attr name="pathPattern" />
<attr name="permission" />
<attr name="readPermission" />
<attr name="writePermission" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag declares a
{@link android.app.Service} class that is available
as part of the package's application components, implementing
long-running background operations or a rich communication API
that can be called by other packages.
<p>Zero or more {@link #AndroidManifestIntentFilter intent-filter}
tags can be included inside of a service, to specify the Intents
that can connect with it. If none are specified, the service can
only be accessed by direct specification of its class name.
The service tag appears as a child tag of the
{@link #AndroidManifestApplication application} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestService" parent="AndroidManifestApplication">
<!-- Required name of the class implementing the service, deriving from
{@link android.app.Service}. This is a fully
qualified class name (i.e., com.mycompany.myapp.MyService); as a
short-hand if the first character of the class
is a period then it is appended to your package name. -->
<attr name="name" />
<attr name="label" />
<attr name="icon" />
<attr name="permission" />
<attr name="process" />
<!-- Specify whether the service is enabled or not (i.e. can be instantiated by the system).
It can also be specified for an application as a whole, in which case a value of "false"
will override any component specific values (a value of "true" will not override the
component specific values). -->
<attr name="enabled" />
<attr name="exported" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag declares an
{@link android.content.BroadcastReceiver} class that is available
as part of the package's application components, allowing the
application to receive actions or data broadcast by other
applications even if it is not currently running.
<p>Zero or more {@link #AndroidManifestIntentFilter intent-filter}
tags can be included inside of a receiver, to specify the Intents
it will receive. If none are specified, the receiver will only
be run when an Intent is broadcast that is directed at its specific
class name. The receiver tag appears as a child tag of the
{@link #AndroidManifestApplication application} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestReceiver" parent="AndroidManifestApplication">
<!-- Required name of the class implementing the receiver, deriving from
{@link android.content.BroadcastReceiver}. This is a fully
qualified class name (i.e., com.mycompany.myapp.MyReceiver); as a
short-hand if the first character of the class
is a period then it is appended to your package name. -->
<attr name="name" />
<attr name="label" />
<attr name="icon" />
<attr name="permission" />
<attr name="process" />
<!-- Specify whether the receiver is enabled or not (i.e. can be instantiated by the system).
It can also be specified for an application as a whole, in which case a value of "false"
will override any component specific values (a value of "true" will not override the
component specific values). -->
<attr name="enabled" />
<attr name="exported" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag declares an
{@link android.app.Activity} class that is available
as part of the package's application components, implementing
a part of the application's user interface.
<p>Zero or more {@link #AndroidManifestIntentFilter intent-filter}
tags can be included inside of an activity, to specify the Intents
that it can handle. If none are specified, the activity can
only be started through direct specification of its class name.
The activity tag appears as a child tag of the
{@link #AndroidManifestApplication application} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestActivity" parent="AndroidManifestApplication">
<!-- Required name of the class implementing the activity, deriving from
{@link android.app.Activity}. This is a fully
qualified class name (i.e., com.mycompany.myapp.MyActivity); as a
short-hand if the first character of the class
is a period then it is appended to your package name. -->
<attr name="name" />
<attr name="theme" />
<attr name="label" />
<attr name="icon" />
<attr name="launchMode" />
<attr name="screenOrientation" />
<attr name="configChanges" />
<attr name="permission" />
<attr name="multiprocess" />
<attr name="process" />
<attr name="taskAffinity" />
<attr name="allowTaskReparenting" />
<attr name="finishOnTaskLaunch" />
<attr name="clearTaskOnLaunch" />
<attr name="noHistory" />
<attr name="alwaysRetainTaskState" />
<attr name="stateNotNeeded" />
<attr name="excludeFromRecents" />
<!-- Specify whether the activity is enabled or not (i.e. can be instantiated by the system).
It can also be specified for an application as a whole, in which case a value of "false"
will override any component specific values (a value of "true" will not override the
component specific values). -->
<attr name="enabled" />
<attr name="exported" />
<!-- Specify the default soft-input mode for the main window of
this activity. A value besides "unspecified" here overrides
any value in the theme. -->
<attr name="windowSoftInputMode" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag declares a new
name for an existing {@link #AndroidManifestActivity activity}
tag.
<p>Zero or more {@link #AndroidManifestIntentFilter intent-filter}
tags can be included inside of an activity-alias, to specify the Intents
that it can handle. If none are specified, the activity can
only be started through direct specification of its class name.
The activity-alias tag appears as a child tag of the
{@link #AndroidManifestApplication application} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestActivityAlias" parent="AndroidManifestApplication">
<!-- Required name of the class implementing the activity, deriving from
{@link android.app.Activity}. This is a fully
qualified class name (i.e., com.mycompany.myapp.MyActivity); as a
short-hand if the first character of the class
is a period then it is appended to your package name. -->
<attr name="name" />
<!-- The name of the activity this alias should launch. The activity
must be in the same manifest as the alias, and have been defined
in that manifest before the alias here. This must use a Java-style
naming convention to ensure the name is unique, for example
"com.mycompany.MyName". -->
<attr name="targetActivity" format="string" />
<attr name="label" />
<attr name="icon" />
<attr name="permission" />
<!-- Specify whether the activity-alias is enabled or not (i.e. can be instantiated by the system).
It can also be specified for an application as a whole, in which case a value of "false"
will override any component specific values (a value of "true" will not override the
component specific values). -->
<attr name="enabled" />
<attr name="exported" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag is used to attach additional
arbitrary data to an application component. The data can later
be retrieved programmatically from the
{@link android.content.pm.ComponentInfo#metaData
ComponentInfo.metaData} field. There is no meaning given to this
data by the system. You may supply the data through either the
<code>value or resource attribute; if both
are given, then <code>resource will be used.
<p>It is highly recommended that you avoid supplying related data as
multiple separate meta-data entries. Instead, if you have complex
data to associate with a component, then use the <code>resource
attribute to assign an XML resource that the client can parse to
retrieve the complete data. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestMetaData"
parent="AndroidManifestApplication
AndroidManifestActivity
AndroidManifestReceiver
AndroidManifestProvider
AndroidManifestService
AndroidManifestPermission
AndroidManifestPermissionGroup
AndroidManifestInstrumentation">
<attr name="name" />
<!-- Concrete value to assign to this piece of named meta-data.
The data can later be retrieved from the meta data Bundle
through {@link android.os.Bundle#getString Bundle.getString},
{@link android.os.Bundle#getInt Bundle.getInt},
{@link android.os.Bundle#getBoolean Bundle.getBoolean},
or {@link android.os.Bundle#getFloat Bundle.getFloat} depending
on the type used here. -->
<attr name="value" format="string|integer|color|float|boolean" />
<!-- Resource identifier to assign to this piece of named meta-data.
The resource identifier can later be retrieved from the meta data
Bundle through {@link android.os.Bundle#getInt Bundle.getInt}. -->
<attr name="resource" format="reference" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- The tag is used to construct an
{@link android.content.IntentFilter} object that will be used
to determine which component can handle a particular
{@link android.content.Intent} that has been given to the system.
It can be used as a child of the
{@link #AndroidManifestActivity activity},
{@link #AndroidManifestReceiver receiver} and
{@link #AndroidManifestService service}
tags.
<p> Zero or more {@link #AndroidManifestAction action},
{@link #AndroidManifestCategory category}, and/or
{@link #AndroidManifestData data} tags should be
included inside to describe the contents of the filter.
<p> The optional label and icon attributes here are used with
an activity to supply an alternative description of that activity
when it is being started through an Intent matching this filter. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestIntentFilter"
parent="AndroidManifestActivity AndroidManifestReceiver AndroidManifestService">
<attr name="label" />
<attr name="icon" />
<attr name="priority" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- Attributes that can be supplied in an AndroidManifest.xml
<code>action tag, a child of the
{@link #AndroidManifestIntentFilter intent-filter} tag.
See {@link android.content.IntentFilter#addAction} for
more information. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestAction" parent="AndroidManifestIntentFilter">
<!-- The name of an action that is handled, using the Java-style
naming convention. For example, to support
{@link android.content.Intent#ACTION_VIEW Intent.ACTION_VIEW}
you would put <code>android.intent.action.VIEW here.
Custom actions should generally use a prefix matching the
package name. -->
<attr name="name" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- Attributes that can be supplied in an AndroidManifest.xml
<code>data tag, a child of the
{@link #AndroidManifestIntentFilter intent-filter} tag, describing
the types of data that match. This tag can be specified multiple
times to supply multiple data options, as described in the
{@link android.content.IntentFilter} class. Note that all such
tags are adding options to the same IntentFilter so that, for example,
<code><data android:scheme="myscheme" android:host="me.com" />
is equivalent to <code><data android:scheme="myscheme" />
<data android:host="me.com" /></code>. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestData" parent="AndroidManifestIntentFilter">
<!-- Specify a MIME type that is handled, as per
{@link android.content.IntentFilter#addDataType
IntentFilter.addDataType()}.
<p>Note: MIME type matching in the Android framework is
case-sensitive, unlike formal RFC MIME types. As a result,
MIME types here should always use lower case letters.</em> -->
<attr name="mimeType" format="string" />
<!-- Specify a URI scheme that is handled, as per
{@link android.content.IntentFilter#addDataScheme
IntentFilter.addDataScheme()}.
<p>Note: scheme matching in the Android framework is
case-sensitive, unlike the formal RFC. As a result,
schemes here should always use lower case letters.</em> -->
<attr name="scheme" format="string" />
<!-- Specify a URI authority host that is handled, as per
{@link android.content.IntentFilter#addDataAuthority
IntentFilter.addDataAuthority()}.
<p>Note: host name matching in the Android framework is
case-sensitive, unlike the formal RFC. As a result,
host names here should always use lower case letters.</em> -->
<attr name="host" format="string" />
<!-- Specify a URI authority port that is handled, as per
{@link android.content.IntentFilter#addDataAuthority
IntentFilter.addDataAuthority()}. If a host is supplied
but not a port, any port is matched. -->
<attr name="port" format="string" />
<!-- Specify a URI path that must exactly match, as per
{@link android.content.IntentFilter#addDataPath
IntentFilter.addDataAuthority()} with
{@link android.os.PatternMatcher#PATTERN_LITERAL}. -->
<attr name="path" />
<!-- Specify a URI path that must be a prefix to match, as per
{@link android.content.IntentFilter#addDataPath
IntentFilter.addDataAuthority()} with
{@link android.os.PatternMatcher#PATTERN_PREFIX}. -->
<attr name="pathPrefix" />
<!-- Specify a URI path that matches a simple pattern, as per
{@link android.content.IntentFilter#addDataPath
IntentFilter.addDataAuthority()} with
{@link android.os.PatternMatcher#PATTERN_SIMPLE_GLOB}.
Note that because '\' is used as an escape character when
reading the string from XML (before it is parsed as a pattern),
you will need to double-escape: for example a literal "*" would
be written as "\\*" and a literal "\" would be written as
"\\\\". This is basically the same as what you would need to
write if constructing the string in Java code. -->
<attr name="pathPattern" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- Attributes that can be supplied in an AndroidManifest.xml
<code>category tag, a child of the
{@link #AndroidManifestIntentFilter intent-filter} tag.
See {@link android.content.IntentFilter#addCategory} for
more information. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestCategory" parent="AndroidManifestIntentFilter">
<!-- The name of category that is handled, using the Java-style
naming convention. For example, to support
{@link android.content.Intent#CATEGORY_LAUNCHER Intent.CATEGORY_LAUNCHER}
you would put <code>android.intent.category.LAUNCHER here.
Custom actions should generally use a prefix matching the
package name. -->
<attr name="name" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- Attributes that can be supplied in an AndroidManifest.xml
<code>instrumentation tag, a child of the root
{@link #AndroidManifest manifest} tag. -->
<declare-styleable name="AndroidManifestInstrumentation" parent="AndroidManifest">
<!-- Required name of the class implementing the instrumentation, deriving from
{@link android.app.Instrumentation}. This is a fully
qualified class name (i.e., com.mycompany.myapp.MyActivity); as a
short-hand if the first character of the class
is a period then it is appended to your package name. -->
<attr name="name" />
<attr name="targetPackage" />
<attr name="label" />
<attr name="icon" />
<attr name="handleProfiling" />
<attr name="functionalTest" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- Declaration of an {@link android.content.Intent} object in XML. May
also include zero or more {@link #IntentCategory <category> and
{@link #Extra <extra>} tags. -->
<declare-styleable name="Intent">
<!-- The action name to assign to the Intent, as per
{@link android.content.Intent#setAction Intent.setAction()}. -->
<attr name="action" format="string" />
<!-- The data URI to assign to the Intent, as per
{@link android.content.Intent#setData Intent.setData()}.
<p>Note: scheme and host name matching in the Android framework is
case-sensitive, unlike the formal RFC. As a result,
Uris here should always be normalized to use lower case letters
for these elements (as well as other proper Uri normalization).</em> -->
<attr name="data" format="string" />
<!-- The MIME type name to assign to the Intent, as per
{@link android.content.Intent#setType Intent.setType()}.
<p>Note: MIME type matching in the Android framework is
case-sensitive, unlike formal RFC MIME types. As a result,
MIME types here should always use lower case letters.</em> -->
<attr name="mimeType" />
<!-- The package part of the ComponentName to assign to the Intent, as per
{@link android.content.Intent#setComponent Intent.setComponent()}. -->
<attr name="targetPackage" />
<!-- The class part of the ComponentName to assign to the Intent, as per
{@link android.content.Intent#setComponent Intent.setComponent()}. -->
<attr name="targetClass" format="string" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- A category to add to an Intent, as per
{@link android.content.Intent#addCategory Intent.addCategory()}. -->
<declare-styleable name="IntentCategory" parent="Intent">
<!-- Required name of the category. -->
<attr name="name" />
</declare-styleable>
<!-- An extra data value to place into a an extra/name value pair held
in a Bundle, as per {@link android.os.Bundle}. -->
<declare-styleable name="Extra" parent="Intent">
<!-- Required name of the extra data. -->
<attr name="name" />
<!-- Concrete value to put for this named extra data. -->
<attr name="value" />
</declare-styleable>
</resources>
Other Android examples (source code examples)
Here is a short list of links related to this Android attrs_manifest.xml source code file:
|