Tests if app is running in multi-window mode for Android devices. Also lets you trap onStop()
and onStart()
which are important to differentiate
from onPause
events while in multi-window.
This is my first cordova plugin, scraped together looking at this tutorial. I am not an android native developer, so the code in the java file is a result of looking at other examples and trying to resolve compile/run time errors as they came along. I don't have a clue on how to write a proper android class file.
If you can improve it, please PR.
Feel free to clone this test repo
cordova plugin add cordova-plugin-multi-window --save
window.MultiWindowPlugin.get(function (result) {
console.log ("Multi-Window state is:" + result.state);
},
function (err) {
console.log (" *************** ERR:"+JSON.stringify(err));
});
NOTE: onStart() and onStop() are also invoked in non-multi window mode
This plugin allows multiple callbacks to register to the events, because in practice, while building an app you'll want to trap these events in different controllers to manage pause/resume states in different views. To do this, you can pass a handle (string) during registration which you can use to de-register that specific instance.
// Make sure you do this AFTER deviceReady
window.MultiWindowPlugin.registerOnStop("my-stop-handle-thiscontroller", onStop);
window.MultiWindowPlugin.registerOnStart("my-start-handle", onStart);
// and in a different controller, maybe
window.MultiWindowPlugin.registerOnStop("my-stop-handle-othercontroller", onOtherStopHandler);
// Make sure you do this AFTER deviceReady
window.MultiWindowPlugin.deregisterOnStop("my-stop-handle-othercontroller");
window.MultiWindowPlugin.deregisterOnStart("my-start-handle");
Or, all together:
NOTE: This will de-register ALL callbacks in all controllers across the app, so use with caution
// Make sure you do this AFTER deviceReady
window.MultiWindowPlugin.deregisterAll();