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cordova-plugin-themeablebrowser

This repo is out of maintenance due to its original mainteners are no longer able to maintain it in an acceptable fashion. Please consider forking this repo if it interests you. Apologies to everyone who still depends on this repo and thanks to everyone who has contributed.


This plugin is a fork of org.apache.cordova.inappbrowser. It attempts to retain most of the features of the InAppBrowser. In fact, for the full list of features inherited from InAppBrowser, please refer to InAppBrowser's documentation.

The purpose of this plugin is to provide an in-app-browser that can also be configured to match the theme of your app, in order to give it a more immersive look and feel for your app, as well as provide a more consistent look and feel across platforms.

This plugin launches an in-app web view on top the existing CordovaWebView by calling cordova.ThemeableBrowser.open().

// Keep in mind that you must add your own images to native resource.
// Images below are for sample only. They are not imported by this plugin.
cordova.ThemeableBrowser.open('http://apache.org', '_blank', {
    statusbar: {
        color: '#ffffffff'
    },
    toolbar: {
        height: 44,
        color: '#f0f0f0ff'
    },
    title: {
        color: '#003264ff',
        showPageTitle: true
    },
    backButton: {
        image: 'back',
        imagePressed: 'back_pressed',
        align: 'left',
        event: 'backPressed'
    },
    forwardButton: {
        image: 'forward',
        imagePressed: 'forward_pressed',
        align: 'left',
        event: 'forwardPressed'
    },
    closeButton: {
        image: 'close',
        imagePressed: 'close_pressed',
        align: 'left',
        event: 'closePressed'
    },
    customButtons: [
        {
            image: 'share',
            imagePressed: 'share_pressed',
            align: 'right',
            event: 'sharePressed'
        }
    ],
    menu: {
        image: 'menu',
        imagePressed: 'menu_pressed',
        title: 'Test',
        cancel: 'Cancel',
        align: 'right',
        items: [
            {
                event: 'helloPressed',
                label: 'Hello World!'
            },
            {
                event: 'testPressed',
                label: 'Test!'
            }
        ]
    },
    backButtonCanClose: true
}).addEventListener('backPressed', function(e) {
    alert('back pressed');
}).addEventListener('helloPressed', function(e) {
    alert('hello pressed');
}).addEventListener('sharePressed', function(e) {
    alert(e.url);
}).addEventListener(cordova.ThemeableBrowser.EVT_ERR, function(e) {
    console.error(e.message);
}).addEventListener(cordova.ThemeableBrowser.EVT_WRN, function(e) {
    console.log(e.message);
});

iOS Sample iOS Menu Sample

Android Sample Android Menu Sample

Installation

cordova plugin add cordova-plugin-themeablebrowser

Additional Properties

In addition to InAppBrowser's properties, following properties were added to fulfill this plugin's purpose in a nested JSON object.

All properties are optional with little default values. If a property is not given, its corresponding UI element will not be shown.

One thing to note is that all image resources reference to native resource bundle. So all images need to be imported to native project first. In case of Android, the image name will be looked up under R.drawable. eg. If image name is hello_world, R.drawable.hello_world will be referenced.

You may have noticed that ThemedBrowser added an optional menu as well as custom buttons, which you can utilize to respond to some simple user actions.

Experimental Properties

Followings are experimental properties that can be used in some special cases. Usage of these property are discouraged due to stability and efficiency.

For any object that supports image and imagePressed properties, there is a set of fallback properties that can be used when you absolutely cannot import native sources due to some circumstances.

eg.

cordova.ThemeableBrowser.open('http://apache.org', '_blank', {
    ...
    backButton: {
        wwwImage: 'images/back.png',
        wwwImagePressed: 'images/back_pressed.png',
        wwwImageDensity: 2,
        align: 'left',
        event: 'backPressed'
    }
    ...
});

File path is relative to www directory, which contains your web app sources. One thing that is very important is the wwwImageDensity property. Since images are not loaded from native resource bundle, density of any loaded images cannot not be automatically determined, therefore it needs to be explicity set. You are responsible for supplying the correct images with its corresponding density for any given device. If you don't know what image density means, please read this documentation. Ideally you are supposed to perform a device detection based on window.devicePixelRatio to supply optimal images. However a cheap way is to always supply high density images and rely on OS to scale down for lower screen density devices. Of course this would be inefficient, but it would save you a lot of trouble. Following is a cheatsheet that corresponds wwwImageDensity values to iOS and Android densities. Though wwwImageDensity does accept float values, followings are handy lookup.

wwwImageDensityiOSAndroid
1No suffixmdpi
2@2xxhdpi
3@3xxxdpi
4N/Axxxhdpi

Additional Methods

The reference object returned by cordova.ThemeableBrowser.open contains the following methods in addition to InAppBrowser's implementation:

Errors and Warnings

This plugin does not want to be the source of your app crash, not to mention that you have no way to catch exceptions from native code, so it does not throw exceptions. Neither does it want to write to log, because it wants to avoid polluting your log and respect your choice of logging library. Hence all errors are warnings are reported back to you through events. You may listen to two special events defined by cordova.ThemeableBrowser.EVT_ERR and cordova.ThemeableBrowser.EVT_WRN. Upon error or warning, you will receive event object that contains the following properties:

Examples:

cordova.ThemeableBrowser.open('http://apache.org', '_blank', {
    ...
}).addEventListener(cordova.ThemeableBrowser.EVT_ERR, function(e) {
    if (e.code === cordova.ThemeableBrowser.ERR_CRITICAL) {
        // TODO: Handle critical error.
    } else if (e.code === cordova.ThemeableBrowser.ERR_LOADFAIL) {
        // TODO: Image failed to load.
    }

    console.error(e.message);
}).addEventListener(cordova.ThemeableBrowser.EVT_WRN, function(e) {
    if (e.code === cordova.ThemeableBrowser.WRN_UNDEFINED) {
        // TODO: Some property undefined in config.
    } else if (e.code === cordova.ThemeableBrowser.WRN_UNEXPECTED) {
        // TODO: Something strange happened. But no big deal.
    }

    console.log(e.message);
});

These events are intended to help you debug strange behaviours. So if you run into something weird, please listene to these events and it might just tell you what's wrong. Please note errors and warnings are not completely consistent across platforms. There are some minor platform differences.

Import Native Images

If you are a native developer and are already aware how to import native image resources, feel free to skip this section. Otherwise, here are some tips. First of all, your native iOS and Android projects are located at:

<cordova_project_root>/platforms/ios
<cordova_project_root>/platforms/android

Let's start with Android, which is quite straightforward. Prepare your images for all of the pixel densities that you'd like to support. Here is a documentation that explains this concept. The gist is that on higher pixel density screens, your images will have to have higher resolution in order to look sharp on an actual device, so you want to prepare multiple files for the same image at different resolutions for their respective pixel density. In Android, there are a lot of densities due to diversity of devices, so you have to decide which ones you want to support. Fortunately if you don't have an image for a particular pixel density, Android will automatically pick up the closest one and try to down scale or up scale it. Of course this process is not very efficient, so you have to make your decisions. The directory where you want to place your images are under

<cordova_project_root>/platforms/android/res

Notice how there are multiple folders named drawble-.*. Each file for the same image should be named the same, but it will need to be moved under the correct directory with respect to its target density. eg. If icon.png is intended for xhdpi, then it needs to go under drawable-xhdpi directory. In your JavaScript config, you can then reference to this iamge without extension. eg. With the previous example, simply icon will suffice.

To import image resources for iOS, it is slightly trickier, because you have to register your file in Xcode project file with help from Xcode, and there are two ways of doing this. Let's start with the old school way. iOS also shares similar concept with Android in terms of pixel density. iPhone to iPhone 3GS uses 1x the resolution, iPhone 4 to iPhone 6 uses 2x the resolution while iPhone 6 Plus and above uses 3x the resolution (even though it's actually down scaled, but that's a different discussion). In the old school way, you have to name your images with @1x, @2x, and @3x suffix with respect to their target density. eg. icon@2x.png. Here is a documentation that explains this concept. You then have to move it under

<cordova_project_root>/platforms/ios/<project_name>/Resources

Then open your native iOS project with Xcode by double clicking on

<cordova_project_root>/platforms/ios/<project_name>.xcodeproj

In the left hand side panel, make sure you are in Project navigator tab. Then you can see a list of directories under your project. One of them being Resources, but you don't see your newly added images there. Now you need to drag your images fron Finder to Xcode and drop it under Resource folder. In your JavaScript config, you can then reference to them without suffix or extension. eg. With the previous example, simply icon will suffice.

The new school way is to use Asset Catalog. This is the recommended technique from Xcode 5+ and iOS 7+. It gives you better management of all of your image resources. ie. No more suffix, and you can see all your images for different densities in one table etc. However there are more steps involved to set it up. Please reference to this guide for a step by step walkthrough.

If for some reason you absolutely cannot import native images, you may consider using the wwwImage, wwwImagePressed and wwwImageDensity properties as fallback solution, though this is an experimental feature and is discouraged. See above for documentation.

FAQ

I just installed this plugin, how come it just shows a blank toolbar?

The purpose of this plugin is to allow you to style the in app browser the way you want. Isn't that why you installed this plugin in the first place? Hence, it does not come with any defaults. Every UI element needs to be styled by you, otherwise it's hidden. This also avoids polluting your resouce bundle with default images.

Why does my menu on Android look ugly?

Android menu is simply a Spinner, which picks up its style from your Activity's theme. By default Cordova uses the very old Theme.Black.NoTitleBar, which is ugly. Open your AndroidManifest.xml and change your android:theme attribute to something more morden, such as Theme.Holo or Base.Theme.AppCompat from support library.

How do I style Android menu?

Android menu is simply a Spinner with default layout resources, which picks up its style from your Activity's theme. You can style it by making a theme of your app and apply it to your activity. See android:dropDownListViewStyle.

How do I add margings and paddings?

There is no margins or paddings. However notice that you can assign images to each of the buttons. So take advantage of PNG's transparency to create margins/paddings around your buttons.

How do I add shadow to the toolbar?

First, notice that you can use an image as well as color for toolbar background. Use PNG for background image and create shadow inside this image. Next, you will probably be concerned about how buttons will slightly misaligned due since they always middle align. Again create some transparent borders in your button images to offset the misalignment. eg. Say your shadow is 5px tall, which causes buttons to allear lower than they shoud. Create a 10px transparent bottom border for each of your button icons and you are set.

Supported Platforms

Currently there is no plan to support other platforms, though source code from InAppBrowser is kept for merge purposes, they are inactive, since they are removed from plugin.xml.

Migration

This plugin is not a drop-in replacement for InAppBrowser. The biggest change that was made from InAppBrowser, which caused it to be no longer compatible with InAppBrowser's API is that options parameter now accepts a JavaScript object instead of string.

cordova.ThemeableBrowser.open('http://apache.org', '_blank', {
    customButtons: [
        {
            image: 'share',
            imagePressed: 'share_pressed',
            align: 'right',
            event: 'sharePressed'
        }
    ],
    menu: {
        image: 'menu',
        imagePressed: 'menu_pressed',
        items: [
            {
                event: 'helloPressed',
                label: 'Hello World!'
            },
            {
                event: 'testPressed',
                label: 'Test!'
            }
        ]
    }
});

As you can see from above, this allows configurations to have more robust and readable definition.

Furthermore, the object returned by open always returns its own instance allowing chaining of methods. Obviously, this breaks the immitation of window.open(), however it's an optional feature that you can choose not to use if you want to stay loyal to the original.

cordova.ThemeableBrowser.open('http://apache.org', '_blank', {
    customButtons: [
        {
            image: 'share',
            imagePressed: 'share_pressed',
            align: 'right',
            event: 'sharePressed'
        }
    ],
    menu: {
        image: 'menu',
        imagePressed: 'menu_pressed',
        items: [
            {
                event: 'helloPressed',
                label: 'Hello World!'
            },
            {
                event: 'testPressed',
                label: 'Test!'
            }
        ]
    }
}).addEventListener('sharePressed', function(event) {
    alert(event.url);
}).addEventListener('helloPressed', function(event) {
    alert(event.url);
}).addEventListener('testPressed', function(event) {
    alert(event.url);
});

Two properties from InAppBrowser are disabled.

One is redefined.

License

This project is licensed under Aapache License 2.0. See LICENSE file.