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page.title=Printing Custom Documents
parent.title=Printing Content
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<h2>This lesson teaches you to</h2>
<ol>
<li><a href="#print-manager">Connect to the Print Manager</a></li>
<li><a href="#print-adapter">Create a Print Adapter</a>
<ol>
<li><a href="#doc-info">Compute print document info</a></li>
<li><a href="#write-file">Write a print document file</a></li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><a href="#draw-content">Drawing PDF Page Content</a></li>
</ol>
</div>
</div>
<p>For some applications, such as drawing apps, page layout apps and other apps that focus on
graphic output, creating beautiful printed pages is a key feature. In this case, it is not enough
to print an image or an HTML document. The print output for these types of applications requires
precise control of everything that goes into a page, including fonts, text flow, page breaks,
headers, footers, and graphic elements.</p>
<p>Creating print output that is completely customized for your application requires more
programming investment than the previously discussed approaches. You must build components that
communicate with the print framework, adjust to printer settings, draw page elements and
manage printing on multiple pages.</p>
<p>This lesson shows you how you connect with the print manager, create a print adapter and
build content for printing.</p>
<h2 id="print-manager">Connect to the Print Manager</h2>
<p>When your application manages the printing process directly, the first step after receiving a
print request from your user is to connect to the Android print framework and obtain an instance
of the {@link android.print.PrintManager} class. This class allows you to initialize a print job
and begin the printing lifecycle. The following code example shows how to get the print manager
and start the printing process.</p>
<pre>
private void doPrint() {
// Get a PrintManager instance
PrintManager printManager = (PrintManager) getActivity()
.getSystemService(Context.PRINT_SERVICE);
// Set job name, which will be displayed in the print queue
String jobName = getActivity().getString(R.string.app_name) + " Document";
// Start a print job, passing in a PrintDocumentAdapter implementation
// to handle the generation of a print document
printManager.print(jobName, new MyPrintDocumentAdapter(getActivity()),
null); //
}
</pre>
<p>The example code above demonstrates how to name a print job and set an instance of the {@link
android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter} class which handles the steps of the printing lifecycle. The
implementation of the print adapter class is discussed in the next section.</p>
<p class="note">
<strong>Note:</strong> The last parameter in the {@link android.print.PrintManager#print print()}
method takes a {@link android.print.PrintAttributes} object. You can use this parameter to
provide hints to the printing framework and pre-set options based on the previous printing cycle,
thereby improving the user experience. You may also use this parameter to set options that are
more appropriate to the content being printed, such as setting the orientation to landscape
when printing a photo that is in that orientation.
</p>
<h2 id="print-adapter">Create a Print Adapter</h2>
<p>A print adapter interacts with the Android print framework and handles the steps of the
printing process. This process requires users to select printers and print options before creating
a document for printing. These selections can influence the final output as the user chooses
printers with different output capabilities, different page sizes, or different page orientations.
As these selections are made, the print framework asks your adapter to lay out and generate a
print document, in preparation for final output. Once a user taps the print button, the framework
takes the final print document and passes it to a print provider for output. During the printing
process, users can choose to cancel the print action, so your print adapter must also listen for
and react to a cancellation requests.</p>
<p>The {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter} abstract class is designed to handle the
printing lifecycle, which has four main callback methods. You must implement these methods
in your print adapter in order to interact properly with the print framework:</p>
<ul>
<li>{@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onStart onStart()} - Called once at the
beginning of the print process. If your application has any one-time preparation tasks to
perform, such as getting a snapshot of the data to be printed, execute them here. Implementing
this method in your adapter is not required.</li>
<li>{@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onLayout onLayout()} - Called each time a
user changes a print setting which impacts the output, such as a different page size,
or page orientation, giving your application an opportunity to compute the layout of the
pages to be printed. At the minimum, this method must return how many pages are expected
in the printed document.</li>
<li>{@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onWrite onWrite()} - Called to render printed
pages into a file to be printed. This method may be called one or more times after each
{@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onLayout onLayout()} call.</li>
<li>{@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onFinish onFinish()} - Called once at the end
of the print process. If your application has any one-time tear-down tasks to perform,
execute them here. Implementing this method in your adapter is not required.</li>
</ul>
<p>The following sections describe how to implement the layout and write methods, which are
critical to the functioning of a print adapter.</p>
<p class="note">
<strong>Note:</strong> These adapter methods are called on the main thread of your application. If
you expect the execution of these methods in your implementation to take a significant amount of
time, implement them to execute within a separate thread. For example, you can encapsulate the
layout or print document writing work in separate {@link android.os.AsyncTask} objects.
</p>
<h3 id="doc-info">Compute print document info</h3>
<p>Within an implementation of the {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter} class, your
application must be able to specify the type of document it is creating and calculate the total
number of pages for print job, given information about the printed page size.
The implementation of the {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onLayout onLayout()} method in
the adapter makes these calculations and provides information about the expected output of the
print job in a {@link android.print.PrintDocumentInfo} class, including the number of pages and
content type. The following code example shows a basic implementation of the {@link
android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onLayout onLayout()} method for a {@link
android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter}:
<pre>
&#64;Override
public void onLayout(PrintAttributes oldAttributes,
PrintAttributes newAttributes,
CancellationSignal cancellationSignal,
LayoutResultCallback callback,
Bundle metadata) {
// Create a new PdfDocument with the requested page attributes
mPdfDocument = new PrintedPdfDocument(getActivity(), newAttributes);
// Respond to cancellation request
if (cancellationSignal.isCancelled() ) {
callback.onLayoutCancelled();
return;
}
// Compute the expected number of printed pages
int pages = computePageCount(newAttributes);
if (pages > 0) {
// Return print information to print framework
PrintDocumentInfo info = new PrintDocumentInfo
.Builder("print_output.pdf")
.setContentType(PrintDocumentInfo.CONTENT_TYPE_DOCUMENT)
.setPageCount(pages);
.build();
// Content layout reflow is complete
callback.onLayoutFinished(info, true);
} else {
// Otherwise report an error to the print framework
callback.onLayoutFailed("Page count calculation failed.");
}
}
</pre>
<p>The execution of {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onLayout onLayout()} method can
have three outcomes: completion, cancellation, or failure in the case where calculation of the
layout cannot be completed. You must indicate one of these results by calling the appropriate
method of the {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter.LayoutResultCallback} object.</p>
<p class="note">
<strong>Note:</strong> The boolean parameter of the
{@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter.LayoutResultCallback#onLayoutFinished
onLayoutFinished()} method indicates whether or not the layout content has actually changed
since the last request. Setting this parameter properly allows the print framework to avoid
unnecessarily calling the {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onWrite onWrite()} method,
essentially caching the previously written print document and improving performance.
</p>
<p>The main work of {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onLayout onLayout()} is
calculating the number of pages that are expected as output given the attributes of the printer.
How you calculate this number is highly dependent on how your application lays out pages for
printing. The following code example shows an implementation where the number of pages is
determined by the print orientation:</p>
<pre>
private int computePageCount(PrintAttributes printAttributes) {
int itemsPerPage = 4; // default item count for portrait mode
MediaSize pageSize = printAttributes.getMediaSize();
if (!pageSize.isPortrait()) {
// Six items per page in landscape orientation
itemsPerPage = 6;
}
// Determine number of print items
int printItemCount = getPrintItemCount();
return (int) Math.ceil(printItemCount / itemsPerPage);
}
</pre>
<h3 id="write-file">Write a print document file</h3>
<p>When it is time to write print output to a file, the Android print framework calls the {@link
android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onWrite onWrite()} method of your application's {@link
android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter} class. The method's parameters specify which pages should be
written and the output file to be used. Your implementation of this method must then render each
requested page of content to a multi-page PDF document file. When this process is complete, you
call the {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter.WriteResultCallback#onWriteFinished
onWriteFinished()} method of the callback object.</p>
<p class="note">
<strong>Note:</strong> The Android print framework may call the {@link
android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onWrite onWrite()} method one or more times for every
call to {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onLayout onLayout()}. For this reason, it is
important to set the boolean parameter of
{@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter.LayoutResultCallback#onLayoutFinished
onLayoutFinished()} method to {@code false} when the print content layout has not changed,
to avoid unnecessary re-writes of the print document.
</p>
<p class="note">
<strong>Note:</strong> The boolean parameter of the
{@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter.LayoutResultCallback#onLayoutFinished
onLayoutFinished()} method indicates whether or not the layout content has actually changed
since the last request. Setting this parameter properly allows the print framework to avoid
unnecessarily calling the {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onLayout onLayout()} method,
essentially caching the previously written print document and improving performance.
</p>
<p>The following sample demonstrates the basic mechanics of this process using the {@link
android.print.pdf.PrintedPdfDocument} class to create a PDF file:</p>
<pre>
&#64;Override
public void onWrite(final PageRange[] pageRanges,
final ParcelFileDescriptor destination,
final CancellationSignal cancellationSignal,
final WriteResultCallback callback) {
// Iterate over each page of the document,
// check if it's in the output range.
for (int i = 0; i < totalPages; i++) {
// Check to see if this page is in the output range.
if (containsPage(pageRanges, i)) {
// If so, add it to writtenPagesArray. writtenPagesArray.size()
// is used to compute the next output page index.
writtenPagesArray.append(writtenPagesArray.size(), i);
PdfDocument.Page page = mPdfDocument.startPage(i);
// check for cancellation
if (cancellationSignal.isCancelled()) {
callback.onWriteCancelled();
mPdfDocument.close();
mPdfDocument = null;
return;
}
// Draw page content for printing
drawPage(page);
// Rendering is complete, so page can be finalized.
mPdfDocument.finishPage(page);
}
}
// Write PDF document to file
try {
mPdfDocument.writeTo(new FileOutputStream(
destination.getFileDescriptor()));
} catch (IOException e) {
callback.onWriteFailed(e.toString());
return;
} finally {
mPdfDocument.close();
mPdfDocument = null;
}
PageRange[] writtenPages = computeWrittenPages();
// Signal the print framework the document is complete
callback.onWriteFinished(writtenPages);
...
}
</pre>
<p>This sample delegates rendering of PDF page content to <code>drawPage()</code>
method, which is discussed in the next section.
</p>
<p>As with layout, execution of {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter#onWrite onWrite()}
method can have three outcomes: completion, cancellation, or failure in the case where the
the content cannot be written. You must indicate one of these results by calling the
appropriate method of the {@link android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter.WriteResultCallback} object.
</p>
<p class="note">
<strong>Note:</strong> Rendering a document for printing can be a resource-intensive operation. In
order to avoid blocking the main user interface thread of your application, you should consider
performing the page rendering and writing operations on a separate thread, for example
in an {@link android.os.AsyncTask}.
For more information about working with execution threads like asynchronous tasks,
see <a href="{@docRoot}guide/components/processes-and-threads.html">Processes
and Threads</a>.
</p>
<h2 id="draw-content">Drawing PDF Page Content</h2>
<p>When your application prints, your application must generate a PDF document and pass it to
the Android print framework for printing. You can use any PDF generation library for this
purpose. This lesson shows how to use the {@link android.print.pdf.PrintedPdfDocument} class
to generate PDF pages from your content.</p>
<p>The {@link android.print.pdf.PrintedPdfDocument} class uses a {@link android.graphics.Canvas}
object to draw elements on an PDF page, similar to drawing on an activity layout. You can draw
elements on the printed page using the {@link android.graphics.Canvas} draw methods. The following
example code demonstrates how to draw some simple elements on a PDF document page using these
methods:</p>
<pre>
private void drawPage(PdfDocument.Page page) {
Canvas canvas = page.getCanvas();
// units are in points (1/72 of an inch)
int titleBaseLine = 72;
int leftMargin = 54;
Paint paint = new Paint();
paint.setColor(Color.BLACK);
paint.setTextSize(36);
canvas.drawText("Test Title", leftMargin, titleBaseLine, paint);
paint.setTextSize(11);
canvas.drawText("Test paragraph", leftMargin, titleBaseLine + 25, paint);
paint.setColor(Color.BLUE);
canvas.drawRect(100, 100, 172, 172, paint);
}
</pre>
<p>When using {@link android.graphics.Canvas} to draw on a PDF page, elements are specified in
points, which is 1/72 of an inch. Make sure you use this unit of measure for specifying the size
of elements on the page. For positioning of drawn elements, the coordinate system starts at 0,0
for the top left corner of the page.</p>
<p>
<strong>Tip:</strong> While the {@link android.graphics.Canvas} object allows you to place print
elements on the edge of a PDF document, many printers are not able to print to the edge of a
physical piece of paper. Make sure that you account for the unprintable edges of the page when
you build a print document with this class.
</p>