1 00:00:05,180 --> 00:00:09,560 Now in the previous video, we created the layouts for our two new activities. 2 00:00:09,640 --> 00:00:13,480 And in this video we're going to add the code to make those activities work. 3 00:00:13,480 --> 00:00:18,250 Now, we haven't yet got a class for the standalone activity, because we're adding the activity manually 4 00:00:18,580 --> 00:00:19,810 instead of using the wizard. 5 00:00:19,960 --> 00:00:22,420 So when I open the project pane if it's not open, 6 00:00:22,560 --> 00:00:29,350 and then come on down to the actual package which is under the Java folder, right click, click on new and select 7 00:00:29,380 --> 00:00:34,680 Kotlin File/Class, and we're going to call this one StandaloneActivity, 8 00:00:36,620 --> 00:00:41,690 and under Kind, we're going to select Class instead of File, and click on OK. 9 00:00:41,730 --> 00:00:44,980 Now this class is going to extend the AppcompatActivity class, 10 00:00:45,150 --> 00:00:48,980 so I'm going to type after the class name, space colon. 11 00:00:49,310 --> 00:00:54,720 And I'm going to type Appc, and that should be enough to bring up this list of classes, and I'm going to choose 12 00:00:54,780 --> 00:00:59,840 AppCompatActivity from that list for the superclass, and I need to add parentheses on the end of that line. 13 00:00:59,880 --> 00:01:05,400 Now we also want to implement an interface, and unlike Java, in Kotlin there's no implements keyword. 14 00:01:05,730 --> 00:01:09,030 You just separate the class from the subsequent interfaces using a comma. 15 00:01:09,150 --> 00:01:15,690 So what I'm going to do is type a comma, then after the comma I'm going to type in onClick, and we 16 00:01:15,690 --> 00:01:19,330 get to the interface's box as you can see there, and we've got a couple of options there. 17 00:01:19,530 --> 00:01:24,060 Now, we need to implement the view dot onClickListener, so make sure you select the right one from the 18 00:01:24,060 --> 00:01:29,700 list. It should be already selected and you can see in my case the first one is selected, and IntelliSense 19 00:01:29,790 --> 00:01:33,760 is very useful here, but you do really have to pay attention to what you're doing. 20 00:01:33,900 --> 00:01:37,670 So we're not creating a dialogue interface so we don't want this second one, 21 00:01:37,710 --> 00:01:42,300 so make sure you choose the correct one and press enter, and that adds that line for us. 22 00:01:42,330 --> 00:01:46,990 Now that's our basic class created, and there's no functions added at the moment. 23 00:01:47,130 --> 00:01:51,080 It is easy to do so, we just need to position the cursor inside the class, 24 00:01:51,160 --> 00:01:57,600 in other words, inside the left and right curly braces, and use control O to choose the onCreate function 25 00:01:57,600 --> 00:02:03,960 from the list. So control O, and you can just type the first few letters, onCreate, and there's onCreate, press enter, 26 00:02:04,670 --> 00:02:09,320 and that implements it for us, and I'm just going to make an extra line of code there, or put 27 00:02:09,389 --> 00:02:14,280 an extra line there. Now when we used the wizard to generate the YouTubeActivity for us, 28 00:02:14,410 --> 00:02:18,010 the onCreate code was slightly different to what was generated here. 29 00:02:18,120 --> 00:02:22,830 Now hopefully Google will have sorted this out and made them consistent, by the time you watch this. 30 00:02:22,830 --> 00:02:24,880 But don't worry if you get slightly different code 31 00:02:24,880 --> 00:02:29,440 as I have, because I'm going to be changing this code in a minute anyway, and you'll be able to make yours 32 00:02:29,450 --> 00:02:30,890 match if necessary. 33 00:02:30,900 --> 00:02:34,980 Now we've still got an error here at the moment, and that's relating to the fact that we haven't implemented 34 00:02:35,370 --> 00:02:40,820 the onClick function yet, which is a required function for the onClickListener interface. 35 00:02:40,830 --> 00:02:42,500 So let's put that right first. 36 00:02:42,530 --> 00:02:46,120 So we're going to put a blank line after the onCreate function. 37 00:02:46,200 --> 00:02:50,720 This time I'm going to do a control I to get the implements method's dialogue, and 38 00:02:50,970 --> 00:02:55,940 I'm going to choose onClick there which is the only option that can be selected, and press enter. 39 00:02:56,000 --> 00:02:58,110 Alright so at this point that's now cleared the error. 40 00:02:58,350 --> 00:03:01,810 So what is this interface though we're implementing, and why are we doing it. 41 00:03:02,040 --> 00:03:07,650 Well before I explain that, let's go back and add the code to the onCreate method because it'll make 42 00:03:07,650 --> 00:03:09,450 more sense when you see the code in there. 43 00:03:09,750 --> 00:03:14,810 So I'm going to start by leaving that super.onCreate line on line 14 as is, and on the next 44 00:03:14,810 --> 00:03:21,640 line I'm going to do a setContentView, and it's going to be R.layout dot, 45 00:03:21,740 --> 00:03:26,430 we're going to choose our activity standalone layout, activity_standalone. OK, 46 00:03:26,440 --> 00:03:35,910 next line we're going to do btnPlayVideo.setOnClickListener, parentheses, this, and we're going to do the same 47 00:03:35,910 --> 00:03:41,960 for the btnPlaylist, btnPlaylist.setOnClickListener, 48 00:03:44,790 --> 00:03:47,740 this, and I did a capital L there, it should be a lower case l, that's better. 49 00:03:48,010 --> 00:03:54,990 Alright so that's the onCreate function, and hopefully you should recognize that code, because it's almost 50 00:03:54,990 --> 00:03:59,670 identical to the way we've been finding buttons in the layout, and setting them onClickListener so that 51 00:03:59,670 --> 00:04:05,790 we can respond to the buttons being clicked. And Android Studio's added the synthetic import for us as 52 00:04:05,790 --> 00:04:08,340 you can see there, on line 6. 53 00:04:08,340 --> 00:04:12,740 Now there's a slight difference in the way that we've set the click listener this time though. 54 00:04:13,050 --> 00:04:17,490 So I'm going to comment these two lines out for now, and review the two different ways that we've done 55 00:04:17,490 --> 00:04:19,410 this previously. Let's go ahead and do that. 56 00:04:21,570 --> 00:04:32,480 Now the first way is btnPlayVideo.setOnClickListener, in parentheses it was object colon View 57 00:04:32,770 --> 00:04:36,320 dot On Click Listener, and then we need our left and right 58 00:04:36,380 --> 00:04:43,640 curly braces, then we did an override control O, choosing onClick. 59 00:04:43,690 --> 00:04:47,900 So that was the first, that's the approach we used in the button counter app in section 5, 60 00:04:48,040 --> 00:04:54,710 and we can also implement that a different way, using a lambda expression. So I'm going to comment that one out, and 61 00:04:58,630 --> 00:05:01,620 the other way of doing it, as I mentioned, was a lambda expression. 62 00:05:01,760 --> 00:05:07,050 So that's btnPlayVideo.setOnClickListener, 63 00:05:07,230 --> 00:05:16,520 and then in parentheses, view.OnClickListener, press enter there, and within the left and right curly braces we'll 64 00:05:16,620 --> 00:05:23,760 put v then an arrow token, press enter, and then we're going to do our TODO, so TODO, we can actually copy 65 00:05:23,770 --> 00:05:34,080 that entire line so let's just do that. Copy that line and then we'll uncomment it, 66 00:05:34,340 --> 00:05:39,400 and that's now valid. Now that's a lot tidier because we don't need all that boilerplate code in colon, 67 00:05:39,660 --> 00:05:43,430 and this is the code I'm referring to here, this override code on line 22. 68 00:05:43,630 --> 00:05:48,900 Now that's fine if you're only using the listener with a single button. Typing all that in for each button's 69 00:05:48,900 --> 00:05:50,150 a bit tedious though, 70 00:05:50,340 --> 00:05:57,220 so what we can do is we can assign it to a variable, and use the same variable then for each button. 71 00:05:57,240 --> 00:06:02,190 So I've commented out that first bit of code out, and let's review the approach we use, which is very similar 72 00:06:02,190 --> 00:06:10,680 to what I've typed in the calculator app. Alright so I'll comment that out that, and the other thing we could've done, is we can assign 73 00:06:10,680 --> 00:06:14,000 it to a variable and use the same variable for each button. 74 00:06:14,160 --> 00:06:21,810 So we could do something like val listener equals view.OnClickListener, then we need our left and right curly brace, our braces, 75 00:06:21,890 --> 00:06:29,240 and within the left and right curly braces, v arrow token, then we can paste in the code for the TODO, like 76 00:06:33,190 --> 00:06:43,800 so, and clean that up. And then we could do btnPlayVideo.setOnClickListener, listener, and btn 77 00:06:43,800 --> 00:06:47,810 Playlist.setOnClickListener, listener. 78 00:06:48,500 --> 00:06:54,050 So here we basically created a new onClickListener object, and assign it to a variable, 79 00:06:54,060 --> 00:06:59,510 and we can then pass that variable to the setOnClickListener method of as many buttons as we need. 80 00:06:59,550 --> 00:07:05,680 Now what that code does is create an anonymous inner class, and assign an instance of that to a variable. 81 00:07:05,760 --> 00:07:10,950 And that's the way we did it when we wanted to assign the same listener to several buttons in the calculator 82 00:07:10,950 --> 00:07:12,540 app in section 6. 83 00:07:12,540 --> 00:07:17,940 Now obviously the code had to work out which button was tapped, to do something different for each one, 84 00:07:18,000 --> 00:07:21,540 but this does save having to create a new listener for each button. 85 00:07:21,600 --> 00:07:25,680 Now a third approach we can take is to make our activity a listener. 86 00:07:25,750 --> 00:07:31,990 Now if the activity implements the onClickListener interface, it can be passed whenever the onClickListener's 87 00:07:32,000 --> 00:07:33,870 implementation's needed. 88 00:07:34,170 --> 00:07:38,330 That's what I did originally when I passed this up here on lines 18 and 19, to 89 00:07:38,520 --> 00:07:44,430 the button's setOnClickListener method, function. As long as our activity satisfies the interface, 90 00:07:44,430 --> 00:07:49,840 so in other words it implements the onClick function, then we can use an instance of our activity whenever our 91 00:07:49,910 --> 00:07:54,860 listener's needed. So I'm going to comment out at all this other code, leaving in just the original set dot 92 00:07:54,930 --> 00:08:08,050 OnClickListeners, and uncomment these two. So all approaches here, all three approaches, pretty much do the same thing. 93 00:08:08,060 --> 00:08:13,610 The advantage of the way we're using it now though, is that it moves the onClick code out of onCreate, and 94 00:08:13,610 --> 00:08:17,930 this can make things more readable when the onClick function's quite long. It's not sort of messing 95 00:08:17,930 --> 00:08:21,080 up the onCreate function in other words. So which approach should you use 96 00:08:21,110 --> 00:08:26,660 here? Well it's really up to you as to which of the approaches you take, when you've got multiple buttons using 97 00:08:26,660 --> 00:08:32,330 the same listener. If there's a lot of code in the onClick function, then implementing the interface and 98 00:08:32,330 --> 00:08:35,350 using this can make the code more readable, as we're about to do. 99 00:08:35,470 --> 00:08:40,309 And it also means that you can use instances of the class as a listener elsewhere in your code, to assign 100 00:08:40,309 --> 00:08:42,470 it to buttons and other activities. 101 00:08:42,470 --> 00:08:47,570 Now that's maybe not something you'd do with a class that extends activity or AppcompatActivity, but 102 00:08:47,570 --> 00:08:50,030 it may be useful in other classes. 103 00:08:50,030 --> 00:08:54,710 Alright, so we've got a listener attached to both of our buttons now, so we now need to write the code 104 00:08:54,710 --> 00:08:56,080 to get it to do something. 105 00:08:56,890 --> 00:09:02,710 Now what we want to do is launch Google's standalone player with the ID of a video to play, or the 106 00:09:02,710 --> 00:09:07,980 ID of a playlist, and when we click the button it'll start the YouTube Player, almost as if you'd launched 107 00:09:08,050 --> 00:09:14,050 it yourself from the phone's launch screen. Now it's slightly different to launching it manually, because we can also 108 00:09:14,050 --> 00:09:18,800 tell it which video to start playing, but apart from that it's the same. Alright so the code is quite simple, so 109 00:09:18,860 --> 00:09:23,890 I'm going to type it in then explain what's going on. So let's go down to the onClick function, and 110 00:09:23,910 --> 00:09:30,250 we're going to remove this TODO now that because we are implementing it. And I'm going to start by typing val intent 111 00:09:30,700 --> 00:09:39,370 equals when, then parentheses view.id, and our left and right curly braces, 112 00:09:39,390 --> 00:09:43,270 and we need to change the name that was assigned. It's not really the best name there, p0, 113 00:09:43,310 --> 00:09:52,020 we'll change that to view, and you're going to get rid of the question mark for now. 114 00:09:52,500 --> 00:10:00,480 So within the code block for when, we're going to do R.id.btnPlayVideo arrow token, and that's going to be 115 00:10:00,480 --> 00:10:10,050 YouTube, with a capital T, StandalonePlayer.createVideoIntent, then parentheses, and 116 00:10:10,200 --> 00:10:19,590 we're going type 'this' as the first argument, comma space getString, then parentheses R.string dot 117 00:10:19,770 --> 00:10:26,440 GOOGLE_API_KEY closing parentheses comma YOUTUBE VIDEO_ID, or YOUTUBE_VIDEO 118 00:10:26,440 --> 00:10:33,140 _ID, then add our right, our closing parentheses. Alright so that's the first one. 119 00:10:33,240 --> 00:10:36,240 Second one, we're going to do something very similar but this time for a playlist, 120 00:10:36,250 --> 00:10:44,560 R.id.btnPlaylist arrow token, it's going to be YouTubeStandalonePlayer 121 00:10:44,780 --> 00:10:54,080 dot, this time it's createPlaylistIntent, parentheses, and we'll start with this on the first line, comma space, and we'll 122 00:10:54,090 --> 00:10:58,910 do you a get string again, parentheses R.string dot 123 00:10:59,130 --> 00:11:02,730 GOOGLE_API_KEY again, parentheses comma space. 124 00:11:02,740 --> 00:11:09,090 And then we'll do a YOUTUBE_PLAYLIST this time, YOUTUBE_PLAYIST in that line there, and then we're just going to add an else, 125 00:11:09,430 --> 00:11:12,780 basically right down here, else arrow token again, and 126 00:11:12,780 --> 00:11:24,840 we're going to throw IllegalArgumentException, and we'll put "Undefined button clicked". OK, then outside of 127 00:11:24,840 --> 00:11:32,520 that code block we're going to put startActivity intent. Alright so to start an activity, 128 00:11:32,520 --> 00:11:36,710 we use the start activity function and we pass it something called an intent. 129 00:11:36,870 --> 00:11:42,570 So the code checks to see which button was tapped to call the onClick function, then sets the data for 130 00:11:42,570 --> 00:11:44,880 an intent before calling startActivity. 131 00:11:44,880 --> 00:11:50,220 Now we can use the playlist ID that we got earlier to play the playlist, and the video ID that we've 132 00:11:50,340 --> 00:11:53,920 already defined in the YouTubeActivity class, to play a single video. 133 00:11:53,940 --> 00:11:57,760 In both cases, we need to pass and use our Google API key, 134 00:11:58,290 --> 00:12:05,160 and if you recall, both the ID's were declared as top level constants in YouTubeActivity, which means 135 00:12:05,160 --> 00:12:08,430 we can use them without having to qualify them with a YouTubeActivity class name. 136 00:12:08,440 --> 00:12:12,420 So in other words we added the definition above the class definition. 137 00:12:12,420 --> 00:12:16,290 Now once you know what an intent is, the code's fairly easy to understand. 138 00:12:16,330 --> 00:12:20,110 So let's actually have a look at the Google documentation for intents. 139 00:12:20,430 --> 00:12:24,630 Alright, so we need to know a bit more about what an intent is, because once we actually figure that out you'll 140 00:12:24,630 --> 00:12:27,280 find the code is pretty straightforward to understand. 141 00:12:27,310 --> 00:12:29,160 So let's work on that in the next video.