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What is the difference between shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale and requestPermissions?

I am building an app that requires user location. I am following the Android training documentation from here which says:

shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale return the boolean indicating whether or not we should show UI with rationale for requesting a permission (dangerous permission, ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION)

Now in this code (taken from the documentation itself) :

if (ContextCompat.checkSelfPermission(thisActivity,
                Manifest.permission.READ_CONTACTS)
        != PackageManager.PERMISSION_GRANTED) {

    // Should we show an explanation?
    if (ActivityCompat.shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale(thisActivity,
            Manifest.permission.READ_CONTACTS)) {

        // Show an explanation to the user *asynchronously* -- don't block
        // this thread waiting for the user's response! After the user
        // sees the explanation, try again to request the permission.

    } else {

        // No explanation needed, we can request the permission.

        ActivityCompat.requestPermissions(thisActivity,
                new String[]{Manifest.permission.READ_CONTACTS},
                MY_PERMISSIONS_REQUEST_READ_CONTACTS);

        // MY_PERMISSIONS_REQUEST_READ_CONTACTS is an
        // app-defined int constant. The callback method gets the
        // result of the request.
    }
}

[MY DOUBT] Shouldn't this part of code (below)

ActivityCompat.requestPermissions(thisActivity,
                new String[]{Manifest.permission.READ_CONTACTS},
                MY_PERMISSIONS_REQUEST_READ_CONTACTS);

be inside the 'if' condition here..

 if (ActivityCompat.shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale(thisActivity,
            Manifest.permission.READ_CONTACTS)) {
    //HERE .....

}

I mean, if

ActivityCompat.shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale(thisActivity, Manifest.permission.READ_CONTACTS)   

is true, then we need to show the UI and we will show the UI by

ActivityCompat.requestPermissions(thisActivity,
    newString[{Manifest.permission.READ_CONTACTS}, MY_PERMISSIONS_REQUEST_READ_CONTACTS);

Please explain where I am mistaken. I am stuck here. Thanks in advance. An example would be much appreciated.

Note: Of course, I am running my app on Android M, and my target sdk is >=23.

like image 839
Sumit Jha Avatar asked Dec 24 '16 05:12

Sumit Jha


People also ask

What is shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale?

shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale( @NonNull Activity activity, @NonNull String permission. ) Gets whether you should show UI with rationale before requesting a permission.

What is ActivityCompat?

A helper for accessing features in Activity in a backwards compatible fashion. Construct this by using getActivityCompat(Activity) . This helper augments the included methods with data on instant apps.

How do I check if permission is granted Android?

To check if the user has already granted your app a particular permission, pass that permission into the ContextCompat. checkSelfPermission() method. This method returns either PERMISSION_GRANTED or PERMISSION_DENIED , depending on whether your app has the permission.

How do I ask for multiple permissions on Android?

In case one or more permissions are not granted, ActivityCompat. requestPermissions() will request permissions and the control goes to onRequestPermissionsResult() callback method. You should check the value of shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale() flag in onRequestPermissionsResult() callback method.


3 Answers

As per the documentation,

shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale return the boolean indicating whether >or not we should show UI with rationale for requesting a permission.

This UI is our custom UI (we can show an alertdialog, for example), NOT the dialog that our device shows (see below):

Allow SnazzyApp to access your contacts ? //this is NOT our custom UI

With this in mind, now

The return value of shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale is as shown in flowchart. enter image description here

Also note that,

When that user "denies"  your permission by CHECKING "never ask again", ``shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale`` would still return ``false``. 

Thus, to summarize

  • shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale will return true only if the application was launched earlier and the user "denied" the permission WITHOUT checking "never ask again".
  • In other cases (app launched first time, or the app launched earlier too and the user denied permission by checking "never ask again"), the return value is false.

Implementation

Let's create a PermissionUtils.java file which handles the different cases for us.

public class PermissionUtils {

    private static final String TAG = "PermissionUtils";

    /*
        Inside this shared_preference file, we will just store information
        about whether the user had visited our app earlier or not.
    */

    private static final String PREFS_FILE_NAME = "preference_permission";
    private static final String PREFS_FIRST_TIME_KEY = "is_app_launched_first_time";


    //an interface containing 5 methods
    //...the scenario in which these callback will be called is written below each method declaration.
    public interface PermissionAskListener {


        void onPermissionGranted();
        /*
            User has already granted this permission
            The app must had been launched earlier and the user must had "allowed" that permission
         */


        void onPermissionRequest();
        /*
            The app is launched FIRST TIME..
            We don't need to show additional dialog, we just request for the permission..

         */


        void onPermissionPreviouslyDenied();
        /*
            The app was launched earlier and the user simply "denied" the permission..
            The user had NOT clicked "DO NOT SHOW AGAIN"
            We need to show additional dialog in this case explaining how "allowing this permission" would be useful to the user
         */


        void onPermissionDisabled();
        /*
            The app had launched earlier and the user "denied" the permission..
            AND ALSO had clicked "DO NOT ASK AGAIN"
            We need to show Toask/alertdialog/.. to indicate that the user had denied the permission by checking do not disturb too...
            So, you might want to take the user to setting>app>permission page where the user can allow the permission..


         */

    }

    // preference utility methods
    private static boolean getApplicationLaunchedFirstTime(Activity activity) {
        SharedPreferences sharedPreferences = activity.getSharedPreferences(PREFS_FILE_NAME, MODE_PRIVATE);
        return sharedPreferences.getBoolean(PREFS_FIRST_TIME_KEY, true);
    }

    private static void setApplicationLaunchedFirstTime(Activity activity) {
        SharedPreferences sharedPreferences = activity.getSharedPreferences(PREFS_FILE_NAME, MODE_PRIVATE);
        SharedPreferences.Editor editor = sharedPreferences.edit();
        editor.putBoolean(PREFS_FIRST_TIME_KEY, false);
        editor.commit();
    }


    private static boolean isRuntimePermissionRequired() {
        return (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= 23);
    }

    public static void checkPermission(Activity activity, String permission, PermissionAskListener permissionAskListener) {

        Log.d(TAG, "checkPermission");


        if (!isRuntimePermissionRequired()) {
            /*
                Runtime permission not required,
                THE DEVICE IS RUNNING ON < 23, So, no runtime permission required..
                Simply call **** permissionAskListener.onPermissionGranted() ****
             */


            permissionAskListener.onPermissionGranted();
        } else {
            //runtime permission required here...

            //check if the permission is already granted, i.e the application was launched earlier too, and the user had "allowed" the permission then.
            if (ContextCompat.checkSelfPermission(activity, permission) != PackageManager.PERMISSION_GRANTED) {
                /* We don't have permission, two cases arise:
                     1. App launched first time, 
                     2. App launched earlier too, and the user had denied the permission is last launch
                           2A. The user denied permission earlier WITHOUT checking "Never ask again"
                           2B. The user denied permission earlier WITH checking "Never ask again"
                */

                if (ActivityCompat.shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale(activity, permission)) {

                    /* 
                       shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale returned true
                       this means Case: 2A
                       see the flowchart, the only case when shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale returns "true", is when the application was launched earlier too and the user had "denied" the permission in last launch WITHOUT checking "never show again"
                    */

                    permissionAskListener.onPermissionPreviouslyDenied();
                } else {
                    /*  
                         this means, either - 
                         Case: 1 or Case 2B
                         See Flowchart, shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale returns false, only when app is launched first time (Case: 1) or app was launched earlier too and user HAD checked "Never show again" then (Case: 2B)
                    */
                    if (getApplicationLaunchedFirstTime(activity)) {

                        //Case: 1
                        Log.d(TAG, "ApplicationLaunchedFirstTime");

                        setApplicationLaunchedFirstTime(activity);  //  ** DON'T FORGET THIS **
                        permissionAskListener.onPermissionRequest();

                    } else {
                        //Case: 2B
                        Log.d(TAG, "onPermissionDisabled");

                        permissionAskListener.onPermissionDisabled();
                    }
                }


            } else {
                Log.d(TAG, "Permission already granted");

                permissionAskListener.onPermissionGranted();
            }
        }
    }
}

Logic

  1. We first begin by checking do we even require runtime permission in the first place ? This is done by :

    if (!isRuntimePermissionRequired()) {...}
    
  2. If we do require runtime permission, then we check if we had got that permission already earlier by

    ContextCompat.checkSelfPermission(activity, permission) != PackageManager.PERMISSION_GRANTED)
    
  3. If we don't have the permission, then we need to handle two cases which are:

    1. App launched first time, 
    2. App launched earlier too, and the user had denied the permission is last launch                  
        2A. The user denied permission earlier WITHOUT checking "Never ask again".
        2B. The user denied permission earlier WITH checking "Never ask again".
    

Thus, the bottomline is:

Inside our PermissionUtils.java, we have an defined an interface which contains 5 abstract methods. These methods are the callbacks which will be called in different cases as discussed above.

Finally inside our activity, we handle all these cases by implementing the callbacks of the listener.

    PermissionUtils.checkPermission(MainActivity.this,
            Manifest.permission.ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION,
            new PermissionUtils.PermissionAskListener() {
                @Override
                public void onPermissionGranted() {
                    updateUI();

                }

                @Override
                public void onPermissionRequest() {

                    ActivityCompat.requestPermissions(MainActivity.this,
                            new String[]{Manifest.permission.ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION},
                            My_PERMISSION_ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION);


                }

                @Override
                public void onPermissionPreviouslyDenied() {

                    //Show an alert message and "request the permission" in its "setPositiveButton"
                    //...and in "setOnNegativeButton", just cancel the dialog and do not run the
                    //...functionality that requires this permission (here, ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION)
                    new AlertDialog.Builder(MainActivity.this)
                            .setTitle("Permission required")
                            .setMessage("Location is required for this application to work ! ")
                            .setPositiveButton("Allow", new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
                                @Override
                                public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int which) {
                                    ActivityCompat.requestPermissions(MainActivity.this,
                                            new String[]{Manifest.permission.ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION},
                                            My_PERMISSION_ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION);


                                }

                            })
                            .setNegativeButton("Cancel", new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
                                @Override
                                public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int which) {
                                    dialog.cancel();
                                    finish();
                                }
                            })
                            .show();


                }

                @Override
                public void onPermissionDisabled() {



                    new AlertDialog.Builder(MainActivity.this)
                            .setTitle("Permission Disabled")
                            .setMessage("Please enable the permission in \n  Settings>Uber>Permission \n and check 'location' permission")
                            .setPositiveButton("Go to settings", new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
                                @Override
                                public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int which) {
                                    startActivity(new Intent(Settings.ACTION_SETTINGS));


                                }

                            })
                            .setNegativeButton("Cancel", new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
                                @Override
                                public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int which) {
                                    dialog.cancel();
                                    finish();
                                }
                            })
                            .show();


                }
            });


}

Hope this helps.

like image 153
Sumit Jha Avatar answered Oct 20 '22 17:10

Sumit Jha


Another option is to use EasyPermissions which was provided by Google itself, to, as said, "Simplify Android M system permissions". Then you don't have to call shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale directly.

Then you don't have to call shouldShowRequestPermissionRationale or handle its return value directly.

like image 3
Wei WANG Avatar answered Oct 20 '22 17:10

Wei WANG


There are two stages in requesting a permission - showing a rationale and then actually asking for permissions.

They will normally manifest as two separate dialogs shown in sequence:

  1. A dialog that simply contains text giving the user the reason (rationale) why the permission needed
  2. A dialog that actually asks for the permission. Which looks like the image below: image of permissions dialog
    (source: android.com)

So the code in the documentation is correct. The logic is:

if we need to show a rationale:
    show the rationale dialog
otherwise:
    just ask for permissions to be granted without showing the rationale dialog
like image 2
David Rawson Avatar answered Oct 20 '22 18:10

David Rawson