When you start an activity from a notification, you must preserve the user's expected navigation experience. Tapping the Back button must take the user back through the app's normal work flow to the Home screen, and opening the Recents screen must show the activity as a separate task. To preserve this navigation experience, start the activity in a fresh task.
The basic approach to set the tap behavior for your notification is described in
Create a basic
notification.
This page describes how to set up a
PendingIntent
for your
notification's action so it creates a fresh task and back
stack. How you do this
depends on which type of activity you're starting:
- Regular activity
- This is an activity that exists as a part of your app's normal UX flow. When the user arrives in the activity from the notification, the new task must include a complete back stack, letting the user tap the Back button to navigate up the app hierarchy.
- Special activity
- The user only sees this activity if it's started from a notification. In a sense, this activity extends the notification UI by providing information that is difficult to display in the notification itself. This activity doesn't need a back stack.
Set up a regular activity PendingIntent
To start a regular activity from your notification, set up the PendingIntent
using TaskStackBuilder
so that it creates a new back stack as follows.
Define your app's Activity hierarchy
Define the natural hierarchy for your activities by adding the
android:parentActivityName
attribute to each <activity>
element in your app manifest file. See the following example:
<activity android:name=".MainActivity" android:label="@string/app_name" > <intent-filter> <action android:name="android.intent.action.MAIN" /> <category android:name="android.intent.category.LAUNCHER" /> </intent-filter> </activity> <!-- MainActivity is the parent for ResultActivity. --> <activity android:name=".ResultActivity" android:parentActivityName=".MainActivity" /> ... </activity>
Build a PendingIntent with a back stack
To start an activity that includes a back stack of activities, create an
instance of TaskStackBuilder
and call
addNextIntentWithParentStack()
,
passing it the Intent
for the
activity you want to start.
As long as you define the parent activity for each activity as described
earlier, you can call
getPendingIntent()
to receive a PendingIntent
that includes the entire back stack.
Kotlin
// Create an Intent for the activity you want to start. val resultIntent = Intent(this, ResultActivity::class.java) // Create the TaskStackBuilder. val resultPendingIntent: PendingIntent? = TaskStackBuilder.create(this).run { // Add the intent, which inflates the back stack. addNextIntentWithParentStack(resultIntent) // Get the PendingIntent containing the entire back stack. getPendingIntent(0, PendingIntent.FLAG_UPDATE_CURRENT or PendingIntent.FLAG_IMMUTABLE) }
Java
// Create an Intent for the activity you want to start. Intent resultIntent = new Intent(this, ResultActivity.class); // Create the TaskStackBuilder and add the intent, which inflates the back // stack. TaskStackBuilder stackBuilder = TaskStackBuilder.create(this); stackBuilder.addNextIntentWithParentStack(resultIntent); // Get the PendingIntent containing the entire back stack. PendingIntent resultPendingIntent = stackBuilder.getPendingIntent(0, PendingIntent.FLAG_UPDATE_CURRENT | PendingIntent.FLAG_IMMUTABLE);
If necessary, you can add arguments to Intent
objects in the stack by calling
TaskStackBuilder.editIntentAt()
.
This is sometimes necessary to ensure that an activity in the back stack
displays meaningful data when the user navigates to it.
Then you can pass the PendingIntent
to the notification as usual:
Kotlin
val builder = NotificationCompat.Builder(this, CHANNEL_ID).apply { setContentIntent(resultPendingIntent) ... } with(NotificationManagerCompat.from(this)) { notify(NOTIFICATION_ID, builder.build()) }
Java
NotificationCompat.Builder builder = new NotificationCompat.Builder(this, CHANNEL_ID); builder.setContentIntent(resultPendingIntent); ... NotificationManagerCompat notificationManager = NotificationManagerCompat.from(this); notificationManager.notify(NOTIFICATION_ID, builder.build());
Set up a special activity PendingIntent
Because a special activity that starts from a notification doesn't need a back
stack, you can create the PendingIntent
by calling
getActivity()
.
However, define the appropriate task options in the manifest.
-
In your manifest, add the following attributes to the
<activity>
element.-
android:taskAffinity=""
-
Combined with the
FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK
flag that you use in code, set this attribute blank to ensure this activity doesn't go into the app's default task. Any existing tasks that have the app's default affinity aren't affected. -
android:excludeFromRecents="true"
- Excludes the new task from the Recents screen so that the user can't accidentally navigate back to it.
This is shown in the following example:
<activity android:name=".ResultActivity" android:launchMode="singleTask" android:taskAffinity="" android:excludeFromRecents="true"> </activity>
-
-
Build and issue the notification:
-
Create an
Intent
that starts theActivity
. -
Set the
Activity
to start in a new, empty task by callingsetFlags()
with the flagsFLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK
andFLAG_ACTIVITY_CLEAR_TASK
. -
Create a
PendingIntent
by callinggetActivity()
.
This is shown in the following example:
Kotlin
val notifyIntent = Intent(this, ResultActivity::class.java).apply { flags = Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK or Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_CLEAR_TASK } val notifyPendingIntent = PendingIntent.getActivity( this, 0, notifyIntent, PendingIntent.FLAG_UPDATE_CURRENT or PendingIntent.FLAG_IMMUTABLE )
Java
Intent notifyIntent = new Intent(this, ResultActivity.class); // Set the Activity to start in a new, empty task. notifyIntent.setFlags(Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK | Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_CLEAR_TASK); // Create the PendingIntent. PendingIntent notifyPendingIntent = PendingIntent.getActivity( this, 0, notifyIntent, PendingIntent.FLAG_UPDATE_CURRENT | PendingIntent.FLAG_IMMUTABLE );
-
Create an
- Pass the
PendingIntent
to the notification as usual:Kotlin
val builder = NotificationCompat.Builder(this, CHANNEL_ID).apply { setContentIntent(notifyPendingIntent) ... } with(NotificationManagerCompat.from(this)) { notify(NOTIFICATION_ID, builder.build()) }
Java
NotificationCompat.Builder builder = new NotificationCompat.Builder(this, CHANNEL_ID); builder.setContentIntent(notifyPendingIntent); ... NotificationManagerCompat notificationManager = NotificationManagerCompat.from(this); notificationManager.notify(NOTIFICATION_ID, builder.build());
For more information about the various task options and how the back stack works, see Tasks and the back stack.