Receive rich content

Figure 1. The unified API provides a single place to handle incoming content regardless of the specific UI mechanism, such as pasting from the touch & hold menu or using drag-and-drop.

Users love images, videos, and other expressive content, but inserting and moving this content in apps isn't always easy. To make it simpler for apps to receive rich content, Android 12 (API level 31) introduces a unified API that lets your app accept content from any source: clipboard, keyboard, or dragging.

You can attach an interface, such as OnReceiveContentListener, to UI components and get a callback when content is inserted through any mechanism. The callback becomes the single place for your code to handle receiving all content, from plain and styled text to markup, images, videos, audio files, and others.

For backward compatibility with previous Android versions, this API is also available in AndroidX, starting from Core 1.7 and Appcompat 1.4, which we recommend you use when implementing this functionality.

Overview

With other existing APIs, each UI mechanism—such as the touch & hold menu or dragging—has its own corresponding API. This means that you have to integrate with each API separately, adding similar code for each mechanism that inserts content:

An image showing the different actions and the relative API to implement
Figure 2. Previously, apps implemented a different API for each UI mechanism for inserting content.

The OnReceiveContentListener API consolidates these different code paths by creating a single API to implement, so you can focus on your app-specific logic and let the platform handle the rest:

An image showing the simplified unified API
Figure 3. The unified API lets you implement a single API that supports all UI mechanisms.

This approach also means that when new ways of inserting content are added to the platform, you don't need to make additional code changes to enable support in your app. And if your app needs to implement full customization for a particular use case, you can still use the existing APIs, which continue to work the same way.

Implementation

The API is a listener interface with a single method, OnReceiveContentListener. To support older versions of the Android platform, we recommend using the matching OnReceiveContentListener interface in the AndroidX Core library.

To use the API, implement the listener by specifying what types of content your app can handle:

Kotlin

object MyReceiver : OnReceiveContentListener {
    val MIME_TYPES = arrayOf("image/*", "video/*")
    
    // ...
    
    override fun onReceiveContent(view: View, payload: ContentInfoCompat): ContentInfoCompat? {
        TODO("Not yet implemented")
    }
}

Java

public class MyReceiver implements OnReceiveContentListener {
     public static final String[] MIME_TYPES = new String[] {"image/*", "video/*"};
     // ...
}

After specifying all the content MIME types that your app supports, implement the rest of the listener:

Kotlin

class MyReceiver : OnReceiveContentListener {
    override fun onReceiveContent(view: View, contentInfo: ContentInfoCompat): ContentInfoCompat {
        val split = contentInfo.partition { item: ClipData.Item -> item.uri != null }
        val uriContent = split.first
        val remaining = split.second
        if (uriContent != null) {
            // App-specific logic to handle the URI(s) in uriContent.
        }
        // Return anything that your app didn't handle. This preserves the
        // default platform behavior for text and anything else that you aren't
        // implementing custom handling for.
        return remaining
    }

    companion object {
        val MIME_TYPES = arrayOf("image/*", "video/*")
    }
}

Java

 public class MyReceiver implements OnReceiveContentListener {
     public static final String[] MIME_TYPES = new String[] {"image/*", "video/*"};

     @Override
     public ContentInfoCompat onReceiveContent(View view, ContentInfoCompat contentInfo) {
         Pair<ContentInfoCompat, ContentInfoCompat> split = contentInfo.partition(
                 item -> item.getUri() != null);
         ContentInfo uriContent = split.first;
         ContentInfo remaining = split.second;
         if (uriContent != null) {
             // App-specific logic to handle the URI(s) in uriContent.
         }
         // Return anything that your app didn't handle. This preserves the
         // default platform behavior for text and anything else that you aren't
         // implementing custom handling for.
         return remaining;
     }
 }

If your app already supports sharing with intents, you can reuse your app-specific logic for handling content URIs. Return any remaining data to delegate handling of that data to the platform.

After implementing the listener, set it on the appropriate UI elements in your app:

Kotlin

class MyActivity : Activity() {
    public override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState)
        // ...
        val myInput = findViewById(R.id.my_input)
        ViewCompat.setOnReceiveContentListener(myInput, MyReceiver.MIME_TYPES, MyReceiver())
    }
}

Java

public class MyActivity extends Activity {
     @Override
     public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
         // ...

         AppCompatEditText myInput = findViewById(R.id.my_input);
         ViewCompat.setOnReceiveContentListener(myInput, MyReceiver.MIME_TYPES, new MyReceiver());
     }
}

URI permissions

Read permissions are granted and released automatically by the platform for any content URIs in the payload passed to the OnReceiveContentListener.

Normally, your app processes content URIs in a service or activity. For long-running processing, use WorkManager. When you implement this, extend permissions to the target service or activity by passing the content using Intent.setClipData and setting the flag FLAG_GRANT_READ_URI_PERMISSION.

Alternatively, you can use a background thread within the current context to process the content. In this case, you must maintain a reference to the payload object received by the listener to help ensure that permissions aren't revoked prematurely by the platform.

Custom views

If your app uses a custom View subclass, take care to ensure that the OnReceiveContentListener isn't bypassed.

If your View class overrides the onCreateInputConnection method, use the Jetpack API InputConnectionCompat.createWrapper to configure the InputConnection.

If your View class overrides the onTextContextMenuItem method, delegate to super when the menu item is R.id.paste or R.id.pasteAsPlainText.

Comparison with the keyboard image API

You can think of the OnReceiveContentListener API as the next version of the existing keyboard image API. This unified API supports the functionality of the keyboard image API as well as some additional features. Device and feature compatibility varies depending on whether you use the Jetpack library or the native APIs from the Android SDK.

Table 1. Supported features and API levels for Jetpack.
Action or feature Supported by keyboard image API Supported by unified API
Insert from the keyboard Yes (API level 13 and higher) Yes (API level 13 and higher)
Insert using paste from the touch & hold menu No Yes
Insert using drag-and-drop No Yes (API level 24 and higher)
Table 2. Supported features and API levels for native APIs.
Action or feature Supported by keyboard image API Supported by unified API
Insert from the keyboard Yes (API level 25 and higher) Yes (Android 12 and higher)
Insert using paste from the touch & hold menu No
Insert using drag and drop No