PrintManager
  public
  
  final
  
  class
  PrintManager
  
    extends Object
  
  
  
  
  
  
| java.lang.Object | |
| ↳ | android.print.PrintManager | 
System level service for accessing the printing capabilities of the platform.
Print mechanics
 The key idea behind printing on the platform is that the content to be printed
 should be laid out for the currently selected print options resulting in an
 optimized output and higher user satisfaction. To achieve this goal the platform
 declares a contract that the printing application has to follow which is defined
 by the PrintDocumentAdapter class. At a higher level the contract is that
 when the user selects some options from the print UI that may affect the way
 content is laid out, for example page size, the application receives a callback
 allowing it to layout the content to better fit these new constraints. After a
 layout pass the system may ask the application to render one or more pages one
 or more times. For example, an application may produce a single column list for
 smaller page sizes and a multi-column table for larger page sizes.
 
Print jobs
 Print jobs are started by calling the print(java.lang.String, android.print.PrintDocumentAdapter, android.print.PrintAttributes) from an activity which results in bringing up the system print
 UI. Once the print UI is up, when the user changes a selected print option that
 affects the way content is laid out the system starts to interact with the
 application following the mechanics described the section above.
 
 Print jobs can be in created, queued, started,
 blocked, completed, failed, and canceled state. Print jobs are stored in dedicated
 system spooler until they are handled which is they are cancelled or completed.
 Active print jobs, ones that are not cancelled or completed, are considered failed
 if the device reboots as the new boot may be after a very long time. The user may
 choose to restart such print jobs. Once a print job is queued all relevant content
 is stored in the system spooler and its lifecycle becomes detached from this of
 the application that created it.
 
An applications can query the print spooler for current print jobs it created but not print jobs created by other applications.
Requires the
PackageManager#FEATURE_PRINTING feature which can be detected using PackageManager.hasSystemFeature(String).
  See also:
Summary
| Public methods | |
|---|---|
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        List<PrintJob> | 
      getPrintJobs()
      Gets the print jobs for this application. | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        boolean | 
      isPrintServiceEnabled(ComponentName service)
      Checks whether a given print service is enabled. | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        
        PrintJob | 
      print(String printJobName, PrintDocumentAdapter documentAdapter, PrintAttributes attributes)
      Creates a print job for printing a  | 
| Inherited methods | |
|---|---|
Public methods
getPrintJobs
public List<PrintJob> getPrintJobs ()
Gets the print jobs for this application.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| List<PrintJob> | The print job list.
 This value cannot be null. | 
See also:
isPrintServiceEnabled
public boolean isPrintServiceEnabled (ComponentName service)
Checks whether a given print service is enabled. The provided service must share UID
 with the calling package, otherwise a SecurityException is thrown.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| service | ComponentName: This value cannot benull. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | true if the given print service is enabled | 
public PrintJob print (String printJobName, PrintDocumentAdapter documentAdapter, PrintAttributes attributes)
Creates a print job for printing a PrintDocumentAdapter with
 default print attributes.
 
 Calling this method brings the print UI allowing the user to customize
 the print job and returns a PrintJob object without waiting for the
 user to customize or confirm the print job. The returned print job instance
 is in a created state.
 
 This method can be called only from an Activity. The rationale is that
 printing from a service will create an inconsistent user experience as the print
 UI would appear without any context.
 
 Also the passed in PrintDocumentAdapter will be considered invalid if
 your activity is finished. The rationale is that once the activity that
 initiated printing is finished, the provided adapter may be in an inconsistent
 state as it may depend on the UI presented by the activity.
 
The default print attributes are a hint to the system how the data is to be printed. For example, a photo editor may look at the photo aspect ratio to determine the default orientation and provide a hint whether the printing should be in portrait or landscape. The system will do a best effort to selected the hinted options in the print dialog, given the current printer supports them.
 Note: Calling this method will bring the print dialog and
 the system will connect to the provided PrintDocumentAdapter. If a
 configuration change occurs that you application does not handle, for example
 a rotation change, the system will drop the connection to the adapter as the
 activity has to be recreated and the old adapter may be invalid in this context,
 hence a new adapter instance is required. As a consequence, if your activity
 does not handle configuration changes (default behavior), you have to save the
 state that you were printing and call this method again when your activity
 is recreated.
 
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| printJobName | String: A name for the new print job which is shown to the user.
 This value cannot benull. | 
| documentAdapter | PrintDocumentAdapter: An adapter that emits the document to print.
 This value cannot benull. | 
| attributes | PrintAttributes: The default print job attributes ornull. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| PrintJob | The created print job on success or null on failure. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalStateException | If not called from an Activity. | 
| IllegalArgumentException | If the print job name is empty or the document adapter is null. | 
See also:
