45
votes

I'm trying to integrate posting to one's wall from within my app. I already have an area where the user can save his/her username and password (encrypted). I would like my program to recall the saved username and password, pass that to Facebook for authentication, and then allow the app to post simple text (maybe a link too) to the user's wall.

That said, I've read everything on the developer pages at Facebook (the api looks completely foreign to me... I've never done any type of web app development before... just desktop apps), and experimented with the Java libraries here but to be honest, I don't understand any of the various implementations. Some claim to be simple to use, but apparently they are all way above my head.

I've even tried messing with the official Facebook Android SDK, but that uses a webview interface, and I can't pass in the username and password for easy authentication. Plus, I'm still clueless as to how to post to the wall even after correct authentication.

Please help. Thanks.

Oh, btw I already have a Facebook API key and Application ID.

[UPDATE 1]

For further clarification: If I use the following code snippet with the official Facebook Android SDK http://github.com/facebook/facebook-android-sdk what should I do next (after the user has logged-in)? This is unclear to me.

Facebook facebookClient = new Facebook();
facebookClient.authorize(this, "[APP ID]", new String[] {"publish_stream", "read_stream", "offline_access"}, this);

where "this" is an Activity that implements a DialogListener, and "[APP ID]" is my Facebook application ID.

Thanks.

[UPDATE 2]

I found a solution (see below), though the only thing missing is the ability to auto-populate the login text boxes with the data I have stored in the app. The official Facebook Android SDK may not allow for this. I'll keep looking into it.

4
I have not found a way to do this status update "in the background", without displaying a dialog. I've tried using the Graph API directly with the access_token provided by the SDK for Android, and it just won't work. No exceptions however.Chris Stewart
I'm still getting it working, but the Single Sign-on option can login without username/password, if they already use facebook on their phone. It still requests authorization.HaMMeReD
Dude thanks a lot You saved my ass. I have got this thing working for tommorows demo. But still there are some things which i need in my facebook sharing :- - Can i post an image along with the text on the wall? - Can i link all the content of my post to my clients website? Except this i am happy i figured it outabhishek
I had a problem with RyanM solution. I recommend this one: integratingstuff.com/2010/10/14/… the string is immediately posted to the wall! And it uses the same, newest SDK from Facebook.Yar

4 Answers

44
votes

I figured it out, with Tom's help (thanks). The key was creating a dialog with the "stream.publish" API call, using the Facebook Android SDK. Here are the steps:

  1. Download the official Facebook Android SDK : http://github.com/facebook/facebook-android-sdk
  2. Import the project files into Eclipse.
  3. Export the project as a *.jar file. (this might cause a conflict)

    [UPDATE]

    Facebook recently updated the source code and I noticed the icon file caused resource id conflicts with my projects (Android 1.5+). My solution is to forget about exporting as a jar. Instead, copy the Facebook "com" folder directly into your app's "src" folder (i.e. "com.facebook.android" should be a package in your app... right alongside your source files). If you already have a "com" folder in your "src" folder, don't worry about any dialog boxes that appear about overwriting files, none of your source files should be overwritten. Go back into Eclipse, and refresh the "src" folder and "com.facebook.android" should now be listed as a package. Copy one of the included Facebook icons to your app's "drawable" folder and refresh that as well. Eclipse will complain about the "FbDialog.java" file... just add an import pointing to your app's "R" file to the header of that file (e.g. if your app's package name is "com.android.myapp," then add this: "import com.android.myapp.R;"). Go to #5 if you needed to do this.

  4. Add the .jar file to your project's build path

  5. Look at the following simplified example code:

import android.app.Activity;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.view.View;
import android.view.View.OnClickListener;
import android.widget.LinearLayout;
import com.facebook.android.*;
import com.facebook.android.Facebook.DialogListener;

public class FacebookActivity extends Activity implements DialogListener,
        OnClickListener
{

    private Facebook facebookClient;
    private LinearLayout facebookButton;

    @Override
    protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState)
    {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
        this.setContentView(R.layout.test);//my layout xml

        facebookButton = (LinearLayout)this.findViewById(R.id.Test_Facebook_Layout);

    }

    @Override
    public void onComplete(Bundle values)
    {

        if (values.isEmpty())
        {
            //"skip" clicked ?
            return;
        }

        // if facebookClient.authorize(...) was successful, this runs
        // this also runs after successful post
        // after posting, "post_id" is added to the values bundle
        // I use that to differentiate between a call from
        // faceBook.authorize(...) and a call from a successful post
        // is there a better way of doing this?
        if (!values.containsKey("post_id"))
        {
            try
            {
                Bundle parameters = new Bundle();
                parameters.putString("message", "this is a test");// the message to post to the wall
                facebookClient.dialog(this, "stream.publish", parameters, this);// "stream.publish" is an API call
            }
            catch (Exception e)
            {
                // TODO: handle exception
                System.out.println(e.getMessage());
            }
        }
    }

    @Override
    public void onError(DialogError e)
    {
        System.out.println("Error: " + e.getMessage());
    }

    @Override
    public void onFacebookError(FacebookError e)
    {
        System.out.println("Error: " + e.getMessage());
    }

    @Override
    public void onCancel()
    {
    }

    @Override
    public void onClick(View v)
    {
        if (v == facebookButton)
        {
            facebookClient = new Facebook();
            // replace APP_API_ID with your own
            facebookClient.authorize(this, APP_API_ID,
                new String[] {"publish_stream", "read_stream", "offline_access"}, this);
        }
    }
}

6
votes
AsyncFacebookRunner mAsyncRunner;
    Facebook    facebook =new Facebook("Your app id");

btnLogin.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {

            @Override
            public void onClick(View arg0) {
                // TODO Auto-generated method stub
                facebook.authorize(FbdemoActivity.this, new String[]{ "user_photos,publish_checkins,publish_actions,publish_stream"},new DialogListener() {
                    @Override
                    public void onComplete(Bundle values) {



                    }

                    @Override
                    public void onFacebookError(FacebookError error) {
                    }

                    @Override
                    public void onError(DialogError e) {
                    }

                    @Override
                    public void onCancel() {
                    }
                });

            }
        });

    public void postOnWall(String msg) {
            Log.d("Tests", "Testing graph API wall post");
             try {
                    String response = facebook.request("me");
                    Bundle parameters = new Bundle();
                    parameters.putString("message", msg);
                    parameters.putString("description", "test test test");
                    response = facebook.request("me/feed", parameters, 
                            "POST");
                    Log.d("Tests", "got response: " + response);
                    if (response == null || response.equals("") || 
                            response.equals("false")) {
                       Log.v("Error", "Blank response");
                   }
             } catch(Exception e) {
                 e.printStackTrace();
             }
1
votes

Here is an objective answer to your new question, "What do I do next?"

A quick look at the source code leads me to believe this is what you do:

Check this URL for the REST (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representational_State_Transfer) API methods you can use to leave a comment/post:

http://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/rest/

Specifically this: http://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/rest/links.post

Check out lines 171 through 295 of Facebook.java http://github.com/facebook/facebook-android-sdk/blob/master/facebook/src/com/facebook/android/Facebook.java

To see how to use the API to make these requests.

You'll probably want this method (it's overloaded, see the code).

        /**
* Make a request to Facebook's old (pre-graph) API with the given
* parameters. One of the parameter keys must be "method" and its value
* should be a valid REST server API method.
*
* See http://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/rest/
*
* Note that this method blocks waiting for a network response, so do not
* call it in a UI thread.
*
* Example:
* <code>
* Bundle parameters = new Bundle();
* parameters.putString("method", "auth.expireSession");
* String response = request(parameters);
* </code>
*
* @param parameters
* Key-value pairs of parameters to the request. Refer to the
* documentation: one of the parameters must be "method".
* @throws IOException
* if a network error occurs
* @throws MalformedURLException
* if accessing an invalid endpoint
* @throws IllegalArgumentException
* if one of the parameters is not "method"
* @return JSON string representation of the response
*/
    public String request(Bundle parameters) 
0
votes

To those who have problems, in the new facebook(); , the string is you App_id, and just delete the APP_ID in the authorized call.

Don't know why the error message is shown, but I guess that facebook updated the facebook SDK.