URI associations in Windows Phone 8

published on: 03/01/2020

by WindowsPhoneGeek

The Windows Phone 8 SDK comes with a new URI and File associations feature that allows you to (1) launch files and URIs from your app and (2) register file and URI associations for your app. This little gem in the SDK allows developers to launch other apps and even pass parameters when they do that. The experience for the user is similar to other platforms - when a file or URI is launched, if more than one app is registered for it, the user will be asked which app he wants to use. If an app causes the user to make such a choice frequently, he may choose to uninstall the app. This is why you must only register file and URI associations for your app if you can do something useful.

This article will show you how to launch apps using URIs and how to register an URI association for your app and handle the launch requests.

URI format

The most important thing you should know about the URI format is that it must begin with the URI schema name that the app you want to launch has registered (in our case this is the "winphonegeek" name that is registered in the manifest). The schema name is followed by ":" and the rest of the URI can be whatever you want to pass to the launched app. Here is an example:

"winphonegeek:?param1=value1¶m2=value2"

Or if you want to navigate for example to the built inWi-Fi settings, without passing any parameters:

"ms-settings-wifi:"

When the app is launched, the URI that it will receive will look like this:

"/Protocol?encodedLaunchUri=winphonegeek:?param1=value1¶m2=value2"

Launching apps using URI associations

Now that we know how to create URIs for launching apps, we will create a sample application that launches different built-in apps like for example the location settings, Wi-Fi settings, lock screen settings, the Wallet, etc. We will also demonstrate how the app can launch itself (or any other app).

We will create an UriCommand class, which we will use to create a list of URI commands and display them in list:

public class UriCommand { public string Title { get; set; } public string Uri { get; set; } public string ImageUri {get;set;} }

Now, let's create a list of URI commands to be displayed in the list control. Note that each UriCommand object has a different URI:

public IEnumerable<UriCommand> GetUriCommandList() { return new List<UriCommand>() { new UriCommand() { Title = "This app", ImageUri = "/Images/logo.png", Uri = "winphonegeek:?param1=value1&param2=value2" }, new UriCommand() { Title = "Location settings", ImageUri = "/Images/location.png", Uri = "ms-settings-location:" }, new UriCommand() { Title = "WiFi settings", ImageUri = "/Images/wifi.png", Uri="ms-settings-wifi:" }, new UriCommand() { Title = "Lock settings", ImageUri = "/Images/lock.png", Uri = "ms-settings-lock:" }, new UriCommand() { Title = "Wallet", ImageUri = "/Images/wallet.png", Uri = "wallet:" } }; }

We will now create a ListBox control in MainPage.xaml to display our list of URI commands with a Launch button for each of them:

<ListBox x:Name="lbUriCommands"> <ListBox.ItemTemplate> <DataTemplate> <StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal"> <Rectangle Width="70" Height="70" Fill="{StaticResource PhoneForegroundBrush}"> <Rectangle.OpacityMask> <ImageBrush ImageSource="{Binding ImageUri}" Stretch="Fill" /> </Rectangle.OpacityMask> </Rectangle> <TextBlock Text="{Binding Title}" VerticalAlignment="Center" Style="{StaticResource PhoneTextTitle2Style}" /> <Button Content="Launch" Click="Button_Click" /> </StackPanel> </DataTemplate> </ListBox.ItemTemplate> </ListBox>

We can now set the ItemsSource for the list box control in the MainPage constructor like this:

this.lbUriCommands.ItemsSource = this.GetUriCommandList();

Finally, let'sadd the following code inside theLaunch button Click event handler, which actually launches the selected URI using the Launcher.LaunchUriAsync method:

private void Button_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e) { Button button = sender as Button; if (button == null) { return; } UriCommand uriCommand = button.DataContext as UriCommand; if (uriCommand != null) { try { Launcher.LaunchUriAsync(new Uri(uriCommand.Uri)); } catch (Exception ex) { MessageBox.Show(ex.Message); } } }

If you now launch the app you should see one of these:

NOTE: We have used an OpacityMask in order to make sure that the images are displayed correctly in both the dark and light themes. More about working with OpacityMask you can find here: Creating theme friendly UI in WP7 using OpacityMask

You should now be able to play with the app and launch some of the built-in settings apps:

Registering for URI associations

In order to register an URI association you will have toinclude a Protocol element inside the Extensions section in theWMAppManifest.xmlfile:

<Extensions> <Protocol Name="winphonegeek" NavUriFragment="encodedLaunchUri=%s" TaskID="_default" /> </Extensions>

Here is the meaning of the attributes of the Protocol element:

Name: the prefix that you use for your URI schema

NavUriFragment: must always be set toencodedLaunchUri=%s

TaskID: Must always be set to _default

Note that you can register a maximum of 10 (ten) URI associations per app.

Now that you have registered an URI association for the app, you have to write some code to handle the launch requests. You do that by implementing an URI mapper. For this article we have implemented theAssociationUriMapperclass which knows how to handle URIs with the winphonegeek schema name. Here is the code:

public class AssociationUriMapper : UriMapperBase { public override Uri MapUri(Uri uri) { string uriString = System.Net.HttpUtility.UrlDecode(uri.ToString()); if (uriString.StartsWith("/Protocol")) { return this.HandleUriAssociation(uriString); } else if (uriString.StartsWith("/FileTypeAssociation")) { return this.HandleFileAssociation(uriString); } // if this is not an uri that we can handle, return original uri return uri; } private Uri HandleUriAssociation(string uriString) { int uriStartIndex = uriString.IndexOf("winphonegeek:"); if (uriStartIndex < 0) { // this is not an URI that we can handle return new Uri("/MainPage.xaml", UriKind.Relative); } // get the query string after the winphonegeek: schema int queryStartIndex = uriString.IndexOf("?", uriStartIndex); string newUri = "/UriTestPage.xaml"; if (queryStartIndex > -1) { string query = uriString.Substring(queryStartIndex); newUri += query; } // redirect all requests with the winphonegeek: schema to /UriTestPage.xaml return new Uri(newUri, UriKind.Relative); } public static readonly string FileTokenKey = "fileToken"; private Uri HandleFileAssociation(string uriString) { } }

Note: UriTestPage.xaml is a sample page in our application project. Our AssociationUriMapperworks by redirecting all launch requests coming from an URI association (starting with /Protocol) to that page, together with any query string parameters. You have probably, noticed the empty HandleFileAssociation method. This is where we will put the code that processes file association URIs later.

Next, you have to tell your app to use the URI mapper by assigning an instance of it to the UriMapper property of the RootFrame. You do that in theInitializePhoneApplicationmethod in App.xaml.cs as shown in the following code snippet:

private void InitializePhoneApplication() { if (phoneApplicationInitialized) return; RootFrame = new PhoneApplicationFrame(); // set an uri mapper that can handle uri associations RootFrame.UriMapper = new AssociationUriMapper(); //.. }

Finally, in the OnNavigatedTo method of the UriTestPage class, we will show any query string parameters that we have received in a list box:

protected override void OnNavigatedTo(NavigationEventArgs e) { base.OnNavigatedTo(e); List<string> queryParams = new List<string>(); foreach (KeyValuePair<string, string> param in this.NavigationContext.QueryString) { queryParams.Add(string.Format("key: {0}, value: {0}", param.Key, param.Value)); } this.lbQueryParams.ItemsSource = queryParams; }

For the sake of completeness, here is how the ListBox control is defined in UriTestPage.xaml:

<!--ContentPanel - place additional content here--> <Grid x:Name="ContentPanel" Grid.Row="1" Margin="12,0,12,0"> <ListBox x:Name="lbQueryParams" /> </Grid>

If you now launch the app using the URI association you should see this:

Conclusion

URI associations in Windows Phone 8 allow you not only to launch other apps, including built-in ones, but also to accept launch requests from other apps. However, you must be careful when registering for URI associations and make sure that your app does something useful with them. Stay tuned for the next article "File associations in Windows Phone 8".

NOTE: This article is a part of the FREE WindowsPhoneGeek Magazine. You can download the magazine as well as the hefull source code here: http://windowsphonegeek.com/magazine

You can also follow us on Twitter: @winphonegeek for Windows Phone; @winrtgeek for Windows 8 / WinRT

Comments