Ioniconf 2022 logo

Uniting our global community of Ionic developers and contributors. May 25, 2022.

DocsPluginsCLI

Custom Native Android Code

With Capacitor, you are encouraged to write Java or Kotlin code to implement the native features your app needs.

There may not be a Capacitor plugin for everything–and that’s okay! It is possible to write WebView-accessible native code right in your app.

WebView-Accessible Native Code

The easiest way to communicate between JavaScript and native code is to build a custom Capacitor plugin that is local to your app.

EchoPlugin.java

First, create a EchoPlugin.java file by opening Android Studio, expanding the app module and the java folder, right-clicking on your app’s Java package, selecting New -> Java Class from the context menu, and creating the file.

Android Studio app package

Copy the following Java code into EchoPlugin.java:

package com.example.myapp;

import com.getcapacitor.JSObject;
import com.getcapacitor.Plugin;
import com.getcapacitor.PluginCall;
import com.getcapacitor.PluginMethod;
import com.getcapacitor.annotation.CapacitorPlugin;

@CapacitorPlugin(name = "Echo")
public class EchoPlugin extends Plugin {

    @PluginMethod()
    public void echo(PluginCall call) {
        String value = call.getString("value");

        JSObject ret = new JSObject();
        ret.put("value", value);
        call.resolve(ret);
    }
}

Register the Plugin

We must register custom plugins on both Android and web so that Capacitor can bridge between Java and JavaScript.

MainActivity.java

In your app’s MainActivity.java, use registerPlugin() or registerPlugins() to register your custom plugin(s).

 public class MainActivity extends BridgeActivity {
     @Override
     public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
         super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
+        registerPlugin(EchoPlugin.class);
     }
 }

JavaScript

In JS, we use registerPlugin() from @capacitor/core to create an object which is linked to our Java plugin.

import { registerPlugin } from '@capacitor/core';

const Echo = registerPlugin('Echo');

export default Echo;

The first parameter to registerPlugin() is the plugin name, which must match the name attribute of our @CapacitorPlugin annotation in EchoPlugin.java.

TypeScript

We can define types on our linked object by defining an interface and using it in the call to registerPlugin().

 import { registerPlugin } from '@capacitor/core';

+export interface EchoPlugin {
+  echo(options: { value: string }): Promise<{ value: string }>;
+}

-const Echo = registerPlugin('Echo');
+const Echo = registerPlugin<EchoPlugin>('Echo');

 export default Echo;

The generic parameter of registerPlugin() is what defines the structure of the linked object. You can use registerPlugin<any>('Echo') to ignore types if you need to. No judgment. ❤️

Use the Plugin

Use the exported Echo object to call your plugin methods. The following snippet will call into Java on Android and print the result:

import Echo from '../path/to/echo-plugin';

const { value } = await Echo.echo({ value: 'Hello World!' });
console.log('Response from native:', value);

Next Steps

Read the Android Plugin Guide ›

Previous
<- Configuration
Next
Deploying to Google Play ->
Contribute ->