Xamarin.Android Bindings for PSPDFKit v8.7.3
.
Note
Nutrient Xamarin SDK (formerly PSPDFKit Xamarin for iOS and PSPDFKit Xamarin for Android) is being sunset and replaced by Nutrient .NET for iOS and Nutrient .NET for Android. All Nutrient Xamarin licenses will remain valid and fully supported until 1 December 2025, or until your license expires, whichever occurs later. Interested in transitioning to another Nutrient product? Contact us and we’ll be happy to help.
The PSPDFKit SDK is a framework that allows you to view, annotate, sign, and fill PDF forms on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and Web.
PSPDFKit Instant adds real-time collaboration features to seamlessly share, edit, and annotate PDF documents.
- Xamarin.iOS Bindings for PSPDFKit for iOS: PSPDFKit/Xamarin-iOS
- Xamarin Bindings for PSPDFKit for Windows UWP: PSPDFKit/Xamarin-UWP
PSPDFKit offers support for customers with an active SDK license via https://pspdfkit.com/support/request/
Are you evaluating our SDK? That's great, we're happy to help out! To make sure this is fast, please use a work email and have someone from your company fill out our sales form: https://pspdfkit.com/sales/
PSPDFKit runs on Android devices running:
- Xamarin.Android >= 13.0.0.0
- Microsoft Mobile OpenJDK >= 11.0
- Android 4.4 or newer / API level 19 or higher
- 32/64-bit ARM (armeabi-v7a with NEON/ arm64-v8a) or 32/64-bit Intel x86 CPU.
- Projects using PSPDFKit.Android.dll must set Target Framework to API 31 (Android 12.0) or higher.
There's 2 ways to integrate PSPDFKit into your project. We highly recommend using our nuget packages from nuget.org in Visual Studio as it requires less work for the customer and also eliminates the possibility of build errors, which can happen from time to time.
- Right-Click on your project in Visual Studio and select "Manage Nuget Packages…"
- In the
Browse
section for "nuget.org" search for "PSPDFKit"
- Select the
PSPDFKit.Android
package. - Tap on "Add Package" to add the nuget package to your project.
Now you are done and can skip to Adding additional resources!
Run ./build.sh
(on macOS) or ./build.ps1
(on Windows, PowerShell) command from root directory. This will download all the required resources needed by the binding. Note that running this will require you to have Xamarin already installed on your computer.
💡 Note: Ensure the files are really named pspdfkit-x.x.x.aar
so there is no hidden .zip
file ending. OS X likes to add these things and doesn't show them by default. Use the Inspector to be sure.
Visual Studio will use the default Java, but this can be customized in Preferences -> SDK Locations -> Java SDK (JDK).
You have two options to get it:
- Open
PSPDFKit.Android.sln
inVisual Studio
. - Build the project.
- Get the dll from the
PSPDFKit.Android/bin
folder. - Enjoy.
- Just grab
PSPDFKit.Android.dll
from the root folder, if you successfuly followed Step 1 it should be there. - Enjoy.
In order to use PSPDFKit.Android.dll with your own project you will need to add the dll as a reference to your project. You can achieve this by doing the following:
- Right click in your References folder from your project and select Edit References...
- Select .Net Assembly tab and click Browse
- Locate your PSPDFKit.Android.dll copy and add it.
First you need to add the pspdfkit-proguard.cfg file to your project, see Xamarin Android and ProGuard section.
💡 Note: If you do not add the pspdfkit-proguard.cfg file to your project you will run into errors
Once you have done this you will need to add some NuGet packages to you project
- Xamarin.AndroidX.Legacy.Support.V4
- Xamarin.AndroidX.AppCompat
- Xamarin.AndroidX.RecyclerView
- Xamarin.AndroidX.CardView
- Xamarin.AndroidX.GridLayout
- Xamarin.AndroidX.Palette
- Xamarin.AndroidX.MultiDex
- Xamarin.AndroidX.Lifecycle.LiveData
- Xamarin.AndroidX.Browser
- Xamarin.Google.Android.Material
- Square.OkHttp3
- Xamarin.Kotlin.StdLib
- Xamarin.Android.ReactiveX.RxJava3.RxAndroid
- Xamarin.Android.ReactiveX.RxJava3.RxJava
If you need to know how to add NuGet packages to your Xamarin project please refer to Walkthrough: Including a NuGet in your project from Xamarin site.
PSPDFKit can display documents either in a new Activity or a Fragment you include into your hierarchy.
Note that currently only local files are supported for PSPDFKit.
In order to integrate ProGuard with Xamarin you can read the following documentation on Xamarin's Site.
Starting PSPDFKit v6.1.0 you will need to add the pspdfkit-proguard.cfg file to your project's root directory and then add two entries in your project's csproj as follows:
First, inside your DEBUG configuration property group:
<PropertyGroup Condition=" '$(Configuration)|$(Platform)' == 'Debug|AnyCPU' ">
...
<AndroidR8ExtraArguments>--pg-conf "$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\pspdfkit-proguard.cfg"</AndroidR8ExtraArguments>
</PropertyGroup>
The above assumes that the pspdfkit-proguard.cfg file is in your root project directory, if not adjust the value file path to match your own scenario.
Second, add the pspdfkit-proguard.cfg file via the following item group to your csproj as shown here:
<ItemGroup>
<ProguardConfiguration Include="pspdfkit-proguard.cfg" />
</ItemGroup>
Again the above assumes that the pspdfkit-proguard.cfg file is in your root project directory, if not adjust the value file path to match your own scenario.
💡 Note: If you do not add the pspdfkit-proguard.cfg file to your project you will run into errors like the following:
R8 : warning : Missing class: org.conscrypt.ConscryptHostnameVerifier
R8 : warning : Missing class: com.android.tools.lint.detector.api.Detector
R8 : warning : Missing class: com.android.tools.lint.detector.api.Detector$UastScanner
R8 : warning : Missing class: com.android.tools.lint.client.api.UElementHandler
R8 : warning : Missing class: com.android.tools.lint.client.api.IssueRegistry
R8 : error : Compilation can't be completed because some library classes are missing.
You can include PSPDFKit into applications which will be distributed to devices not supported by PSPDFkit. In that case you can attempt initializing and catch PSPDFKitInitializationFailedException
to check for device compatibility.
try {
PSPDFKitGlobal.Initialize(this, "<YOUR LICENSE>");
} catch (PSPDFKitInitializationFailedException ex) {
Console.WriteLine ("Current device is not compatible with PSPDFKit: {0}", ex.Message);
}
- Add PSPDFKit viewer activity to your applications AndroidManifest.xml
<application android:largeHeap="true">
<activity android:name="com.pspdfkit.ui.PdfActivity"
android:windowSoftInputMode="adjustNothing" />
</application>
You can use android:theme attribute to customize actionbar, background and other elements of the activity theme if you so desire.
-
Make sure you have
android:largeHeap="true"
property in your<application>
tag in AndroidManifest.xml. Rendering PDF files is memory intensive and this property will ensure your app has enough heap allocated to avoid out of memory errors. -
Create
PdfActivityConfiguration
object and then callPdfActivity.ShowDocument()
to display the document. Document location is expressed with an Uri object.
var pdfDocument = Android.Net.Uri.FromFile (new Java.IO.File (Android.OS.Environment.ExternalStorageDirectory, "document.pdf"));
var configuration = new PdfActivityConfiguration.Builder("<YOUR_LICENSE>").Build();
PdfActivity.ShowDocument(this, pdfDocument, configuration);
You can create an Uri object from file using
Android.Net.Uri.FromFile(File)
call or you can pass in Uri returned by Storage Access Framework. For all configuration options refer to included JavaDoc.
- Make sure you have
android:largeHeap="true"
property in your<application>
tag in AndroidManifest.xml. Rendering PDF files is memory intensive and this property will ensure your app has enough heap allocated to avoid out of memory errors.
<application android:largeHeap="true">
...
</application>
- Create
PdfConfiguration
object and then callPdfFragment.NewInstance()
to create a newPdfFragment
instance for a document. - Attach the fragment to your view hierarchy. Remember that fragments are retained over configuration changes, so do not recreate fragment if it's already attached - that will lead to bugs and out of memory errors.
var pdfDocument = Android.Net.Uri.FromFile (new Java.IO.File (Android.OS.Environment.ExternalStorageDirectory, "document.pdf"));
var configuration = new PdfConfiguration.Builder("<YOUR_LICENSE>")
.ScrollDirection (PageScrollDirection.Horizontal)
.Build();
var fragment = PdfFragment.NewInstance(pdfDocument, configuration);
SupportFragmentManager.BeginTransaction().Replace(Resource.Id.Content, fragment).Commit();
Note that the
PdfFragment
extendsAndroidX.Fragment.App.Fragment
and notAndroid.App.Fragment
.
You can use PSPDFKit to render PDF to bitmaps without showing them in activities. To do that, use PSPDFKitGlobal
and PdfDocument
class calls.
Example:
PSPDFKitGlobal.Initialize (this, "<YOUR LICENSE>");
try {
var pdfDocument = PSPDFKitGlobal.OpenDocument (this, Android.Net.Uri.FromFile (new Java.IO.File(Android.OS.Environment.ExternalStorageDirectory, "document.pdf")));
var pageToRender = 1; // This is 0-indexed, use pdfDocument.PageCount to retrieve number of pages
var pageBitmap = pdfDocument.RenderPageToBitmap(this,
pageToRender,
// This is the size of bitmap that will be generated
pdfDocument.GetPageSize (pageToRender).Width,
pdfDocument.GetPageSize (pageToRender).Height);
} catch (IOException ex) {
Console.WriteLine ("Failed to open PDF document: {0}", ex.Message);
}
To customize PdfActivity
UI elements, use theme based on Theme.AppCompat
. PSPDFKit will color actionbar and other elements according to colorPrimary
and colorAccent
attributes. Example theme definition:
<style name="MyApplicationTheme.Theme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.DarkActionBar">
<item name="colorPrimary">@color/mymain_color</item>
<item name="colorPrimaryDark">@color/mymain_color_dark</item>
<item name="colorAccent">@color/mymain_color_accent</item>
</style>
And then it should be applied in AndroidManifest.xml:
<activity android:name="com.pspdfkit.ui.PdfActivity"
android:windowSoftInputMode="adjustNothing"
android:theme="@style/MyApplicationTheme.Theme" />
Other configuration options for UI elements (icons, element sizes) can be found in PdfActivityConfiguration
class.
For more documentation about PSPDFKit check out PSPDFKit online documentation and bundled Javadoc.
You can use PSPDFKit SDK with Xamarin.Forms in 3 ways:
- Using a Custom PageRenderer and embedding a
PdfFragment
, seePdfViewerPageRenderer.cs
andPdfViewerPage.cs
inside our provided Xamarin.Forms example. - Showing a
PdfActivity
. See the provided Xamarin.Forms example for further details. - Using Xamarin.Forms embedding, you can take any ContentPage and add it to your native applications. This is also showcased by our PSPDFCatalog example app.
Support for Instant was added with the Xamarin.Android Bindings for PSPDFKit 4.5.1 for Android.
With PSPDFKit Instant, it’s easier than ever to add real-time collaboration features to your PSPDFKit-powered app, allowing your users to seamlessly share, edit, and annotate PDF documents across iOS, Android, and web. With just a few lines of code, PSPDFKit Instant gives your users a massive productivity boost.
For more information about Instant, please have a look at our website.
You can find several sample projects in the samples
folder, including a catalog and Xamarin.Forms example.
- Complete the first step in the advanced setup to download the required files by executing the
./build.sh
script in theXamarin-Android
folder. - Open the
PSPDFKit.Android.sln
solution in Visual Studio. - Select the example project and device you want to run it on (alternatively you can also right-click on the project and select "Build
Project Name
").
This example is included in the PSPDFCatalog example, but you can also find the code here.
The PSPDFKit Instant example shows how easy and efficient Instant works. Just go the Instant demo page and tap on Instant on Android
, this will show a code at step three, which you have to enter in the example on your device. Afterwards you'll be connected to the server and you can start testing!
The PSPSDFCatalog
project has various little example projects in it, including a basic example, which opens a demo document in PSPSDFKit, an example for automatically filling out forms, or one for creating a password protected PDF.
XFSample.Droid
is an example showcasing how to build an app with PSPDFKit using Xamarin.Forms.
AndroidSimple
is an example project showing showing how to open and present document, or how to open a document from various file providers or the local file directory.
Unsupported devices
- Samsung Galaxy Note 2 (GT-N7100) / Android 4.4.2 (N7100XXUFND3) Memory issues because of defective garbage collection. Source: https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=71073
Please ensure you signed our CLA so we can accept your contributions.