com.mio.jrdv.sunshine.FetchWeatherTask.java Source code

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/*
 * Copyright (C) 2014 The Android Open Source Project
 *
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 * limitations under the License.
 */
package com.mio.jrdv.sunshine;

import android.content.ContentUris;
import android.content.ContentValues;
import android.content.Context;
import android.database.Cursor;
import android.net.Uri;
import android.os.AsyncTask;
import android.text.format.Time;
import android.util.Log;
import android.widget.ArrayAdapter;

import com.mio.jrdv.sunshine.data.WeatherContract;
import com.mio.jrdv.sunshine.data.WeatherContract.WeatherEntry;

import org.json.JSONArray;
import org.json.JSONException;
import org.json.JSONObject;

import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.net.HttpURLConnection;
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.Vector;

public class FetchWeatherTask extends AsyncTask<String, Void, String[]> {

    private final String LOG_TAG = FetchWeatherTask.class.getSimpleName();

    private ArrayAdapter<String> mForecastAdapter;
    private final Context mContext;

    ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
    //////////////////////////vamoa acambiarlo por el nuevo FroreCastAdapter!!:///////////////////////////////////

    //    public FetchWeatherTask(Context context, ArrayAdapter<String> forecastAdapter) {
    //        mContext = context;
    //        mForecastAdapter = forecastAdapter;
    //    }
    ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
    /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

    public FetchWeatherTask(Context context) {
        mContext = context;
    }

    private boolean DEBUG = true;

    ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
    ////// ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
    //////NO SE USA SE PASA AL FORECAST ADAPTER
    //getReadableDateString, formatHighLows, convertContentValuesToUXFormat.
    // These are all formatting functions and we?ve moved them to the ForecastAdapter.
    //vamoa acambiarlo por el nuevo FroreCastAdapter!!:
    ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
    //////
    //
    //
    //
    //    /* The date/time conversion code is going to be moved outside the asynctask later,
    //     * so for convenience we're breaking it out into its own method now.
    //     */
    //    private String getReadableDateString(long time){
    //        // Because the API returns a unix timestamp (measured in seconds),
    //        // it must be converted to milliseconds in order to be converted to valid date.
    //        Date date = new Date(time);
    //        SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("E, MMM d");
    //        return format.format(date).toString();
    //    }
    //
    //    /**
    //     * Prepare the weather high/lows for presentation.
    //     */
    //    private String formatHighLows(double high, double low) {
    //        // Data is fetched in Celsius by default.
    //        // If user prefers to see in Fahrenheit, convert the values here.
    //        // We do this rather than fetching in Fahrenheit so that the user can
    //        // change this option without us having to re-fetch the data once
    //        // we start storing the values in a database.
    //        SharedPreferences sharedPrefs =
    //                PreferenceManager.getDefaultSharedPreferences(mContext);
    //        String unitType = sharedPrefs.getString(
    //                mContext.getString(R.string.pref_temperature_key),
    //                mContext.getString(R.string.pref_units_metric));
    //
    //        if (unitType.equals(mContext.getString(R.string.pref_units_imperial))) {
    //            high = (high * 1.8) + 32;
    //            low = (low * 1.8) + 32;
    //        } else if (!unitType.equals(mContext.getString(R.string.pref_units_metric))) {
    //            Log.d(LOG_TAG, "Unit type not found: " + unitType);
    //        }
    //
    //        // For presentation, assume the user doesn't care about tenths of a degree.
    //        long roundedHigh = Math.round(high);
    //        long roundedLow = Math.round(low);
    //
    //        String highLowStr = roundedHigh + "/" + roundedLow;
    //        return highLowStr;
    //    }

    /**
     * Helper method to handle insertion of a new location in the weather database.
     *
     * @param locationSetting The location string used to request updates from the server.
     * @param cityName A human-readable city name, e.g "Mountain View"
     * @param lat the latitude of the city
     * @param lon the longitude of the city
     * @return the row ID of the added location.
     */

    //este metodo lo he tenido que hace public para poder accederlo desde el TEstFetchWeatherTask!!

    public long addLocation(String locationSetting, String cityName, double lat, double lon) {
        // Students: First, check if the location with this city name exists in the db
        // If it exists, return the current ID
        // Otherwise, insert it using the content resolver and the base URI
        // return 0;
        long locationId;

        // First, check if the location with this city name exists in the db
        Cursor locationCursor = mContext.getContentResolver().query(WeatherContract.LocationEntry.CONTENT_URI,
                new String[] { WeatherContract.LocationEntry._ID },
                WeatherContract.LocationEntry.COLUMN_LOCATION_SETTING + " = ?", new String[] { locationSetting },
                null);
        // WeatherContract.LocationEntry.CONTENT_URI:
        //  ES content://com.mio.jrdv.sunshine.app/location

        if (locationCursor.moveToFirst()) {
            int locationIdIndex = locationCursor.getColumnIndex(WeatherContract.LocationEntry._ID);
            locationId = locationCursor.getLong(locationIdIndex);
        } else {
            // Now that the content provider is set up, inserting rows of data is pretty simple.
            // First create a ContentValues object to hold the data you want to insert.
            ContentValues locationValues = new ContentValues();

            // Then add the data, along with the corresponding name of the data type,
            // so the content provider knows what kind of value is being inserted.
            locationValues.put(WeatherContract.LocationEntry.COLUMN_CITY_NAME, cityName);
            locationValues.put(WeatherContract.LocationEntry.COLUMN_LOCATION_SETTING, locationSetting);
            locationValues.put(WeatherContract.LocationEntry.COLUMN_COORD_LAT, lat);
            locationValues.put(WeatherContract.LocationEntry.COLUMN_COORD_LONG, lon);

            // Finally, insert location data into the database.
            Uri insertedUri = mContext.getContentResolver().insert(WeatherContract.LocationEntry.CONTENT_URI,
                    locationValues);

            // The resulting URI contains the ID for the row.  Extract the locationId from the Uri.
            locationId = ContentUris.parseId(insertedUri);
        }

        locationCursor.close();
        // Wait, that worked?  Yes!
        return locationId;
    }

    ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
    ////// ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
    //////NO SE USA SE PASA AL FORECAST ADAPTER
    //getReadableDateString, formatHighLows, convertContentValuesToUXFormat.
    // These are all formatting functions and we?ve moved them to the ForecastAdapter.
    //vamoa acambiarlo por el nuevo FroreCastAdapter!!:
    ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
    //////

    //    /*
    //        Students: This code will allow the FetchWeatherTask to continue to return the strings that
    //        the UX expects so that we can continue to test the application even once we begin using
    //        the database.
    //     */
    //    String[] convertContentValuesToUXFormat(Vector<ContentValues> cvv) {
    //        // return strings to keep UI functional for now
    //        String[] resultStrs = new String[cvv.size()];
    //        for ( int i = 0; i < cvv.size(); i++ ) {
    //            ContentValues weatherValues = cvv.elementAt(i);
    //            String highAndLow = formatHighLows(
    //                    weatherValues.getAsDouble(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_MAX_TEMP),
    //                    weatherValues.getAsDouble(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_MIN_TEMP));
    //            resultStrs[i] = getReadableDateString(
    //                    weatherValues.getAsLong(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_DATE)) +
    //                    " - " + weatherValues.getAsString(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_SHORT_DESC) +
    //                    " - " + highAndLow;
    //        }
    //        return resultStrs;
    //    }

    /**
     * Take the String representing the complete forecast in JSON Format and
     * pull out the data we need to construct the Strings needed for the wireframes.
     *
     * Fortunately parsing is easy:  constructor takes the JSON string and converts it
     * into an Object hierarchy for us.
     */
    private String[] getWeatherDataFromJson(String forecastJsonStr, String locationSetting) throws JSONException {

        // Now we have a String representing the complete forecast in JSON Format.
        // Fortunately parsing is easy:  constructor takes the JSON string and converts it
        // into an Object hierarchy for us.

        // These are the names of the JSON objects that need to be extracted.

        // Location information
        final String OWM_CITY = "city";
        final String OWM_CITY_NAME = "name";
        final String OWM_COORD = "coord";

        // Location coordinate
        final String OWM_LATITUDE = "lat";
        final String OWM_LONGITUDE = "lon";

        // Weather information.  Each day's forecast info is an element of the "list" array.
        final String OWM_LIST = "list";

        final String OWM_PRESSURE = "pressure";
        final String OWM_HUMIDITY = "humidity";
        final String OWM_WINDSPEED = "speed";
        final String OWM_WIND_DIRECTION = "deg";

        // All temperatures are children of the "temp" object.
        final String OWM_TEMPERATURE = "temp";
        final String OWM_MAX = "max";
        final String OWM_MIN = "min";

        final String OWM_WEATHER = "weather";
        final String OWM_DESCRIPTION = "main";
        final String OWM_WEATHER_ID = "id";

        try {
            JSONObject forecastJson = new JSONObject(forecastJsonStr);
            JSONArray weatherArray = forecastJson.getJSONArray(OWM_LIST);

            JSONObject cityJson = forecastJson.getJSONObject(OWM_CITY);
            String cityName = cityJson.getString(OWM_CITY_NAME);

            JSONObject cityCoord = cityJson.getJSONObject(OWM_COORD);
            double cityLatitude = cityCoord.getDouble(OWM_LATITUDE);
            double cityLongitude = cityCoord.getDouble(OWM_LONGITUDE);

            long locationId = addLocation(locationSetting, cityName, cityLatitude, cityLongitude);

            // Insert the new weather information into the database
            Vector<ContentValues> cVVector = new Vector<ContentValues>(weatherArray.length());

            // OWM returns daily forecasts based upon the local time of the city that is being
            // asked for, which means that we need to know the GMT offset to translate this data
            // properly.

            // Since this data is also sent in-order and the first day is always the
            // current day, we're going to take advantage of that to get a nice
            // normalized UTC date for all of our weather.

            Time dayTime = new Time();
            dayTime.setToNow();

            // we start at the day returned by local time. Otherwise this is a mess.
            int julianStartDay = Time.getJulianDay(System.currentTimeMillis(), dayTime.gmtoff);

            // now we work exclusively in UTC
            dayTime = new Time();

            for (int i = 0; i < weatherArray.length(); i++) {
                // These are the values that will be collected.
                long dateTime;
                double pressure;
                int humidity;
                double windSpeed;
                double windDirection;

                double high;
                double low;

                String description;
                int weatherId;

                // Get the JSON object representing the day
                JSONObject dayForecast = weatherArray.getJSONObject(i);

                // Cheating to convert this to UTC time, which is what we want anyhow
                dateTime = dayTime.setJulianDay(julianStartDay + i);

                pressure = dayForecast.getDouble(OWM_PRESSURE);
                humidity = dayForecast.getInt(OWM_HUMIDITY);
                windSpeed = dayForecast.getDouble(OWM_WINDSPEED);
                windDirection = dayForecast.getDouble(OWM_WIND_DIRECTION);

                // Description is in a child array called "weather", which is 1 element long.
                // That element also contains a weather code.
                JSONObject weatherObject = dayForecast.getJSONArray(OWM_WEATHER).getJSONObject(0);
                description = weatherObject.getString(OWM_DESCRIPTION);
                weatherId = weatherObject.getInt(OWM_WEATHER_ID);

                // Temperatures are in a child object called "temp".  Try not to name variables
                // "temp" when working with temperature.  It confuses everybody.
                JSONObject temperatureObject = dayForecast.getJSONObject(OWM_TEMPERATURE);
                high = temperatureObject.getDouble(OWM_MAX);
                low = temperatureObject.getDouble(OWM_MIN);

                ContentValues weatherValues = new ContentValues();

                weatherValues.put(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_LOC_KEY, locationId);
                weatherValues.put(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_DATE, dateTime);
                weatherValues.put(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_HUMIDITY, humidity);
                weatherValues.put(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_PRESSURE, pressure);
                weatherValues.put(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_WIND_SPEED, windSpeed);
                weatherValues.put(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_DEGREES, windDirection);
                weatherValues.put(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_MAX_TEMP, high);
                weatherValues.put(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_MIN_TEMP, low);
                weatherValues.put(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_SHORT_DESC, description);
                weatherValues.put(WeatherEntry.COLUMN_WEATHER_ID, weatherId);

                cVVector.add(weatherValues);
            }

            ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
            ////// ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
            //////NO SE USA SE PASA AL FORECAST ADAPTER
            // The lines in getWeatherDataFromJson where we requery the database after the insert.
            //vamoa acambiarlo por el nuevo FroreCastAdapter!!:
            ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

            //            // add to database
            //            if ( cVVector.size() > 0 ) {
            //                // Student: call bulkInsert to add the weatherEntries to the database here
            //
            //                ContentValues[] cvArray = new ContentValues[cVVector.size()];
            //                cVVector.toArray(cvArray);
            //                mContext.getContentResolver().bulkInsert(WeatherEntry.CONTENT_URI, cvArray);
            //
            //
            //            }
            //
            //            // Sort order:  Ascending, by date.
            //            String sortOrder = WeatherEntry.COLUMN_DATE + " ASC";
            //            Uri weatherForLocationUri = WeatherEntry.buildWeatherLocationWithStartDate(
            //                    locationSetting, System.currentTimeMillis());
            //
            //            // Students: Uncomment the next lines to display what what you stored in the bulkInsert
            //            //esto no hace nada !!lo que hace es que inserte 0!!!! si no lo hacemos por medio un bulkinsert!!
            //
            //            Cursor cur = mContext.getContentResolver().query(weatherForLocationUri,
            //                    null, null, null, sortOrder);
            //
            //            cVVector = new Vector<ContentValues>(cur.getCount());
            //            if ( cur.moveToFirst() ) {
            //                do {
            //                    ContentValues cv = new ContentValues();
            //                    DatabaseUtils.cursorRowToContentValues(cur, cv);
            //                    cVVector.add(cv);
            //                } while (cur.moveToNext());
            //            }
            //
            //            Log.d(LOG_TAG, "FetchWeatherTask Complete. " + cVVector.size() + " Inserted");
            //
            //            String[] resultStrs = convertContentValuesToUXFormat(cVVector);
            //            return resultStrs;

            int inserted = 0;
            // add to database
            if (cVVector.size() > 0) {
                ContentValues[] cvArray = new ContentValues[cVVector.size()];
                cVVector.toArray(cvArray);
                inserted = mContext.getContentResolver().bulkInsert(WeatherEntry.CONTENT_URI, cvArray);
            }

            Log.d(LOG_TAG, "FetchWeatherTask Complete. " + inserted + " Inserted");

        } catch (JSONException e) {
            Log.e(LOG_TAG, e.getMessage(), e);
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
        return null;
    }

    @Override
    protected String[] doInBackground(String... params) {

        // If there's no zip code, there's nothing to look up.  Verify size of params.
        if (params.length == 0) {
            return null;
        }
        String locationQuery = params[0];

        // These two need to be declared outside the try/catch
        // so that they can be closed in the finally block.
        HttpURLConnection urlConnection = null;
        BufferedReader reader = null;

        // Will contain the raw JSON response as a string.
        String forecastJsonStr = null;

        String format = "json";
        String units = "metric";
        int numDays = 14;

        try {
            // Construct the URL for the OpenWeatherMap query
            // Possible parameters are avaiable at OWM's forecast API page, at
            // http://openweathermap.org/API#forecast
            final String FORECAST_BASE_URL = "http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/forecast/daily?";
            final String QUERY_PARAM = "q";
            final String FORMAT_PARAM = "mode";
            final String UNITS_PARAM = "units";
            final String DAYS_PARAM = "cnt";

            Uri builtUri = Uri.parse(FORECAST_BASE_URL).buildUpon().appendQueryParameter(QUERY_PARAM, params[0])
                    .appendQueryParameter(FORMAT_PARAM, format).appendQueryParameter(UNITS_PARAM, units)
                    .appendQueryParameter(DAYS_PARAM, Integer.toString(numDays)).build();

            //ESTO DA
            //http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/forecast/daily?q=seville&mode=json&units=metric&cnt=14

            URL url = new URL(builtUri.toString());

            //Y ESTO LO MISMO

            //http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/forecast/daily?q=seville&mode=json&units=metric&cnt=14

            // Create the request to OpenWeatherMap, and open the connection
            urlConnection = (HttpURLConnection) url.openConnection();
            urlConnection.setRequestMethod("GET");
            urlConnection.connect();

            // Read the input stream into a String
            InputStream inputStream = urlConnection.getInputStream();
            StringBuffer buffer = new StringBuffer();
            if (inputStream == null) {
                // Nothing to do.
                return null;
            }
            reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(inputStream));

            String line;
            while ((line = reader.readLine()) != null) {
                // Since it's JSON, adding a newline isn't necessary (it won't affect parsing)
                // But it does make debugging a *lot* easier if you print out the completed
                // buffer for debugging.
                buffer.append(line + "\n");
            }

            if (buffer.length() == 0) {
                // Stream was empty.  No point in parsing.
                return null;
            }
            forecastJsonStr = buffer.toString();
        } catch (IOException e) {
            Log.e(LOG_TAG, "Error ", e);
            // If the code didn't successfully get the weather data, there's no point in attemping
            // to parse it.
            return null;
        } finally {
            if (urlConnection != null) {
                urlConnection.disconnect();
            }
            if (reader != null) {
                try {
                    reader.close();
                } catch (final IOException e) {
                    Log.e(LOG_TAG, "Error closing stream", e);
                }
            }
        }

        try {
            return getWeatherDataFromJson(forecastJsonStr, locationQuery);
        } catch (JSONException e) {
            Log.e(LOG_TAG, e.getMessage(), e);
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
        // This will only happen if there was an error getting or parsing the forecast.
        return null;
    }

    ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
    ////// ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
    //////NO SE USA
    //
    //vamoa acambiarlo por el nuevo FroreCastAdapter!!:
    ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

    //    @Override
    //    protected void onPostExecute(String[] result) {
    //        if (result != null && mForecastAdapter != null) {
    //            mForecastAdapter.clear();
    //            for(String dayForecastStr : result) {
    //                mForecastAdapter.add(dayForecastStr);
    //            }
    //            // New data is back from the server.  Hooray!
    //        }
    //    }
}