I have just downloaded the facebook SDK from -android-sdkI unpack it from git and opened Eclipse. I then created a new project using existing source and selected the facebook directory. So the sdk project came up correctly (i think). Then I created a new project again using existing source and selected the "Simple" example.Its came up with errors. I went in the properties and selected Build Path section and added the facebook SDK project and applyed. All the errors disappear.I then tried to run the Example but im getting an exception on the first call to facebook SDK function ! Exception is NoClassDefFoundError. Its seems that at runtime it cannot find the class of the SDK. How come ? Any suggestions ? Someone did sucessfully run this example ? Any help would be greatly appreciated.

I too faced the same problem. I was able to overcome this issue by placing the Facebook SDK library as well as my project(to which I want to link the Facebook SDK) within the same workspace. Now go to your project->right click->properties->android->scoll down->add->select the path to facebook SDK->press ok.


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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.

I have downloaded facebook-java-api-3.0.2-bin from -java-api/

for connecting to face book.I want to use this api in my java application to connect Facebook.I am developing a desktop application for this purpose.I have created account on Face book and registered as a developer.

If App ID / App Secret / access token / access permission are listed in facebook4j.properties then, they are set in Facebook instance given back.

See Configuration | Facebook4J - A Java library for the Facebook Graph API for the detail.

When they are not listed, it is setable later as follows:

The first step is to create the (CalendarModule.java or CalendarModule.kt) Java/Kotlin file inside android/app/src/main/java/com/your-app-name/ folder (the folder is the same for both Kotlin and Java). This Java/Kotlin file will contain your native module Java/Kotlin class.

To add your Native Module to ReactPackage, first create a new Java/Kotlin Class named (MyAppPackage.java or MyAppPackage.kt) that implements ReactPackage inside the android/app/src/main/java/com/your-app-name/ folder:

To register the CalendarModule package, you must add MyAppPackage to the list of packages returned in ReactNativeHost's getPackages() method. Open up your MainApplication.java or MainApplication.kt file, which can be found in the following path: android/app/src/main/java/com/your-app-name/.

For more detail, you can find the Promise.java interface here. If userInfo is not provided, ReactNative will set it to null. For the rest of the parameters React Native will use a default value. The message argument provides the error message shown at the top of an error call stack. Below is an example of the error message shown in JavaScript from the following reject call in Java/Kotlin.

In the next step, we will move to the 'string.xml' file of Android Studio and create two strings, i.e., facebook_app_id and fb_login_protocol_scheme. For facebook_app_id, we will paste the app id, which we have copied before, and for fb_login_protocol_scheme, we will add prefix FB in our app_id and use it as a protocol string.

We can use the object model API to get names and their public posts about the term java. In the Listing 3, lines 1 through 3 lines create JsonReader; line 5 creates JsonObject for the results; line 7 loops over each result; and lines 8 through 11 get the name of the person who posted, get the public post, and prints them. Note that the JsonReader and other objects in this API can be used in the try-with-resources statement (which is also called automatic resource management [ARM]).

Let's use the streaming API to do the same thing that was done with the object model API, that is, to search Facebook's public posts about java. In Listing 4, lines 1 through 3 create a streaming parser, lines 4 through 5 get the next event, line 6 looks for the KEY_NAME event, lines 8 through 11 read names and print them, and lines 14 through 16 read the public posts and print them. The use of streaming API provides an efficient way to access names and their public posts when compared to the same task using the object model API. ff782bc1db

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