A plugin to list installed applications on an Android device (
May 5 2021 will mark a breaking change on how applications requesting QUERY_ALL_PACKAGES
are accepted in the Google Play (and only this app store !). Quoting from the doc:
Permitted use involves apps that must discover any and all installed apps on the device, for awareness or interoperability purposes may have eligibility for the permission. Permitted use includes; device search, antivirus apps, file managers, and browsers.
Apps granted access to this permission must comply with the User Data policies, including the Prominent Disclosure and Consent requirements, and may not extend its use to undisclosed or invalid purposes.
More info here: https://support.google.com/googleplay/android-developer/answer/10158779
Starting with version 2.1.0 of this plugin, the QUERY_ALL_PACKAGES
permission won't be requested by default!
Starting with Android 11, Android applications targeting API level 30, willing to list "external" applications have to declare a new "normal" permission in their AndroidManifest.xml
file called QUERY_ALL_PACKAGES
. A few notes about this:
- A normal permission doesn't require the user consent
- Before version 2.1 of this plugin, the permission was requested automatically. This is not the case anymore
If you want to use, simply add the following to your AndroidManifest.xml:
<manifest...>
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.QUERY_ALL_PACKAGES" />
</manifest>
However, publishing applications on the Google Play with this kind of feature may change in the future. Quoting from the documentation:
In an upcoming policy update, look for Google Play to provide guidelines for apps that need the QUERY_ALL_PACKAGES permission.
👍 Right now, there is no limitation, but be aware that this may change in the future.
First, you have to import the package in your dart file with:
import 'package:device_apps/device_apps.dart';
To list applications installed on the device:
List<Application> apps = await DeviceApps.getInstalledApplications();
You can filter system apps if necessary.
Note: The list of apps is not ordered! You have to do it yourself.
A launch Intent means you can launch the application.
To list only the apps with launch intents, simply use the onlyAppsWithLaunchIntent: true
attribute.
// Returns a list of only those apps that have launch intent
List<Application> apps = await DeviceApps.getInstalledApplications(onlyAppsWithLaunchIntent: true, includeSystemApps: true)
To get a specific application info, please provide its package name:
Application app = await DeviceApps.getApp('com.frandroid.app');
To check if an app is installed (via its package name):
bool isInstalled = await DeviceApps.isAppInstalled('com.frandroid.app');
To open an application (with a launch Intent)
DeviceApps.openApp('com.frandroid.app');
To open an application settings screen
DeviceApps.openAppSettings('com.frandroid.app');
To open the screen to uninstall an application:
- Add this permission to the
AndroidManifest.xml
file:
<manifest...>
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.REQUEST_DELETE_PACKAGES" />
</manifest>
- Call this method:
DeviceApps.uninstallApp('com.frandroid.app');
When calling getInstalledApplications()
or getApp()
methods, you can also ask for the icon.
To display the image, just call:
Image.memory(app.icon);
To listen to applications events on the device (installation, uninstallation, update, enabled or disabled):
Stream<ApplicationEvent> apps = await DeviceApps.listenToAppsChanges();
If you only need events for a single app, just use the Stream
API, like so:
DeviceApps.listenToAppsChanges().where((ApplicationEvent event) => event.packageName == 'com.frandroid.app')