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Home/ Questions/Q 6014871
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T02:45:18+00:00 2026-05-23T02:45:18+00:00

I have a Gingerbread 2.3.4 powered Nexus S and I recently got some writable

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I have a Gingerbread 2.3.4 powered Nexus S and I recently got some writable NFC tags. So far I can read them as blank tags, but I couldn’t find a way to write data to them.
All my research has lead me to this article: Writing tags with Nexus S from January (before 2.3.4 release).

How do you write NFC tags inside your application, using your Nexus S? Any pointers?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T02:45:19+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 2:45 am

    I found the Android NFC API text and dev guide a bit tricky to follow so a bit of example code might help here. This is actually a port of MIDP code I’ve been using in Nokia 6212 devices, so I probably haven’t yet figured out everything about Android NFC API correctly, but at least this has worked for me.

    First we create an NDEF record:

    private NdefRecord createRecord() throws UnsupportedEncodingException {
        String text       = "Hello, World!";
        String lang       = "en";
        byte[] textBytes  = text.getBytes();
        byte[] langBytes  = lang.getBytes("US-ASCII");
        int    langLength = langBytes.length;
        int    textLength = textBytes.length;
        byte[] payload    = new byte[1 + langLength + textLength];
    
        // set status byte (see NDEF spec for actual bits)
        payload[0] = (byte) langLength;
    
        // copy langbytes and textbytes into payload
        System.arraycopy(langBytes, 0, payload, 1,              langLength);
        System.arraycopy(textBytes, 0, payload, 1 + langLength, textLength);
    
        NdefRecord record = new NdefRecord(NdefRecord.TNF_WELL_KNOWN, 
                                           NdefRecord.RTD_TEXT, 
                                           new byte[0], 
                                           payload);
    
        return record;
    }
    

    Then we write the record as an NDEF message:

    private void write(Tag tag) throws IOException, FormatException {
        NdefRecord[] records = { createRecord() };
        NdefMessage  message = new NdefMessage(records);
    
        // Get an instance of Ndef for the tag.
        Ndef ndef = Ndef.get(tag);
    
        // Enable I/O
        ndef.connect();
    
        // Write the message
        ndef.writeNdefMessage(message);
    
        // Close the connection
        ndef.close();
    }
    

    To write to a tag, you obviously need the Tag object, which you can get from the Intent.

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