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Android Studio 4.1 Development Essentials – Java Edition

You're reading from  Android Studio 4.1 Development Essentials – Java Edition

Product type Book
Published in May 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801815161
Pages 810 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Neil Smyth Neil Smyth
Profile icon Neil Smyth

Table of Contents (88) Chapters

1. Introduction 2. Setting up an Android Studio Development Environment 3. Creating an Example Android App in Android Studio 4. Creating an Android Virtual Device (AVD) in Android Studio 5. Using and Configuring the Android Studio AVD Emulator 6. A Tour of the Android Studio User Interface 7. Testing Android Studio Apps on a Physical Android Device 8. The Basics of the Android Studio Code Editor 9. An Overview of the Android Architecture 10. The Anatomy of an Android Application 11. An Overview of Android View Binding 12. Understanding Android Application and Activity Lifecycles 13. Handling Android Activity State Changes 14. Android Activity State Changes by Example 15. Saving and Restoring the State of an Android Activity 16. Understanding Android Views, View Groups and Layouts 17. A Guide to the Android Studio Layout Editor Tool 18. A Guide to the Android ConstraintLayout 19. A Guide to using ConstraintLayout in Android Studio 20. Working with ConstraintLayout Chains and Ratios in Android Studio 21. An Android Studio Layout Editor ConstraintLayout Tutorial 22. Manual XML Layout Design in Android Studio 23. Managing Constraints using Constraint Sets 24. An Android ConstraintSet Tutorial 25. A Guide to using Apply Changes in Android Studio 26. An Overview and Example of Android Event Handling 27. Android Touch and Multi-touch Event Handling 28. Detecting Common Gestures using the Android Gesture Detector Class 29. Implementing Custom Gesture and Pinch Recognition on Android 30. An Introduction to Android Fragments 31. Using Fragments in Android Studio - An Example 32. Modern Android App Architecture with Jetpack 33. An Android Jetpack ViewModel Tutorial 34. An Android Jetpack LiveData Tutorial 35. An Overview of Android Jetpack Data Binding 36. An Android Jetpack Data Binding Tutorial 37. An Android ViewModel Saved State Tutorial 38. Working with Android Lifecycle-Aware Components 39. An Android Jetpack Lifecycle Awareness Tutorial 40. An Overview of the Navigation Architecture Component 41. An Android Jetpack Navigation Component Tutorial 42. Creating and Managing Overflow Menus on Android 43. An Introduction to MotionLayout 44. An Android MotionLayout Editor Tutorial 45. A MotionLayout KeyCycle Tutorial 46. Working with the Floating Action Button and Snackbar 47. Creating a Tabbed Interface using the TabLayout Component 48. Working with the RecyclerView and CardView Widgets 49. An Android RecyclerView and CardView Tutorial 50. A Layout Editor Sample Data Tutorial 51. Working with the AppBar and Collapsing Toolbar Layouts 52. An Android Studio Master/Detail Flow Tutorial 53. An Overview of Android Intents 54. Android Explicit Intents – A Worked Example 55. Android Implicit Intents – A Worked Example 56. Android Broadcast Intents and Broadcast Receivers 57. A Basic Overview of Threads and AsyncTasks 58. An Overview of Android Started and Bound Services 59. Implementing an Android Started Service – A Worked Example 60. Android Local Bound Services – A Worked Example 61. Android Remote Bound Services – A Worked Example 62. An Android Notifications Tutorial 63. An Android Direct Reply Notification Tutorial 64. Foldable Devices and Multi-Window Support 65. An Overview of Android SQLite Databases 66. The Android Room Persistence Library 67. An Android TableLayout and TableRow Tutorial 68. An Android Room Database and Repository Tutorial 69. Accessing Cloud Storage using the Android Storage Access Framework 70. An Android Storage Access Framework Example 71. Video Playback on Android using the VideoView and MediaController Classes 72. Android Picture-in-Picture Mode 73. An Android Picture-in-Picture Tutorial 74. Making Runtime Permission Requests in Android 75. Android Audio Recording and Playback using MediaPlayer and MediaRecorder 76. Working with the Google Maps Android API in Android Studio 77. Printing with the Android Printing Framework 78. An Android HTML and Web Content Printing Example 79. A Guide to Android Custom Document Printing 80. An Introduction to Android App Links 81. An Android Studio App Links Tutorial 82. A Guide to the Android Studio Profiler 83. An Android Biometric Authentication Tutorial 84. Creating, Testing and Uploading an Android App Bundle 85. An Overview of Android Dynamic Feature Modules 86. An Android Studio Dynamic Feature Tutorial 87. An Overview of Gradle in Android Studio Index

3. Creating an Example Android App in Android Studio

The preceding chapters of this book have covered the steps necessary to configure an environment suitable for the development of Android applications using the Android Studio IDE. Before moving on to slightly more advanced topics, now is a good time to validate that all of the required development packages are installed and functioning correctly. The best way to achieve this goal is to create an Android application and compile and run it. This chapter will cover the creation of an Android application project using Android Studio. Once the project has been created, a later chapter will explore the use of the Android emulator environment to perform a test run of the application.

3.1 About the Project

The project created in this chapter takes the form of a rudimentary currency conversion calculator (so simple, in fact, that it only converts from dollars to euros and does so using an estimated conversion rate). The project will also make use of one of the most basic of Android Studio project templates. This simplicity allows us to introduce some of the key aspects of Android app development without overwhelming the beginner by trying to introduce too many concepts, such as the recommended app architecture and Android architecture components, at once. When following the tutorial in this chapter, rest assured that all of the techniques and code used in this initial example project will be covered in much greater detail in later chapters.

3.2 Creating a New Android Project

The first step in the application development process is to create a new project within the Android Studio environment. Begin, therefore, by launching Android Studio so that the “Welcome to Android Studio” screen appears as illustrated in Figure 3-1:

Figure 3-1

Once this window appears, Android Studio is ready for a new project to be created. To create the new project, simply click on the Create New Project option to display the first screen of the New Project wizard.

3.3 Creating an Activity

The first step is to define the type of initial activity that is to be created for the application. Options are available to create projects for Phone and Tablet, Wear OS, TV, Android Audio or Android Things. A range of different activity types is available when developing Android applications, many of which will be covered extensively in later chapters. For the purposes of this example, however, simply select the option to create an Empty Activity on the Phone and Tablet screen. The Empty Activity option creates a template user interface consisting of a single TextView object.

Figure 3-2

With the Empty Activity option selected, click Next to continue with the project configuration.

3.4 Defining the Project and SDK Settings

In the project configuration window (Figure 3-3), set the Name field to AndroidSample. The application name is the name by which the application will be referenced and identified within Android Studio and is also the name that would be used if the completed application were to go on sale in the Google Play store.

The Package name is used to uniquely identify the application within the Android application ecosystem. Although this can be set to any string that uniquely identifies your app, it is traditionally based on the reversed URL of your domain name followed by the name of the application. For example, if your domain is www.mycompany.com, and the application has been named AndroidSample, then the package name might be specified as follows:

com.mycompany.androidsample

If you do not have a domain name you can enter any other string into the Company Domain field, or you may use example.com for the purposes of testing, though this will...

3.5 Modifying the Example Application

At this point, Android Studio has created a minimal example application project and opened the main window.

Figure 3-4

The newly created project and references to associated files are listed in the Project tool window located on the left-hand side of the main project window. The Project tool window has a number of modes in which information can be displayed. By default, this panel should be in Android mode. This setting is controlled by the menu at the top of the panel as highlighted in Figure 3-5. If the panel is not currently in Android mode, use the menu to switch mode:

Figure 3-5

3.6 Modifying the User Interface

The user interface design for our activity is stored in a file named activity_main.xml which, in turn, is located under app -> res -> layout in the project file hierarchy. Once located in the Project tool window, double-click on the file to load it into the user interface Layout Editor tool which will appear in the center panel of the Android Studio main window:

Figure 3-6

In the toolbar across the top of the Layout Editor window is a menu (currently set to Pixel in the above figure) which is reflected in the visual representation of the device within the Layout Editor panel. A wide range of other device options are available for selection by clicking on this menu.

To change the orientation of the device representation between landscape and portrait simply use the drop down menu immediately to the left of the device selection menu showing the icon.

As can be seen in the device screen, the content layout already includes a label...

3.7 Reviewing the Layout and Resource Files

Before moving on to the next step, we are going to look at some of the internal aspects of user interface design and resource handling. In the previous section, we made some changes to the user interface by modifying the activity_main.xml file using the Layout Editor tool. In fact, all that the Layout Editor was doing was providing a user-friendly way to edit the underlying XML content of the file. In practice, there is no reason why you cannot modify the XML directly in order to make user interface changes and, in some instances, this may actually be quicker than using the Layout Editor tool. In the top right-hand corner of the Layout Editor panel are three buttons as highlighted in Figure 3-19 below:

Figure 3-19

By default, the editor will be in Design mode whereby just the visual representation of the layout is displayed. The left-most button will switch to Code mode to display the XML for the layout, while the middle button...

3.8 Adding Interaction

The final step in this example project is to make the app interactive so that when the user enters a dollar value into the EditText field and clicks the convert button the converted euro value appears on the TextView. This involves the implementation of some event handling on the Button widget. Specifically, the Button needs to be configured so that a method in the app code is called when an onClick event is triggered. Event handling can be implemented in a number of different ways and is covered in detail in a later chapter entitled “An Overview and Example of Android Event Handling”. Return the layout editor to Design mode, select the Button widget in the layout editor, refer to the Attributes tool window and specify a method named convertCurrency as shown below:

Figure 3-23

Note that the text field for the onClick property is now highlighted with a red border to warn us that the button has been configured to call a method which does...

3.9 Summary

While not excessively complex, a number of steps are involved in setting up an Android development environment. Having performed those steps, it is worth working through an example to make sure the environment is correctly installed and configured. In this chapter, we have created an example application and then used the Android Studio Layout Editor tool to modify the user interface layout. In doing so, we explored the importance of using resources wherever possible, particularly in the case of string values, and briefly touched on the topic of layouts. Next we looked at the underlying XML that is used to store the user interface designs of Android applications.

Finally, an onClick event was added to a Button connected to a method that was implemented to extract the user input from the EditText component, convert from dollars to euros and then display the result on the TextView.

With the app ready for testing, the steps necessary to set up an emulator for testing...

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Android Studio 4.1 Development Essentials – Java Edition
Published in: May 2021 Publisher: Packt ISBN-13: 9781801815161
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