Book Image

Android Studio Cookbook

By : Mike van Drongelen
Book Image

Android Studio Cookbook

By: Mike van Drongelen

Overview of this book

This book starts with an introduction of Android Studio and why you should use this IDE rather than Eclipse. Moving ahead, it teaches you to build a simple app that requires no backend setup but uses Google Cloud or Parse instead. After that, you will learn how to create an Android app that can send and receive text and images using Google Cloud or Parse as a backend. It explains the concepts of Material design and how to apply them to an Android app. Also, it shows you how to build an app that runs on an Android wear device. Later, it explains how to build an app that takes advantage of the latest Android SDK while still supporting older Android versions. It also demonstrates how the performance of an app can be improved and how memory management tools that come with the Android Studio IDE can help you achieve this. By the end of the book, you will be able to develop high quality apps with a minimum amount of effort using the Android Studio IDE.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Android Studio Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Introduction


A typical software release cycle goes like this, although it does not necessarily have to go through each phase:

Alpha -> closed beta -> open beta -> release.

You could release your app directly on the Google Play Store, but having at least one beta round is a clever thing to do. Gathering feedback and applying further improvements can make your app even better.

We will have a look at how to set up multiple different flavors for your app and how to define different build types for it. For example, your release app will most likely use different API endpoints than those you used to debug and test, at least I hope so.

The minimum API level you choose, the required features, and the requested permissions will affect the number of devices that your app will be available for in the Play Store. Also, we will have a preview of how runtime permissions that come with Android Marshmallow require a different approach.

Finally, we will find out what we need to do to distribute a beta...