Book Image

Android High Performance Programming

By : Emil Atanasov, Enrique López Mañas, Diego Grancini
Book Image

Android High Performance Programming

By: Emil Atanasov, Enrique López Mañas, Diego Grancini

Overview of this book

Performant applications are one of the key drivers of success in the mobile world. Users may abandon an app if it runs slowly. Learning how to build applications that balance speed and performance with functionality and UX can be a challenge; however, it's now more important than ever to get that balance right. Android High Performance will start you thinking about how to wring the most from any hardware your app is installed on, so you can increase your reach and engagement. The book begins by providing an introduction to state–of-the-art Android techniques and the importance of performance in an Android application. Then, we will explain the Android SDK tools regularly used to debug and profile Android applications. We will also learn about some advanced topics such as building layouts, multithreading, networking, and security. Battery life is one of the biggest bottlenecks in applications; and this book will show typical examples of code that exhausts battery life, how to prevent this, and how to measure battery consumption from an application in every kind of situation to ensure your apps don’t drain more than they should. This book explains techniques for building optimized and efficient systems that do not drain the battery, cause memory leaks, or slow down with time.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Android High Performance Programming
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Getting started


In order to get started with ClassyShark, the fastest way is to download the last .jar from the GitHub site (as the time of writing this book, version 6.6 can be downloaded from the following URL: https://github.com/google/android-classyshark/releases). Download the latest version and then run it from the console with the following command:

java –jar route/to/ClassyShark.jar

This will start the application. You will be prompted with a screen like the following one:

It is now time to open a sample APK to see its composition and start using ClassyShark. Click on the icon and a screen to select an APK will be displayed. Select an APK from one of your projects (if you have been using Android Studio, they are generally in the build/output/apk folder). For this purpose, any APK file will be valid.

Note

If you want to automate ClassyShark or you feel more comfortable with the command line, it is also possible to open the APK directly by running the following command:

java –jar ClassyShark...