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Showing posts from June, 2014

lets talk chapters four and six today in class

we're using xml and native java for our development managing in code, vs creating fragments inside of activity life http://developer.android.com/guide/webapps/webview.html we will definatley need some sufficient debugging notes about the debug perspective we're still talking about fragmenting and activity lifecycles we have a fragment manager we'll have to code through chapter five chapter four we have logging stack traces lets see what we got we have diagnosing misbehaviors in chapter four we need a good ddms perspective using dalvik debug monitor service we're going to have to get good with logcat we should try to develop specifically for gingerbread and froyo for the sake of compatibility and portability we're going to shoot for chapter ten on Wednesday so far we're going to be in depth talking aobut our app manifest in xml we should have extensive experience with our app resources and grouping them for our target sdk by type something so...

Create a Project with Command Line Tools

        http://developer.android.com/training/basics/firstapp/creating-project.html   If you're not using the Eclipse IDE with the ADT plugin, you can instead create your project using the SDK tools from a command line: Change directories into the Android SDK’s tools/ path. Execute: android list targets This prints a list of the available Android platforms that you’ve downloaded for your SDK. Find the platform against which you want to compile your app. Make a note of the target id. We recommend that you select the highest version possible. You can still build your app to support older versions, but setting the build target to the latest version allows you to optimize your app for the latest devices. If you don't see any targets listed, you need to install some using the Android SDK Manager tool. See Adding Platforms and Packages . Execute: android create project --target <target-id> --name MyFirstApp \ --path <path-to-workspace>...

mobile development activities and intents MVC big ranch nerd guide

activities are not added to the manifest.xml file automatically, for an explicit intent we also have to engineer a java file that will bring this into your android application implicit intents would be using some other application or part of the system outside of our application but utilized inside somehow like with the camera or microphone and geolocating are examples of implicit intents

robotics club

http://www.societyofrobots.com/robotforum/index.php?topic=1581.0 http://phys.org/news/2014-04-students-wheelchair-geo-positioning-robot.html http://www.cwhaticando.com/view/?t=Build%20a%20Robot%20From%20A%20Power%20Wheelchair&itemParent=294 http://store.curiousinventor.com/ http://narobo.com/

isbn

9780393928761 asp? mobile? operating systems? -- Sent from my BlackBerry® www.blackberry.com