page.title=Creating an Android Project page.tags=project setup helpoutsWidget=true trainingnavtop=true next.title=Running Your App next.link=running-app.html @jd:body
An Android project contains all the files that comprise the source code for your Android app.
This lesson shows how to create a new project either using Android Studio or using the SDK tools from a command line.
Note: You should already have the Android SDK installed, and if you're using Android Studio, you should also have Android Studio installed. If you don't have these, follow the guide to Installing the Android SDK before you start this lesson.
It will probably be easier to follow these lessons if you use the same values as shown.
The Minimum Required SDK is the earliest version of Android that your app supports, indicated using the API level. To support as many devices as possible, you should set this to the lowest version available that allows your app to provide its core feature set. If any feature of your app is possible only on newer versions of Android and it's not critical to the app's core feature set, you can enable the feature only when running on the versions that support it (as discussed in Supporting Different Platform Versions).
An activity is one of the distinguishing features of the Android framework. Activities provide the user with access to your app, and there may be many activities. An application will usually have a main activity for when the user launches the application, another activity for when she selects some content to view, for example, and other activities for when she performs other tasks within the app. See Activities for more information.
Your Android project is now a basic "Hello World" app that contains some default files. Take a moment to review the most important of these:
app/src/main/res/layout/activity_my.xml
TextView
element that displays the message, "Hello world!"app/src/main/java/com.mycompany.myfirstapp/MyActivity.java
app/src/res/AndroidManifest.xml
app/build.gradle
build.gradle
file for each module of your project, as well as a build.gradle
file for the entire
project. Usually, you're only interested in the build.gradle
file for the module,
in this case the app
or application module. This is where your app's build dependencies
are set, including the defaultConfig
settings:
compiledSdkVersion
is the platform version against which you will compile
your app. By default, this is set to the latest version of Android available in your SDK.
(It should be Android 4.1 or greater; if you don't have such a version available, you must
install one using the SDK Manager.)
You can still build your app to support older versions, but setting this to the latest
version allows you to enable new features and optimize your app for a great user experience
on the latest devices.applicationId
is the fully qualified package name for your application that
you specified during the New Project workflow.minSdkVersion
is the Minimum SDK version you specified during the New Project
workflow. This is the earliest version of the Android SDK that your app supports.targetSdkVersion
indicates the highest version of Android with which you have
tested your application. As new versions of Android become available, you should
test your app on the new version and update this value to match the latest API level and
thereby take advantage of new platform features. For more information, read
Supporting Different
Platform Versions.See Building Your Project with Gradle for more information about Gradle.
Note also the /res
subdirectories that contain the
resources for your application:
drawable-hdpi/
layout/
values/
To run the app, continue to the next lesson.
If you're not using the Android Studio IDE, you can instead create your project using the SDK tools from a command line:
tools/
path.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 SDK Packages.
android create project --target <target-id> --name MyFirstApp \ --path <path-to-workspace>/MyFirstApp --activity MyActivity \ --package com.example.myfirstapp
Replace <target-id>
with an ID from the list of targets (from the previous step)
and replace
<path-to-workspace>
with the location in which you want to save your Android
projects.
Tip: Add the platform-tools/
as well as the
tools/
directory to your PATH
environment variable.
Your Android project is now a basic "Hello World" app that contains some default files. To run the app, continue to the next lesson.