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Sorry for asking but, I have recently been using drive to save my projects in sync from a mac computer to a windows one. My project file on android studio started on my windows file but the sdk location and files were changed to suit the mac. When I try to open it on windows it says it changed the SDK directory as shown in the image but the project still is not functional
Check your local.properties file in your root project. And change it to something like this:
sdk.dir=F:/ANDROIDSDK
You need to remember that in Android Studio, path is using / instead of \.
I am a little confused why I am getting this message when the ANDROID_HOME environment variable is actually set.
It is also set in project defaults:
I am probably missing something trivial here, but not sure what. Thanks
Faced the same issue with Intellij IDEA 2017.2 on MacOS Sierra.
I have two projects with different Build targets (26 and 25).
Both projects were created on Win and committed to Git.
The First cloned project was with Build target 26. All needed SDK platforms and tools were downloaded with SDK Manager. The project compiled and built without any errors.
I didn't set up ANDROID_HOME variable or create local.properties file. I just set up the "Android SDK home path" within IDEA.
The Second cloned project was with Build target 25. I downloaded all needed SDK platforms and tools for this target. Then I configured new SDK for the Android API 25 platform. On Build APK got the error "SDK location not found. Define location with sdk.dir in the local.properties file or with an ANDROID_HOME environment variable". I tried many solutions (created ANDROID_HOME, re-installed SDK, changed settings many times) except local.properties creation - nothing works for me. As I use the same project on different platforms the creation of the local.properties file is not a good choice.
Today I made a strange thing. I clicked the Edit link near the Android SDK Location field in the SDK Manager. Then Next -> Next -> Finish.
And my issue gone.
Check your local.properties file
If sdk.dir="Your sdk path" is not available in the file. Please add it and try.
You should also change it on Project Structure.
Close the current project and you'll see pop up with dialog which will then proceed to Configure option.
Configure -> Project Defaults -> Project Structure -> SDKs on left column -> Android SDK Home Path -> give the exact path as you did on local.properties and select Valid Target.
You should define sdk path in your local.properties file and also in the Android SDK home path.
local.properties file is not available in your project. Please add it Gradle scripts and give the sdk path to sdk.dir
It will resolve your issue.
Please check correct sdk path in your local.properties file and also in the Android SDK home path.
If still not successful, You have to just copy your local.properties file to the folder where project is stored and it will work. But remember, it must be placed in the root folder where the project is stored.
I have installed Android Studio for the millionth time but when i go to C:\Program Files\Android\Android Studio , i can't find any folder named "SDK" , can't find it any where on the computer either.
Also, the SDK manager doesn't open, which i guess is a problem linked to the first one.
If you have downloaded the AS + SDK bundle:
Assuming the defaults were left unchanged, you will find the SDK in
C:\Users\%USERNAME%\AppData\Local\Android
If it is missing at this location, one of the following reasons apply: you have chosen a custom location, you missed to install the SDK at all, or (unlikely) they have changed the default install location.
Note #1: the AppData directory is hidden by default. If you have a standard Windows configuration, the C:\ path above should work "as is" (hit Win + R -> paste the path -> Enter).
Note #2: you will never find the SDK in the Android Studio directory unless you have explicitly put it in there. The reason is that those directories might be deleted after installing a newer version of Android Studio and you would have to re-install the SDK as well.
If you have retrieved the standalone SDK by some other means:
The SDK location may vary (from my experience), however (assuming the default configuration) you will most likely find it in C:\Program Files\Android or C:\Users\%USERNAME%
Tools > Android > SDK Manager > there you'll see the path to SDK
If you don't have it at C:\Users\%USERNAME%\AppData\Local\Android (this is where most people have it) than it is possible you don't have it installed. Go to Tools > Android > SDK Manager and then click on "Android SDK." On the top of the SDK Manager it will list the SDK Location. Click edit. If you don't have Android SDK installed, it will give you the option to install it in certain location. Install it, and Android Studio should work!
SDK folder by defalut is in C:\Users\<user-name>\AppData\Local\Android. And the AppData folder is hidden in windows. Enable show hidden files in folder option, and give a look inside that.
Make sure all the folders are visible.
click start>control panel>Appearance and Personalization>Show hidden files and folders then click "Show hidden files, folders and drives"
The file should be in C:\Users\Username\AppData\Local\Android as mentioned above. otherwise you can check by opening Android SDK Manager - top left under SDK path.
If SDK folder is present in system, one can find in C:\Users\%USERNAME%\AppData\Local\Android
If Android/SDK folder is not found
Once done with downloading and installing Android Studio, you need to launch studio.
On launching Android studio for the first time, we get option to download further more components, in that we have SDK.
On downloading components one can find SDK under Appdata (C:\Users\%USERNAME%\AppData\Local\Android)
I had to open Android studio and go through the wizard. Android studio will install the SDK for you.
If your are using android studio go to file >> project structure on the left pane press on SDK location . you will find the path where your sdk is located
When you install the android studio just by downloading from https://developer.android.com/studio/install.html sometimes sdk folder will not get appear in C:\Users\home\AppData\Local\Android Location..
But to set the android studio we need to set the path for android on this location.
So simply
1) start the android setup.
2) follow the instruction and android studio will automatically download the sdk folder by itself. (it will show the window like "Downloading Components").
After completing that installation check the above path again.
sdk folder will get appear now.
I faced the same issue. And I am able to resolve it by uninstalling the previous version I had, and removing the Android studio projects and reinstalling it.
And then go to Settings-> Android Studio -> Click on edit, to specify studio location, it will recognize the requask you if you would like to download sdk,
So I was trying to root one of my old phones and process required Android SDK. When I searched Android SDK, all i could do was download and install Android Studio. Everything went fine and smooth, till I tried to look for SDK in installation. I could not find it under Android Studio installation. But after a little search on Google and Android Studio configuration on my computer, I was able to find it at
C:\Users\username\Android\sdk
I hope that helps.
C:\Users\*********\AppData\Local\Android\Sdk
Check whether the USERNAME is correct, for me a new USERNAME got created with my proxy extension.
I found it in /Users//Library/Android/sdk
For me it was :
C:\Users\{your-user-name}\AppData\Local\Android\Sdk\tools\bin
Hope it helps!
After installation if you get a message about Proxy, it means that you're probably behind a firewall. You can create a new Outgoing firewall rule to include it. Add this to Allow:
C:\Program Files\Android\Android Studio\bin\studio64.exe
It will then download required SDK components
Once that's done, SDK will be in:
C:\Users\your_user_name\AppData\Local\Android\Sdk
For anyone who really can't find the SDK, you can manually download it from android studio.
File => Settings => Appearance & Behavior => System Settings => Android SDK
If you do not have a SDK (or did not select the right folder), you will be asked to select the SDK version and the folder where the SDK will be installed.
This is how I fixed by SDK not found problem.
System: Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, yet you can try these steps in accordance to your respective systems.
If there is an SDK file present, it should be most likely found at /home/USERNAME/Android/sdk
USERNAME is to be replaced by your username
If there is none, check the specified sdk path for the project in android studio.
File > Project Structure > sdk path
The sdk directory should be present in the specified path. In case, it is not there, open the file:
PROJECT_DIRECTORY/android/local.properties
PROJECT_DIRECTORY needs to be replaced by your project name.
If the file is not there, create it.
Then add the following line depending on where you find the sdk directory.
If sdk is there at /home/USERNAME/Android/:
add the line: sdk.dir = /home/tanya/Android/sdk
If sdk is not there at /home/USERNAME/Android/:
add the line: sdk.dir = /home/tanya/Android/
If the path specified for sdk directory in 'Project Structure' is entirely different and the sdk directory is present at the specified location,
add the line: sdk.dir = SPECIFIED_SDK_PATH
Add the specified sdk path in place of SPECIFIED_SDK_PATH
When upgrading android studio from 0.8.9 to 0.8.14 I get the error
Android SDK folder inside the application folder
even though my Android SDK folder is not inside Android Studio Folder.
As you can see in the release notes:
To proceed, you should open up a file explorer or finder window, go to the Android Studio installation (e.g. /Applications/Android Studio.app) and move the sdk/ folder over to a different location, such as your home directory. Once done, press Retry to finish installing the patch. The reason this is necessary is two-fold: First, we have made a lot of improvements to make the patch updater more accurate, and in order for installation signatures to match, you cannot have non-application folders inside the application directory. Second, placing the SDK folder inside the application directory was probably not a good idea to begin with: this folder should typically be writable and in a directory with a lot of extra diskspace, such that users can easily download and install additional libraries, system images and so on. We are doing some work on the installer side to make this easier to set up.
In the meantime, please find a different place to put the SDK (for example ~/android-sdk), and then point your SDK to this directory location instead. You can do this either by opening up the Project Structure Dialog and selecting the SDK Location tab, or if you try to load a project which is using the old location, you'll be prompted for the new location:
I'll assume you are using Mac OS not Windows, if true, you will need to do the following:
Go to Android Studio in Applications directory
Right click over its icon and select Show Package Content
Cut (Move) sdk directory to another place (ex. /home/sdk)
Restart Android Studio and select the sdk path where you moved it (ex. /home/sdk/)
Update
(Windows 8)
Steps I did to fix this:
Open Android Studio->Help->Check for update...
Update and restart
While downloading find folder "sdk" inside android studio installation folder, rigth click and "cut", paste the folder somewhere outside the android installation folder. Wait till download finish, a java window will appear sayng there was some corrup files, in my case was the file "uninstall.exe" select this file from list and hit "proceed"
After step "3" Android Studio will launch and will ask to set the sdk path.
Get the sdk folder that was pasted outside from android installation folder and bring him back. (read step 3), in the selection window from step 4, select the sdk path (re-copied sdk folder that was bringed back).
Done. This solved my "Android SDK folder inside the application folder" while try to update from 0.8.6 to 0.8.14
This is described in Known Issues. The best solution I found for this problem was to download android studio again from the downloads page and reinstalling it, instead of trying to run an upgrade. This solved the problem for me.
Edit based on #stknet's comment
Upgrading from 0.8.9 to 0.8.12+ requires a reinstall see here
You need to go to the Android installation folder from your file explorer, get the sdk folder and move it somewhere else (I put in a folder called SDKs) and then go and open Android Studio again. It will ask to point it to the sdk folder so just give it the path to your sdk folder and let Gradle synchronize it. After that go to Android Studio update and check for updates. Now you can update without errors.
This problem is detailed here.
For example I use it on Xubunutu and I just went to /usr/share/android-studio/data/ and cut the sdk folder and then moved it into /home/user_name/sdks. After that I fired Android Studio, pointed to the new sdk folder and updated.
No re-install required.
Hey even i faced this issue.
Just remove sdk folder present in android-studio folder and place it outside folder(or somewhere) and update. Once you update it will ask you for SDK location if no then manually update the SDK location in local.properties.
Hope this will help you.
Just had this issue while updated Android Studio from 2.2.2 to 2.2.3 in Windows 10. My SDK directory has not been in Android Studio's application directory since 2014. However, somehow an empty 'sdk' directory had appeared in
C:\Users\[username]\AppData\Local\Android\android-studio
Renaming the directory fixed the issue. The installation then deleted deleted my new 'sdk-blah' directory.
AFTER installing the SDK elsewhere and referencing your environment variable to that new location, simply delete the
D:\Android Studio\sdk folder
and Android Studio won't rely on it.
I just initialised a project on Android Studio, and it was working fine in version 0.2.6, but in 0.2.7, I get this error:
It creates a folder inside my Applications directory, but it does not initialize the project. Any help regarding this problem would be appreciated. I get no problems with version 0.1.1 through version 0.2.6, but when it comes to 0.2.7, things start to get problematic, like this and I can't even start a project.
With 2.7 update I got the same issue. It looks like now Android Studio thinks sdk lays in under its own folder at android-studio/sdk.
You should be able to use android app under android-studio/sdk/tools to get missing components (not tested).
Another solution would be to fix sdk path (tested):
Close any projects then drop to Welcome to Android Studio Dialog
Select Configure -> Project Defaults -> Project Structure
Select SDKs -> Android SDK -> Android SDK Home Path
Update it to your previous sdk location.
got the same problem when applying the last patch (2.7). I've resolved it by copying SDK Manager.exe from android-studio\sdk\tools\lib to android-studio\sdk\ then I've launched it and install the missing component.
After restarting Android Studio it works again !
You must manually run SDK Manager.
Folder: android-studio/sdk/tools
Search for android or android-sdk
The new Support Repository must be already selected, and you need only click the "Install" button.
Just as Leonidos said, install ASR through SDK Manager:
Tools > Android > SDK Manager ; Navigate to the Extras folder, and select Android Support Repositories.
Click install packages and it will work fine
I did a fresh install of Java, SDK and Android Studio, update it to 0.2.7 and install the ASR through SDK Manager, but the messages comes again.
So i found this solution.
The most common problem for Android Studio and 64Bit Windows System is the no 8.3 short path for
C:\Program Files and C:\Program Files (x86).
find_java.exe
couldn't handle it and give a wrong path back.
Finally do this:
dir /x C:
-- It shows no 8.3 short paths.
fsutil 8dot3name query C:
-- It shows NtfsDisable8dot3NameCreation is 1 on "C:",
means 8.3 short path won't be created in "C:".
Then I enable the generation of 8.3 short name by:
fsutil 8dot3name set C: 0
and create short names for C:\Program Files and C:\Program Files (x86) in windows recovery mode by:
fsutil file setshortname "C:\Program Files" PROGRA~1
fsutil file setshortname "C:\Program Files (x86)" PROGRA~2
And now dir /x C: can show the short names.
And now find_java.exe -s
can show the short path C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_2\bin\java.exe.
And now find_java.bat and android.bat can work good now!
source
Also copying SDK Manager.exe from android-studio\sdk\tools\lib to android-studio\sdk\
Just a few ideas to try that should hopefully help. These can be found by using Ctrl + Shift + A.
"Sync project with Gradle" - (it's also often in the toolbar with a green and yellow ball and a blue down arrow next to three android icons)
"Gradle" and select the ToolBox option; then hit the blue refresh icon to refresh all the gradle projects
"Project Structure..." (also available under File) Under the Libraries project settings you should see a valid reference to your support library. You'll also want to skim through everything to make sure everything else looks good with the project.
"Invalidate Caches..." (another available under File) Invalidate and restart. This one got me going again after the previous upgrade generated a bunch of errors.
Some of these may be redundant, but after having fought with similar issues in the past it's just a few easy things I've found to check.
If refreshing everything doesn't work you can always pull up the Android SDK from Tools -> Android -> SDK or from the toolbar with the blue/green boxy android that has a black down arrow. It should be next to the Sync Gradle button.
I update the Android Studio(AS) and see the same issue.
However, there is something slightly different about what I find out.
I actually have two sdks because I shift from Eclipse to AS.
Hence, I get one sdk in
c:\Program Files(x86)\Android\android-sdk
and anther in
c:\Android\android-studio\sdk.
And the real one that I use is in c:\Program Files(x86)\Android\android-sdk.
The important thing is that, I find that only one of the sdk setting is changed after the update.
Quick Start > Configure > Project Defaults > Project Structure
> Platform Settings > SDKs
1.7
JDK home path:
C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_10
Android 2.2 Platform
Android SDK home path:
C:\Program Files(x86)\Android\android-sdk
Android 4.0.3 Platform
same as 2.2
Android 4.2.2 Platform
Android SDK home path:
C:\Android\android-studio\sdk <- it is modified after update!!!!
Android 4.3 Platform
same as 2.2
After fixing the path in 4.2.2, I could create new project successfully again.
For some reason, if you install Android Studio in the same directory as the SDK, this error will pop up. Just install it somewhere else.
For instance, I had it installed at C:\Android\, along with the SDK. Then, I decided to install it at C:\Program Files (x86)\Android Studio and it simply worked.