Adding other android projects to my eclipse project, using maven - android

Most of the times a 3rd party library comes in a main directory that contains readme/setting files/build.gradle and also one directory that represents the api itself and another one is an example.
I want to add a library to my project in Eclipse, how do I do it in the best way?
The way I know is:
"import" android project to workspace, and then go to my project "properties" -> android and add a library.
I find this way odd and I frequently get weird behaviour from eclipse. Also sometimes even after importing the 3rd parry library I still can't add it (it doesn't find it). So how do I do it properly?
If the library is available in Maven Central how do I add it to my build.gradle file? I can't seem to find it in my project (I've installed Gradle plugin for Eclipse).

Related

What is the correct way to add an Android Library to an Android Project?

I am trying to add android-support-v7-appcompat to my newly created Android project.
Following the Support Library Setup Documentation (developer.android.com/tools/support-library/setup.html), section Adding libraries with resources, I have created an android-support-v7-appcompat project, before adding it as an Android dependency.
EDIT: Here are more details on the process I followed to add the library project as an Android Dependency to the main project:
In the Project Explorer, right-click your project and select Properties.
In the category panel on the left side of the dialog, select Android.
In the Library pane, click the Add button.
Select the library project and click OK.
However, even if the dependency is correctly recognized, Eclipse still sees the compatibility references, such as ActionBarActivity, as errors, forbidding me to build the project. (See picture here).
To solve this problem, I tried the solutions accepted by similar questions on SE, i.e. adding android-support-v7-appcompat to the Project's Build Path, which successfully silents the errors that prevented me to compile earlier.
However, now when building and deploying the project, I get an error: the app crashes at launch, and the Console displays an error message: Could not find android-support-v7-appcompat.apk! (See picture here).
To resume, with the first configuration I am not able to compile with Eclipse, while with the second configuration I can't launch the application.
Therefore, I have two questions:
First, how should I be adding a library to my project, so I can at the same time build my project and be able to use the library's additions in my code in Eclipse?
Secondly, I feel like I am missing theoretical knowledge on how Eclipse handles dependencies.
What is the difference between adding a library as Android dependency vs Java Dependency / vs adding the project or its jar to the Build path?
First, how should I be adding a library to my project, so I can at the same time build my project and be able to use the library's additions in my code in Eclipse?
Your first approach should be fine, which would indicate that there is some other problem. For example, there may be errors in the appcompat library project that are preventing it from being compiled. However, given the error from the second approach, either you are running the appcompat library (which will not work) or something else is more fundamentally broken in your project setup, where your app thinks that it is supposed to build android-support-v7-appcompat.apk, when there is no such APK.
What is the difference between adding a library as Android dependency vs Java Dependency / vs adding the project or its jar to the Build path?
Never manually modify the build path in Eclipse for an Android project. While that will satisfy the compiler, the contents of the JAR(s) will not be packaged into your APK for use at runtime, resulting in runtime crashes (e.g., VerifyError).
"Java dependency" is for pure Java source code. Not only do you not have the source code to appcompat from the SDK, but an Android library project includes Android resources (and, at least on Android Studio, also assets and an optional manifest file).
For Eclipse, library projects are attached via the approach you describe as the first approach in your question. For Eclipse, plain JARs are just dropped into libs/ in your project root, and those are automatically added to your compile-time and runtime classpaths.

How do you import an Eclipse project into Android Studio now?

Using "Import Project" in Android Studio for an Eclipse project used to change the project structure and generate Gradle files, but right now (I'm using AS 0.5.3) it's only generating IDEA files (.iml, .idea) but not Gradle and it's not touching the file structure either.
How do you import an Eclipse project into Android Studio now?
Update: Trying to export gradle files in Eclipse won't export them for the app, it doesn't show up as a module in Android Studio either.
In newer versions of Android Studio, the best way to bring in an Eclipse/ADT (Android Development Tool) project is to import it directly into Android Studio; we used to recommend you export it from Eclipse to Gradle first, but we haven't been updating ADT often enough to keep pace with Android Studio.
In any event, if you choose "Import Project" from the File menu or from the Welcome screen when you launch Android Studio, it should take you through a specialized wizard that will prompt you that it intends to copy the files into a new directory structure instead of importing them in-place, and it will offer to fix up some common things like converting dependencies into Maven-style includes and such.
It doesn't seem like you're getting this specialized flow. I think it may not be recognizing your imported project as an ADT project, and it's defaulting to the old built-into-IntelliJ behavior which doesn't know about Gradle. To get the specialized import working, the following must be true:
The root directory of the project you import must have an AndroidManifest.xml file.
Either:
The root directory must contain the .project and .classpath files from Eclipse
or
The root directory must contain res and src directories.
If your project is complex, perhaps you're not pointing it as the root directory it wants to see for the import to succeed.
Export from Eclipse
Update your Eclipse ADT Plugin to 22.0 or higher, then go to File | Export
Go to Android now then click on Generate Gradle build files, then it would generate gradle file for you.
Select your project you want to export
Click on finish now
Import into Android Studio
In Android Studio, close any projects currently open. You should see the Welcome to Android Studio window.
Click Import Project.
Locate the project you exported from Eclipse, expand it, select it and click OK.
Try these steps:
1- click on Import project (Eclipse, ADT, ...)
2- Choose main directory of your Eclipse project
3- Keep the defaults. The first two options is for changing jar files into remote libraries (dependencies). It mean while building Android studio try to find library in local system or remote repositories. The last option is for showing only one folder as app after importing.
4- Then, you will see the summary of changes
5- Then, if you see Gradle project sync failed, you should go to project view (top left corner). Then, you should go to your project-> app and open build.gradle.
6- Then, you should change your compilesdkVersion and targetsdkVersion to your current version that you see in buildToolsVersion (mine is 23). For example, in my project I should change 17 to 23 in two places
7- If you see an error in your dependencies, you should change the version of it. For example, in my project I need to check which version of android support library I am using. So, I open the SDK manager and go to bottom to see the version. Then, I should replace my Android studio version with my current version and click try again from top right corner
I hope it helps.
Its Got simpler with Android Studio
All you need is to first choose
import project(eclipse.....)
then choose your folder eclipse based project.like this one below
3.based on the type of project and library you used like (ActionBarSherlock) you may prompted special import wizard so go ahead and click next then finish.
in this case it was simple one
4.And you are done.
but sometimes the debug or Run options do not work and a error msg shows like
"this project structure is not gradle based or migrate it to gradle"
something
to solve this
close the opened eclipse project and reopen same project through the same process as we did before with import project (eclipse adt,gradle,etc)) this time android studio gonna add all necessary gradle files and green debug option will work too.
i have did this somehow accidentally but it worked, i just hope it works for you too.
Android Studio has been improved since this question was posted, and the latest versions of Android Studio (as of this writing, we are at 2.1.1) have fairly good Eclipse importing capabilities, so importing Eclipse projects directly into Android Studio is now the best approach for migrating projects from Eclipse into Android Studio.
I will describe how to do this below, including a few of the pitfalls that one might encounter. I will deal in particular with importing an Eclipse workspace that contains multiple apps sharing one or more project libraries (the approaches posted thus far seem limited to importing just one Eclipse app project and its project libraries). While I don't deal with every possible issue, I do go into a lot of detail regarding some of them, which I hope will be helpful to those going through this process for the first time themselves.
I recently imported the projects from an Eclipse workspace. This workspace included four library projects that were shared between up to nine projects each.
Some background:
An Eclipse workspace contains multiple projects, which may be library projects or apps.
An Android Studio project is analogous to an Eclipse workspace, in that it can contain both library projects and apps. However, a library project or an app is represented by a "module" in Android Studio, whereas it is represented by a "project" in Eclipse.
So, to summarize: Eclipse workspaces will end up as Android Studio projects, and Eclipse projects inside a workspace will end up as Android Studio modules inside a project.
You should start the import process by creating an Android Studio project (File / New / New Project). You might give this project the same (or similar) name as you gave your Eclipse workspace. This project will eventually hold all of your modules, one each for each Eclipse project (including project libraries) that you will import.
The import process does not change your original Eclipse files, so long as you place the imported files in a different folder hierarchy, so you should choose a folder for this project that is not in your original Eclipse hierarchy. For example, if your Eclipse projects are all in a folder called Android, you might create a sibling folder called AStudio.
Your Android Studio project can then be created as a sub-folder of this new folder. The New Project wizard will prompt you to enter this top-level project folder, into which it will create your project.
Android Studio's new project wizard will then ask you to configure a single module at the time you create the project. This can be a little confusing at first, because they never actually tell you that you are creating a module, but you are; you are creating a project with a single module in it. Apparently, every project is required to have at least one module, so, since you are relying on Eclipse to provide your modules, your initial module will be a placeholder to vacuously satisfy that formal requirement.
Thus, you probably will want to create an initial module for your project that does as little as possible. Therefore, select Phone and Tablet as the type of your module, accept the default minimum SDK (API level 8), and select Add No Activity for your module.
Next, select one of the Eclipse app projects in your workspace that requires the largest number of libraries as your first project to import. The advantage of doing this is that when you import that project, all the library projects that it uses (directly, or indirectly, if some of your library projects themselves require other library projects) will get imported along with it as part of the importing process.
Each of these imported projects will get its own module within your Android Studio project. All of these modules will be siblings of one another (both in your project hierarchy, and in the folder hierarchy where their files are placed), just as if you had imported the modules separately. However, the dependencies between the modules will be created for you (in your app's build.gradle files) as part of the importing process.
Note that after you finish importing, testing and debugging this "most dependent" Eclipse project and its supporting library projects, you will go on to import a second Eclipse app project (if you have a second one in your workspace) and its library project modules (with those imported earlier getting found by the import wizard as existing modules and re-used for this new module, rather than being duplicated).
So, you should never have to import even a single library project from Eclipse directly; they will all be brought in indirectly, based on their dependencies upon app projects that you import. This is assuming that all of your library projects in the workspace are created to serve the needs of one or more app projects in that same workspace.
To perform the import of this first app project, back in Android Studio, while you are in the project that you just created, select File / New / New Module. You might think that you should be using File / New / Import Module, but no, you should not, because if you do that, Android Studio will create a new project to hold your imported module, and it will import your module to that project. You actually could create your first module that way, but then the second through Nth modules would still require that you use this other method (for importing a module into an existing project), and so I think that just starting with an "empty" project (or rather, one with its own vacuous, do-nothing placeholder module), and then importing each of your Eclipse projects as a new module into that project (i.e., the approach we are taking here), may be less confusing.
So, you are going to take your practically-empty new project, and perform a File / New / New Module in it. The wizard that this invokes will give you a choice of what kind of module you want to create. You must select "Import Eclipse ADT Project." That is what accesses the wizard that knows how to convert an Eclipse project into an Android Studio module (along with the library modules on which it depends) within your current Android Studio project.
When prompted for a source folder, you should enter the folder for your Eclipse project (this is the folder that contains that project's AndroidManifest.xml file).
The import wizard will then display the module name that it intends to create (similar to your original Eclipse project's name, but with a lower-case first letter because that is a convention that distinguishes module names from project names (which start with an upper-case letter). It usually works pretty well to accept this default.
Below the module name is a section titled "Additional required modules." This will list every library required by the module you are importing (or by any of its libraries, etc.). Since this is the first module you are importing, none of these will already be in your project, so each of them will have its Import box checked by default. You should leave these checked because you need these modules. (Note that when you import later Eclipse app projects, if a library that they need has already been imported, those libraries will still appear here, but there will be a note that "Project already contains module with this name," and the Import box will be un-checked by default. In that case, you should leave the box unchecked, so that the importer will hook up your newly-imported module(s) to the libraries that have already been imported. It may be that accepting the default names that Android Studio creates for your modules will be important for allowing the IDE to find and re-use these library modules.
Next, the importer will offer to replace any jars and library sources with Gradle dependencies, and to create camelCase module names for any dependent modules, checking all those options by default. You should generally leave these options checked and continue. Read the warning, though, about possible problems. Remember that you can always delete an imported module or modules (via the Project Structure dialog) and start the import process over again.
The next display that I got (YMMV) claims that the Android Support Repository is not installed in my SDK installation. It provides a button to open the Android SDK Manager for purposes of installing it. However, that button did not work for me. I manually opened the SDK manager as a separate app, and found that the Android Support Repository was already installed. There was an update, however. I installed that, and tapped the Refresh button in the import dialog, but that did nothing. So, I proceeded, and the perceived lack of this Repository did not seem to hurt the importing process (although I did get messages regarding it being missing from time to time later on, while working with the imported code, which I was able to appease by clicking a supplied link that corrected the problem - at least temporarily). Eventually this problem went away when I installed an update to the repository, so you may not experience it at all.
At this point, you will click Finish, and after a bit it should create your modules and build them. If all goes well, you should get a BUILD SUCCESSFUL message in your Gradle Console.
One quirk is that if the build fails, you may not see your imported modules in the Project hierarchy. It seems that you need to get to the first valid build before the new modules will appear there (my experience, anyway). You may still be able to see the new modules in the File / Project Structure dialog (e.g., if you want to delete them and start your import over).
Remember that since you are not changing your original Eclipse projects, you can always delete the modules that you have just imported (if importing goes badly), and start all over again. You can even make changes to the Eclipse side after deleting your Android Studio modules, if that will make importing go better the second time (so long as you preserve your fallback ability to build your existing source under Eclipse). As you'll see when we discuss version control below, it may be necessary for you to retain your ability to build under Eclipse, because the project structure is changed under Android Studio, so if you need to go back to a commit that precedes your move to Android Studio (e.g., to make a bug fix), you will want to have the ability to build that earlier commit in Eclipse.
To delete a module, you must select File / Project Structure, then select the module from the left side of the dialog, and then hit the delete key. For some reason, I was not able to delete a module directly in the Project hierarchy; it had to be done using this Project Structure dialog.
The import wizard generates an import-summary.txt file containing a detailed list of any issues it may have encountered, along with actions taken to resolve them. You should read it carefully, as it may provide clues as to what is happening if you have trouble building or running the imported code. It will also help you to find things that the importer moves around to accommodate the different structure of Android Studio projects.
If all does not go well, then have at look at these possible problems that you may encounter, along with solutions for those problems:
Generally speaking, there are two main kinds of problems that I encountered:
Proguard problems
Manifest problems
When Proguard is messed up, the (obfuscated) names of methods in your libraries may not match the names being used to invoke them from your app, and you will get compiler errors like "error: cannot find symbol class ..."
In Eclipse, Proguard stuff is pretty much ignored for library projects, with the Proguard stuff for any app project that you are building determining the obfuscation, etc. for not just itself, but for processing all of the libraries on which it depends. And that is generally what you want.
In Android Studio, however, you need to make some changes to attain this same effect. Basically, in the build.gradle files for each of your library project modules, you will want something like this:
buildTypes {
release {
minifyEnabled false
consumerProguardFiles 'proguard.cfg'
}
}
Where proguard.cfg is your library module's own proguard configuration file.
The term "consumer" in "consumerProguardFiles" apparently refers to the app module that is using this library module. So the proguard commands from that app are used in preference to those of the library module itself, and apparently this results in obfuscations that are coordinated and compatible, so that all calls from the app module to its library modules are made with matching symbols.
These "consumerProguardFiles" entries are not created automatically during the import process (at least that was my own experience) so you will want to make sure to edit that into your library modules' build.gradle files if they are not created for you during importing.
If you wanted to distribute your library projects separately, with obfuscation, then you would need an individual proguard file for them; I have not done this myself, and so that is beyond the scope of this answer.
In the app module, you will want something like this:
buildTypes {
release {
minifyEnabled true
proguardFiles 'proguard.cfg'
}
}
(BTW, as of this writing, while my apps are running just fine, I have not yet directly confirmed that things are actually getting obfuscated using this approach, so do check this yourself - e.g., by using a decompiler like apktool. I will be checking this later on, and will edit this answer when I get that info).
The second kind of problem is due to the fact that Eclipse pretty much ignores the manifest files for library projects when compiling an app project that uses those library projects, while in Android Studio, there is an interleaving of the two that apparently does not consistently prioritize the app's manifest over those of its libraries.
I encountered this because I had a library manifest that listed (just for documentation purposes) an abstract Activity class as the main activity. There was a class derived from this abstract class in my app that was declared in the manifest of each app that used the library.
In Eclipse, this never caused any problems, because the library manifests were ignored. But in Android Studio, I ended up with that abstract class as my activity class for the app, which caused a run-time error when the code made an attempt to instantiate that abstract class.
You have two choices in this case:
Use tools syntax to override specific library manifest stuff in your app manifest - for example:
<manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
package="com.goalstate.WordGames.FullBoard.trialsuite"
xmlns:tools="http://schemas.android.com/tools"
.
.
<application
tools:replace="android:name"
or,
Strip out practically everything from your library modules' manifests, and rely upon the app module's manifest to provide every value. Note that you do need to have a manifest for each library module, but not much more is required than the header and a bare manifest element with just a package attribute in it.
I tried both and ended up with approach 2., above, as the simpler method. However, if you wanted to distribute your library modules separately, you would need to create a more meaningful manifest file that reflects each library module's own individual requirements.
There is probably a more "correct" way to do this which puts requirements (e.g., permissions) for each library in the library manifest itself, and allows the automatic interleaving process to combine these with those declared for the app. However, given that Eclipse ignores the manifests for libraries, it seems safer at least initially to rely entirely on the app manifests and just strip the library manifests down to the bare bones.
Be aware that some of the project properties, and also the manifest attributes, from your Eclipse project will have been used to construct portions of your build.gradle files. Specifically, your compileSdkVersion in build.gradle is set to the project build version from the Eclipse project properties, applicationId is the package name from your app's manifest, and minSdkVersion and targetSdkVersion are also copied from the app's manifest file. The dependencies section of build.gradle comes from the library project dependencies in your project's properties.
Note that this may make some of your AndroidManifest.xml values redundant and quite possibly residual (i.e., unused). This could create confusion. My understanding is that the build.gradle values are the ones that actually have an effect, and that the manifest values like targetSdkVersion are not used any more for purposes of building. However, they may still be used by app stores such as Google Play; I don't know for certain one way or the other, so at this point I am just maintaining them in tandem.
Besides the above two kinds of issue, there are more routine things like importing a project that has a project build level of 22 when you have only installed SDK level 23 in Android Studio. In that situation, it is probably better to edit your app module's build.gradle file to move compileSdkVersion from 22 (the imported value) to 23, than it would be to install the SDK for level 22, but either approach should work.
Throughout this entire process, when something does not build properly and you make a change to try to address it, you might want to try Build / Rebuild Project and/or Tools / Android / Sync Project with Gradle Files, and/or File / Invalidate Caches/Restart, to make sure that your changes have been fully incorporated. I don't know exactly when these are truly necessary, because I don't know how much is done incrementally when you haven't yet had a successful build, but I performed them all fairly regularly as a kind of superstitious ritual, and I'm fairly certain that it helped. For example, when I got a Resources$NotFound runtime error that appeared to be from an inability to find the launch icon resource, I tried all three, and the problem was fixed.
When you have performed the above for your first Eclipse project and have attained a successful build, then with luck, you can select your app module from the dropdown at the top of the Android Studio display to the left of the play button, then click the play button itself, then select a device or Android Virtual Device, and the app should be loaded for running.
Likewise, you should be able to create a signed copy of your app using the Build / Generate Signed APK feature. Note that some import-related errors may appear when running your signed copy that do not appear when using the play button, so you need to confirm that both are working before deciding that your import is complete.
Following this, you will probably want to turn on version control. I am using git myself, but there are a number of other options available.
Version control is mostly beyond the scope of this answer, but there are a few things that are affected by the importing process. First, in Eclipse you might have your various projects in various folders stuck all over the place, but when you import into Android Studio, all modules will be created as direct child folders of your main project folder. So if you had a separate git folder for each project in Eclipse, or for related groups of projects organized under a parent folder for each group (as I did), that is not going to translate very well to Android Studio.
My knowledge of this is limited as I have not worked with version control yet in Android Studio, so maybe there is a way around this, but it appears that all version control in Android Studio is unified at the project level, and so all of your modules will be under a single git archive.
This means that you may need to abandon your old git archive and start fresh with a new archive for your imported source code. And that means that you will want to keep your old git archive around, so that it can be used with Eclipse to perform any needed bug fixes, etc., at least for a while. And you also will want it to preserve a history of your project.
If you are fortunate enough to have had all of your projects organized under a single Eclipse workspace, and if you were using a single git archive for those projects, then it is possible that you might just copy your old git archive from in and under your Eclipse workspace folder to in and under your Android Studio project folder. Then, you could edit any still-relevant .gitignore items from you Eclipse project into the auto-generated .gitignore file for your Android Studio project, and let git figure out what has been changed during the importing process (and some things will have been moved around - for example, the manifest file is no longer at the top level of your module). Others have reported that git is pretty good at figuring out what has changed; I have not tried this myself.
But even if you did this, going back to a commit that precedes your move from Eclipse to Android Studio would be going back to a set of files that would only make sense from inside Eclipse. So it sounds, well, "difficult" to work with. Especially since Eclipse will still be pointing to its original set of project folders.
I personally had multiple git archives for my various sets of related projects, and so I decided to just make a clean break and start git over again in Android Studio. If you had to do this, it could affect your planning, because you would want to be at a very stable point in your code development before making the move in that case, since you will lose some accessibility to that older code within your version control system (e.g., ability to merge with post-import code) once you have made the move to Android Studio.
The part of this answer that pertains to git is partly speculative, since I have not actually worked with version control yet on my imported project files, but I wanted to include it to give some idea of the challenges, and I plan to update my answer after I have worked more with version control inside Android Studio.
According to http://tools.android.com/tech-docs/new-build-system/migrating-from-eclipse-projects,
You have a couple of choices
- simply importing
- pre-exporting first from Eclipse.
Pre-exporting from eclipse may be the better choice if your project contains a lot of relationships that are Eclipse-specific. A.S. cannot 'translate' everything Eclipse can produce. If you want to continue using Eclipse as well as A.S. on this project code, this is the better choice. If you choose this method, please read the above link, there are some important pre-requisites.
Simply importing into AS will let AS 'translate' and rearrange the project, and is the recommended method, especially if you have no intention of returning to Eclipse. In this case, you let the A.S. wizard do everything and you dont need to manually generate gradle files.
In addition to the answer by Scott Barta above, you may still have import problems if there are references to Eclipse workspace library files, with e.g.
/workspace/android-support-v7-appcompat
being a common one.
In this case the import will halt until you provide a reference (and if you've cloned from a git repo, it probably won't be there) and even pointing to your own install (e.g. something like /android-sdk-macosx/extras/android/m2repository/com/android/support/appcompat-v7) won't be recognised and will halt the import, leaving you in no-man's land.
To get around this, look for refs in the project.properties or .classpath files that came in from the Eclipse project and remove/comment them out, e.g.
<classpathentry combineaccessrules="false" kind="src" path="/android-support-v7-appcompat"/>
That will get you past the import stage and you can then add these refs in your build.gradle (Module:app) as indicated in the Android tutorial, like below:
dependencies {
compile 'com.android.support:appcompat-v7:22.2.0'
}
Here is a simpler way to migrate:
Start off with a sample Android Studio project.
Open android studio and create a new project (or) just download a ‘sample’ studio project here: https://github.com/AppLozic/eclipse-to-android-studio-migration.
Now, open the downloaded project in Android Studio by following the below instructions.
Import eclipse project modules into Android Studio.
Select File -> New -> Import Module
Image title
Next, select the path of the eclipse project and import the modules. In case, if you see the message “Failed to sync Gradle project,” then click on “Install Build Tools and sync project…”
Now, remove the sample project modules by following the below simple steps:
Open settings.gradle and remove “include ‘:app’”
Right click on “app” module and “Delete” it.
Now, what we have is the Eclipse project open in Android studio with the Gradle build.
Here are few other links which might help you:
http://developer.android.com/sdk/installing/migrate.html
Source: http://www.applozic.com/blog/migrating-project-from-eclipse-to-studio/
Simple steps:
1.Go to Android Studio.
2.Close all open projects if any.
3.There will be an option which says import non Android Studio Projects(Eclipse ect).
4.Click on it and choose ur project
Thats't it enjoy!!!
Stop installing android studio 3.0.1 and go back 2.3.3 ( Stable version) . Check for the stable version and you can find them a lot
All you have to do uninstall and go back to the other version. Yes it asks to create gradle file seperately which is completely new to me!
Failure is the stepping stone for success..
The best way to bring in an Eclipse/ADT project is to import it directly into Android Studio. At first GO to Eclipse project & delete the project.properties file.
After that, open the Android studio Tool & import Eclipse project(Eclipse ADT, Gradle etc).

java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError when using third party library in Android application (Aviary SDK)

This has been driving me absolutely crazy. There's 101 answers to this kind of problem scattered across Stack Overflow but nothing seems to work for me.
Here's the story:
I downloaded the Aviary SDK (if that's relevant) and imported their library project into my workspace
I added their Library under Project -> Android -> Add.. and it's checked off there
The JAR (aviary-sdk.jar) containing the class that apparently is missing at runtime (com.aviary.android.feather.FeatherActivity) is listened under Android Dependencies in Project -> Java Build Path
The project builds correctly, but at runtime it throws a java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError when trying to launch this activity
I've tried a bunch of things (checking and unchecking things in Order and Export, reordering things there, etc.) but nothing is taking. I also tried just manually including the JAR in the /libs folder, but this SDK depends on a bunch of other things in that library project (e.g. themes) and having the SDK referenced twice doesn't work either.
I'm completely stumped here. I've looked at all kinds of other answers and nothing seems to work. I'm starting to get the feeling that this method of referencing other libraries is no longer supported...?
Edit: I've created a fresh Android project and reproduced the problem there, too. I suspect it has to be something stupid in my build environment:
Have you tried importing the aviary-sdk.jar as an external jar?
Copy the aviary-sdk.jar into the libs folder on your project
Right click on your project, Build Path -> Add External Libraries
Add the aviary-sdk.jar from your libs folder inside your project
Hope this helps, Good luck ^^
Try a few things,
Number 1: Regarding conflicting jars, it's probably refering to the support library. So go ahead and right click on your library project, and select the option 'Add Support Library'. This downloads the most recent support library, then do the same for your own application project.
The problem is that the library may be using a different support.jar than yours.
Number 2: If that doesn't fix the issue, go to your project properties, Java Build Path, and select 'Order and Export', and make sure that both 'Android Private Libraries' and 'Android Dependencies' are checked.
Clean the project, and try running again.
Figured it out.
After trying everything in the settings, I decided it was the IDEs fault. I deleted my ADT and started a new one, new workspace, imported all my projects (as-is), and launched from there. Everything works.
I guess this is my punishment for always complaining about how Vim was better than any IDE... Ya got me, Eclipse.
disgruntled sigh

Eclipse will not recognize project as library (ActionBarSherlock/ViewPagerIndicator)

I'm trying to get ActionBarSherlock and the ViewPagerIndicator libraries set up for my projects, but I seem to be running into a few issues. I sent Jake Wharton (The developer) a few messages earlier about it, and got a few replies but couldn't get anywhere - and I think he got busy with a few other things.
What my issue is, For both VPI and ABS
Both libraries open up without any errors, and I'm using compiler version 1.6 for all as is required.
The funny thing is, if I load in the samples that are provided - they work fine and link to his library; but when I go to add the library to my project - the above happens.
Where to store the actual library project does not matter, as long as you use a relative link to reference it. Check out the Library Projects - Development considerations:
Library project storage location
There are no specific requirements on where you should store a library project, relative to a dependent application project, as long as the application project can reference the library project by a relative link. What is important is that the main project can reference the library project through a relative link.
You should always use the Eclipse ADT plugin to select and set up Library Project Reference, i.e. right-click project -> Properties -> Android -> Add, then in the opened Project Selection window, select the Library Project list here (of cause you should import them in the same Eclipse workspace as your Main Project). This will add a android.library.reference using relative path into project.properties as well as show relative path in the Android preference window:
android.library.reference.2=../../../../../Documents and Settings/yorkw/Desktop/JakeWharton-Android-ViewPagerIndicator-f09acb0/library
If you directly alter it using absolute path from project.properties as below:
android.library.reference.1=C:\\Documents and Settings\\yorkw\\Desktop\\JakeWharton-Android-ViewPagerIndicator-f09acb0\\library
Then after Eclipse refresh your project, you get the exact error described in your question, see my screenshot below:
Hope this helps.
While importing the libraries, make sure that you tick the "Copy projects int workspace" check box. The library projects need to be in the same workspace for them to work.
delete and import the project and lib again. build the lib project , add lib to project, still error shows.. rename the lib project. this worked for me ....

Referencing a library project in Android

If I decided to use a library project in mine I still have to keep this library project in my workspace. Is there a way to avoid this? Also, does it mean I have to deliver an addition folder of library project with a folder of mine?
Library projects works like a charm, but of course you need to keep them open in the workspace as everytime eclipse builds your project it needs to access all the stuff from the library project.
If you don't want to keep this project open AND you don't plan to change it a lot AND it's not an Android project, it's a JAVA commom project you can build it once and instead of using a library project reference a JAR in your android project
If you want to do this outside of Eclipse, (say you're building from the terminal with ant, ie. in continuous integration, or if you just hate Eclipse.) Just place the library project in an adjacent directory. In your main project, edit project.properties to include:
android.library.reference.1=../LibraryFolderName
If you have more than one library to add, just number them accordingly, ie.
android.library.reference.1=../LibraryFolderName
android.library.reference.2=../AnotherLibraryFolderName

Categories

Resources