android app title naming - android

I'm trying to upload my android app, but instead of my app name "Соновник" it shows question marks. I've stored all my string in the values/strings.xml file. Is there some naming convention or am I supposed to do something for my app title to support UTF characters?

it might be a problem with your browser (or google's side) that it is not showing title correctly, otherwise on device i believe it should be fine.

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Google Play Store Description Size & Color [duplicate]

I've made an Android application that is available on Google Play. Now I want to add some more formatting to my app description (eg. indent, links, lists..). But I cannot find any website where possible formatting is listed. Google Help pages cannot help me either on this subject. There exists a lot of different formats and I don't really know which one to use (eg. HTML or wiki formatting..)
I could test it with trial and error, but that would take some time, because Google Play only refreshes after 2-3 hours. And while I'm testing, my app description would be rather ugly if the wrong format was used.
tl;dr Is there a list of all possible formatting I could use in the app description for Google Play?
Experimentally, I've discovered that you can provide:
Single line breaks are ignored; double line breaks open a new paragraph.
Single line breaks can be enforced by ending a line with two spaces (similar to Markdown).
A limited set of HTML tags (optionally nested), specifically:
<b>…</b> for boldface,
<i>…</i> for italics,
<u>…</u> for underline,
<br /> to enforce a single line break,
I could not find any way to get strikethrough working (neither HTML or Markdown style).
A fully-formatted URL such as http://google.com; this appears as a hyperlink.
(Beware that trying to use an HTML <a> tag for a custom description does not work and breaks the formatting.)
HTML character entities are supported, such as → (→), ™ (™) and ® (®); consult this W3 reference for the exhaustive list.
UTF-8 encoded characters are supported, such as é, €, £, ‘, ’, ★ and ☆.
Indentation isn't strictly possible, but using a bullet and em space character looks reasonable (•  yields "• ").
Emoji are also supported (though on the website depends on the user's OS & browser).
Special notes concerning only Google Play app:
Some HTML tags only work in the app:
<blockquote>…</blockquote> to indent a paragraph of text,
<small>…</small> for slightly smaller text,
<big>…</big> for slightly larger text,
<sup>…</sup> and <sub>…</sub> for super- and subscripts.
<font color="#a32345">…</font> for setting font colors in HEX code.
Some symbols do not appear correctly, such as ‣.
All these notes also apply to the app's "What's New" section.
Special notes concerning only Google Play website:
All HTML formatting appears as plain text in the website's "What's New" section (i.e. users will see the HTML source).
Currently (July 2015), HTML escape sequences (• •) do not work in browser version of Play Store, they're displayed as text. Though, Play Store app handles them as expected.
So, if you're after the unicode bullet point in your app/update description [that's what's got you here, most likely], just copy-paste the bullet character
•
PS You can also use unicode input combo to get the character
Linux: CtrlShiftu 2022 Enter or Space
Mac: Hold ⌥ 2022 release ⌥
Windows: Hold Alt 2022 release Alt
Mac and Windows require some setup, read on Wikipedia
PPS If you're feeling creative, here's a good link with more copypastable symbols, but don't go too crazy, nobody likes clutter in what they read.
As a matter of fact, HTML character entites also work : http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/sgml/entities.html.
It lets you insert special characters like bullets '•' (•), '™' (™), ... the HTML way.
Note that you can also (and probably should) type special characters directly in the form fields if you can enter international characters.
=> one consideration here is whether or not you care about third-party sites that collect data on your app from Google Play : some might simply take it as HTML content, others might insert it in a native application that just understand plain Unicode...
This is not bullet but you can consider it. As there is nothing like big dot.
I used below symbol in the description and its working fine.
⚫ Black Circle
🌑 New Moon
🌕 Full Moon
💠 Diamond With a Dot
🔸 Small Orange Diamond
⚙ Gear
🏴 Black Flag
🏳 White Flag
▶ Play Button
⏩ Fast-Forward Button
⭕ Heavy Large Circle
✴ Eight-Pointed Star
◼ Black Medium Square
◽ White Medium-Small Square
◾ Black Medium-Small Square
⬛ Black Large Square
You just need to copy and paste it over description. Below is the result.
Currently (June 2016) typing in the link as http://www.example.com will only produce plain text.
You can now however put in an html anchor :
My Example Site
Title, Short Description and Developer Name
HTML formatting is not supported in these fields, but you can include UTF-8 symbols and Emoji: ✓☆👍
Full Description and What’s New:
For the Long Description and What’s New Section, there is a wider variety of HTML codes you can apply to format and structure your text. However, they will look slightly different in Google Play Store app and web.
Here is a table with codes that you can use for formatting Description and What’s New fields for your app on Google Play (originally appeared on ASO Stack blog):
Also you can refer this..
https://thetool.io/2020/html-emoji-google-play
Include emojis; copy and paste them to the description:
http://getemoji.com
<br> seems to be the best and only way that currently works on the app version to create a new line break. I have tried it successfully in a review, as well as unsuccessfully tried all other Unicode/HTML newline-related characters that the Wikipedia page for newlines would tell me.
I used <br> with | immediately on either side, using no closing tag, and it magically created a single line break without revealing the source or screwing anything up.
TLDR: <br> lets you successfully utilize single line breaks in Google Play app -- unlike everything else I tried (a lot).
P.S. I have no clue how to make the thing show source instead of being used as source. !^( Now I do, and I know it works on both the desktop and mobile sites. !!
Additionally, upon searching for how to make it show the source, I stumbled upon this. <del></del>

Using strings from #android:string

I am a bit noob in Android and recently I found out that I can use the predefined string that Android provides as #android:string/cancel or #android:string/ok. At first I thought it was a good idea to use them because is a way to reuse code, but now I am not so sure about that.
What if somebody with a device configured with a language that I don't support install my app?
I assume that the app will use a default language, probably english, but those string from #android:string will get translated to the user's language, so he will end up with a mix of languages.
It this true? What do you think about use #android:string?
Thanks!
EDIT: Apparently my question hasn't been understood properly. I am NOT asking about how to support different languages. My question is about the convenience of use strings defined on #string:android, if it is correct to use them or can be lead to undesirable situation like a mix up of languages in the same application.
To ensure that your strings are appearing properly on devices configured with different languages, you'll want to create different values directories for different languages. For example, your default string values would be kept under values/strings.xml and French string values would be kept under values-fr/strings.xml.
The Android Developer website gives you plenty of information for supporting different languages in your application. http://developer.android.com/training/basics/supporting-devices/languages.html
The android: values (strings, icons, themes, etc.) will differ between devices and Android versions. If you want to use them, it's safest to copy them into your project. So for strings, you wouldn't have to worry about partial translation.
In the ressource folder of your app (res), ther is a folder "values" in it, and in this folder is the string ressource xml (strings.xml).
Usually, your app selects the strings from this file.
But you can add other value folders like this: Just create a new folder and name it "values-countryCode", for example "values-ch" for Switzerland ;)
Your app automaticly chooses the right string ressource, depending on your device's langague settings. If the langague of your device isn't available, it just takes the sting ressource of the default "values" folder.
A list if the country-codes is here.
Further information can be found here.
Hope I helped, and this is what you're looking for!

Google Drive SDK and Unicode filenames

I’m using OpenFileActivityBuilder from Google Drive SDK for Android to prompt the user about saving a file to Google Drive. Saving itself goes totally fine, but when I set the title to non-English text, such as Russian, the saved file has question marks instead of symbols. For example, I set title to “Файл” and created file has filename “????”. The thing is if user enters the title himself Cyrillic symbols are translated to question marks as well. This issue is applied to any example—even official quickstart app—just enter non-English characters (“Файл”, “ø”) into a file title and you’ll get question marks at created filename as well.
Does anyone know how to fix this issue? I thought this is my fault, but I’m obtaining string from resources, plus when user enters title himself it is definitely Unicode already.
This looks like a bug :-/ Sorry, we are looking into it.

Android Application Name getting truncated

My Application name is being truncated in some of mobiles is there any solution to show full name in all mobiles?
you can split the name like "android\nAppliction"
Define application name in String.xml and '\n' seperator used to split the application name
Your application name is not truncated. The launcher that is installed on the mobile that displays your app decides of a reasonable length for a title to display. Each different launcher has different rules for that (based on the screen resolution, the user settings, etc.), so you're never fully in control.
It's not big deal to display a partial title: the user knows what he's downloaded
If you want to make sure everyone has a full name displayed, use a shorter name!
If it's too long, It will truncated to fit into the launcher. The launcher app also controls this behavior. Apart from shortening the name, there's not much else you can do.
Sorry but the answer is no. You can't do anything about it. Shorter name perhaps?
I noticed this happening on an old phone of mine, the name was slightly too long so "mylongappname" looked like:
mylongappnam
e
My only recourse seems to be to add a dash "mylongapp-name". I wish there were a faux character one could add to tell android where to split the name if it needs too, but otherwise leave it as one word.

Wordwrap problem in android

I am having a textview with multi line text. In some places textview is having webpage address like google.com yahoo.com etc.., Now because of multi line, wordwrap functionality is splitting google. in one line and com in other line, same is happening for yahoo. in one line and com in other line.
Is there any way to specify that some words in the string should not be splitted in android?
-RR..
you have to load your string as Html content. For Example, think that this your String
Android is a software stack for mobile devices that includes an operating system, middleware and key applications. <a>http://www.google.co.in</a> The Android SDK provides the tools and APIs necessary to begin developing applications on the Android platform using the Java programming language.
you have to put <a> tag to doesnot affect the wordwrap.
you have to load your String like this: textview.setText(Html.fromHtml(content_String));
Hope it helps.

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