I am making a game in Android where i am generating random number for different colored balls. Currently i am generating buttons dynamically and settings the background resource.
I am using some high resolution icons as images. However when they render on screen, all of them gets slightly pixelated and don't look good on screen. I tried it with different sizes of icons but it was of no use.
Can anyone suggest where i can be going wrong and what can be the best way to take care of these things. I am new to game programming so any help would be appreciated.
I would guess that your application is not running at your phone's maximum resolution. You need to specify the target version of Android in your manifest file, otherwise the app defaults to an early version and only runs at low-res.
If your phone supports Android 2.2 (Froyo) then try adding this line to your AndroidManifest.xml file:
<uses-sdk android:minSdkVersion="8" />
Be sure to put it in the manifest section, not the application section. If you see a line for "android:versionName" then put it immediately after that line.
If your phone doesn't support Android 2.2 then change the minSdkVersion number to 7. If it's an older version then go down to 6 or 5. You'll need to make sure you have the correct SDK files installed on your development machine. (ie: you won't be able to compile an Android 2.2 app if you only have the 2.1 SDK installed.)
Related
I'm currently working with Xamarin for developing an android app. The structure of the app is really simple yet but a big problem appeared concerning the rendering of my main page. First, it's important to know that I'm supposed to develop for target API 23 so Android 6.0.
And every time I test my application on my Android 6.0 device via USB-debugging the design is totally messed up with my only (!) button duplicated many times and the textViews mixed up over the screen (As shown in the picture link below).
Even though I am new to Xamarin and Android (and C#) I have my settings (as I think) in perfect order. The minimum API level is 21, the target SDK version 23 (Android 6.0), my device runs version 6.0.1, the target compiling framework in properties is set to 6.0, the manifest is set up as I mentioned before and even my "Designer" window with the layouts .axml is set to v23.
I really don't know what to try next, because I want to start coding further. Would be nice if sb could help me out with that.
I have already tested the code of the app on a different API level (26 I think) and it worked perfectly fine with my Galaxy S9 in Debugger mode. Everything looked like it was designed in first place.
I also tried different AppThemes in Visual Studio but not one of the 7-8 I tried worked in any way different except for the colors.
The android app does only switch when clicking the button, texthttps://imgur.com/i0xChVniew 2 into the current date and time. I'm really sure, that my code is not the problem.
Picture: How it should look (In Xamarin)
Picture: How it looks on the phone
In Google play (app market), if an application is not compatible to your device (for some reason, say small screen size, etc). Then it is not even shown in the list.
Now, as an app developer I never want to unintentionally add a limitation in my app that forbids it from a range of devices.
So, while developing how can I make sure that the application will be able to run on atleast the type of devices that I intend.
Also, right now I'm developing an app & testing it in on my phone with version 2.3.5. And every now & then Google changes some method names & flags.
For newer android releases, I CAN test it on emulator, but testing it on phone/tabs/etc. is a different thing.
Please suggest.
how can I make sure that the application will be able to run on atleast the type of devices that I intend.
In manifest file you can mention, which type of device you want to run your app. And for testing you can create emulators for different devices to test your app. Try to make app UI such that it runs on all devices.
Google changes some method names & flags
Whenever Android changes any thing it will always be upward compatible means if you have made app for 2.2 it will run on 2.2 and above (screen size or resolution is other thing)
Regarding UI see my answer here
Layout for 720*1280 devices
By default apps will be available to as wide a range of users as possible.
There are certain limitations you can define in your manifest file, such as not being available on small screen sizes, but they are at your discretion.
The only limitation Google imposes on you is that any user who has a lower Android version than your minimum SDK version cannot see your app. To get around this, you can either design the app for lower SDK versions (I believe building for 2.2 and up gives you access to about 95% of the user base) or maintain multiple versions of the APK.
Read this. It will really help. Next Eclipse will help you a lot, firstly you can define what you wish to support (screen sizes and hardware requirements or even if they're not necessary but may be used) in the manifest. You can run a version check and implement APIs dependent on which version of Android you're running on. That's personally what I do, I check the API level and if it's greater than or equal to the API I wish to run I run it, otherwise I attempt to find compatible code (often using the compatibility library) or alternatively drop support for that feature, for example JellyBean notifications there's not really any work around for expanded notifications but I can use the NotifcationCompat builder.
I have wrote an application using android 2.2 in eclipse.
My app is working fine on the samsung galaxy mini android 2.2. However, it is not working on samsung galaxy s3 android 4.1.
My app is only taking up half of the screen on the samsung galaxy s3.
Why is my app not working on higher resolution devices?
How can i make the app compatible with other devices running
different versions of android?
Sounds like it's most likely you just have a LinearLayout at the top of your layout XML and it just takes up less space on the S3.
I would advise taking a look at the two links below; if you want a specific starting point, you could adjust your layout to match_parent and use the l/m/h/xhdpi folders to place different size graphics in. Also worth checking whether you are using dp or dip (density independent pixels)
http://developer.android.com/training/multiscreen/index.html
http://android-developers.blogspot.co.uk/2012/11/designing-for-tablets-were-here-to-help.html
The best way to ensure that your app will work on other devices is to get access to other devices and test your application on those devices before you release.
Another way is to make sure that you are targeting the correct SDK you need to target and use the AndroidSupportLibrary when needing to have backwards compatibility.
For us to help with your specific problem we would need more details as to what exactly is going on, but make sure the packages and libraries you are using are compatible with the android versions you are trying to target.
And make good use of the AndroidSupportLibrary.
Did you check the resolution compatibility? This seems more like an Android Manifest issue then an Android version issue.
Hi im having problems getting an app i have written for the motorola xoom to fill the screen. When i run the app it runs it in the middle of the screen as if it was on a phone or something. When creating the main.xml at the top it is showing the screen as a 10.1in WXGA screen and the system at the right hand side is set to Android 3.1
Any idea what im doing wrong?
Screen sizes beyond phone screens was added in Donut (API 4). Thus to say that you know about different screen sizes, you need to set at least API 4 as the target SDK version in your manifest:
<manifest ...>
<uses-sdk android:targetSdkVersion="4" />
</manifest>
This allows the system to use the modern defaults for the supported screens that you can specify with this:
http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/supports-screens-element.html
The use of android:targetSdkVersion is very important, since it allows the platform to disable a variety of compatibility behavior for your app to allow it to run better on more recent versions of the platform. Some of the things it impacts can be found here:
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/Build.VERSION_CODES.html
I had the same problem with porting to Galaxy Tab. Make sure you specify the correct API Level. I used an old one and had the same behaviour.
Try adding this to your AndroidManifest.xml: <uses-sdk android:minSdkVersion="4" />
Please i have different platforms installed. I just wanted to know what am supposed to do. If i develop with 3.0 platform, would those with a 2.2 be able to use my app??..
The second question which is the main question is I always get this error when i create android projects..
[2011-05-16 16:32:21 - Hello World] Dx no classfiles specified
[2011-05-16 16:32:21 - Hello World] Conversion to Dalvik format failed with error 1
What do I do to it?
There are several reports out there for that error (e.g., this one. All the solutions point simply to reload the project (select it in the tree at your left, and press F5).
Regarding the first question, unless you want to support Honeycomb-only features, then set up the api level to 8 (Froyo).
Eclair, Froyo and Gingerbread are android versions 2.1, 2.2 and 2.3 respectively (also referred in the documentation as API levels 7, 8 and 9). See the table here. If you want to support just mobile phones, set your target to 2.1 or even lower. That way you will be able to target most of the phones in the market. Your app will also run in Honeycomb (3.x) devices.
Honeycomb has new features to support larger screen devices, so if that is your main target, you might consider taking advantage of those features and drop cell phone support. All will depend on what is your objective.
you should have a look at the minSdk and targetSdk features of a manifest file :
<uses-sdk android:minSdkVersion="4" android:targetSdkVersion="8" />
This will help you target a android sdk version and precise what is the minimum sdk level that can run your app.
Regards,
Steff
Developing for Honeycomb or non-tablet version of Android, is different in various things. Your 2.2 application should run correctly on a tablet, but if you want to optimize the graphical interface and use all the notification and other things included only in Honeycomb, then you must use the appropriate API. Until Ice Cream Sandwich is released, we have to develope two different application for the best result.
Regarding the error you get with android projects (I suppose under eclipse?) you'll find some detail at this link, but if you follow all the instruction provided by google in the developers page, you'll be able to write and run your Hello World application.