This document provides an overview of Android software and its architecture. It describes Android as an open source software stack that includes an operating system, middleware and key applications. It discusses the origins of Android from Android Inc. and its acquisition by Google. It outlines the major components of the Android software stack including the Linux kernel, runtime, application framework and core applications. It also covers the Android development environment, application structure, manifest file, activity lifecycle and more.
This Presentation (Android) is prepared by me for Education Purpose. And be careful for Hyperlinks. There are so many Hyperlinks. Just click on them.
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Mr. SOM
This presentation gives detailed overview of Android, Android Architecture, Software Stack, Platform, Database Support, Licensing, File System, Network Connectivity, Security and Permissions, IDE and Tools, Other IDEs Overview, Development Evaluation, Singing your application, Versioning your application, Preparing to publish your application, Publish your App on Android Market. This presentation also includes links to sample exampled.
Note: Few slides from this presentation are taken from internet or slideshare.com as it is or modified little bit. I have no intention of saying someone’s else work as mine. I prepared this presentation to just educate co-workers about android. So I want the best material from internet and slideshare.com.
This Presentation (Android) is prepared by me for Education Purpose. And be careful for Hyperlinks. There are so many Hyperlinks. Just click on them.
Thank You
Mr. SOM
This presentation gives detailed overview of Android, Android Architecture, Software Stack, Platform, Database Support, Licensing, File System, Network Connectivity, Security and Permissions, IDE and Tools, Other IDEs Overview, Development Evaluation, Singing your application, Versioning your application, Preparing to publish your application, Publish your App on Android Market. This presentation also includes links to sample exampled.
Note: Few slides from this presentation are taken from internet or slideshare.com as it is or modified little bit. I have no intention of saying someone’s else work as mine. I prepared this presentation to just educate co-workers about android. So I want the best material from internet and slideshare.com.
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Link Of App At Amazon Store: http://www.amazon.com/Wifi-Direct-Chat-Transfer-Application/dp/B00TKFFMZO/ref=sr_1_1?s=mobile-apps&ie=UTF8&qid=1424009545&sr=1-1&keywords=Wifi+Direct+Chat+and+File+Transfer+Application
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We all have good and bad thoughts from time to time and situation to situation. We are bombarded daily with spiraling thoughts(both negative and positive) creating all-consuming feel , making us difficult to manage with associated suffering. Good thoughts are like our Mob Signal (Positive thought) amidst noise(negative thought) in the atmosphere. Negative thoughts like noise outweigh positive thoughts. These thoughts often create unwanted confusion, trouble, stress and frustration in our mind as well as chaos in our physical world. Negative thoughts are also known as “distorted thinking”.
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleCeline George
Bills have a main role in point of sale procedure. It will help to track sales, handling payments and giving receipts to customers. Bill splitting also has an important role in POS. For example, If some friends come together for dinner and if they want to divide the bill then it is possible by POS bill splitting. This slide will show how to split bills in odoo 17 POS.
2. What is a Software?
A collection of computer programs and related data that
provide the instructions for telling a computer what to do and
how to do it making imaginary into reality .
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4.
Smartphone= PDA + Cell phone
Smartphone Features
Keyboard
Internet Access
Ability to download app & run independently
Personal Information Management
Wi-Fi
Support 3rd party app
And many more…
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6. Software Stack
Set of programs working together to produce a result.
It consists of
1. Operating System
2. Middleware
3. Key Applications
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8. What is Android?
Android is a software stack for
mobile devices that includes an
operating system, middleware
and key applications.
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9. WHYANDROID?
A simple and powerful SDK
No licensing, distribution, or development fees
Development over many platform Linux, Mac OS, windows
Excellent documentation
For us:
Development using Java .
Job opportunity
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10. The Birth of Android
Android Inc. founded in 2003
The key players at Android Inc. included
Andy Rubin -co-founder of Danger .Inc
Rich Miner-co-founder of Wildfire Communications, Inc.
Nick Sears - once VP at T-Mobile
Chris White - headed design and interface development at Web TV
Android Inc. acquired by Google
Google acquired the startup company Android Inc. in 2005 to start the
development of the Android Platform.
11. Introducing Android
A first joined project of the Open Handset Alliance (OHA)
First open, complete and free platform
Software stack open-sourced.
A generous development environment
A SDK is available to build ,compile, test and debug user applications.
Applications are developed using Java programming language
No difference between the built-in applications and the user ones
12. What is Open Handset Alliance?
•“… Open Handset Alliance™, a group of 85 technology and mobile
firms have come together to develop open standards for mobile devices.
Google, HTC, Sony, Dell, Intel, Motorola, Qualcomm, Samsung, LG, TMobile.....etc.
Announcement of the formation of the OHA was on 5 November 2007.
13. First Mobile
An early look of the SDK was released to developers on 12 November
2007.
The first commercially available Android phone was the T-Mobile
G1 (HTC Dream). In August 2008,and became available on 22
October.
16. Features
Application framework enabling reuse and replacement of components
Dalvik virtual machine optimized for mobile devices
Integrated browser based on the open source WebKit engine
Optimized graphics powered by a custom 2D graphics library; 3D graphics based
on the OpenGL ES 1.0 specification (hardware acceleration optional)
SQLite for structured data storage
Media support for common audio, video, and still image formats (MPEG4, H.264,
MP3, AAC, AMR, JPG, PNG, GIF)
GSM Telephony (hardware dependent)
Bluetooth, EDGE, 3G, and WiFi (hardware dependent)
Camera, GPS, compass, and accelerometer (hardware dependent)
Rich development environment including a device emulator, tools for debugging,
memory and performance profiling, and a plugin for the Eclipse IDE
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17. What you need:
Operating System:
Windows XP: (32-bit), Vista (32/64-bit), or Windows 7 (32/ 64-bit)
Mac OS X
: 10.5.8 or later (x86 only)
Linux
: Ubuntu Linux, version 8.04 or later is required.
JDK >= 5
Android SDK
Eclipse + Android Development Tools plug-in
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19. Installation - Android SDK
Download the Android SDK from:
http://developer.android.com/sdk/
Unpack the compressed file into a location you prefer.
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21. To create an AVD in Eclipse:
1.
Select Window > Android SDK and AVD Manager.
The Android SDK and AVD Manager displays.
1.
Make sure the entry for Virtual Devices is selected and click
New.
The Create new AVD window displays.
1.
Enter a Name for the AVD.
2.
Select Android APIs (API level 8) as the Target.
Click Create AVD.
Close the Android SDK and AVD Manager.
3.
4.
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22. To create the project in Eclipse:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Select File > New > Project.
Select Android Project in the Android folder and click Next.
Enter Project Name.
Select APIs (Platform 2.2) as the Build Target.
Enter the Application name.
Enter com.android as the Package name.
Enter the Activity name.
Click Finish.
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24. Structure of a typical Android Application
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25. Android Manifest xml File
Every application must have an AndroidManifest.xml
file (with precisely that name) in its root directory.
The manifest presents essential information about the
application to the Android system, information the
system must have before it can run any of the
application's code.
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28. Android S/W Stack – Linux Kernel
This is the kernel on which android is based . This layer
contains all the low level device drivers for the various
hardware components of an android device.
Providing an abstraction layer between the H/W and the
rest of the S/W stack letting the upper levels remain
unchanged despite changes in the underlying hardware.
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29. Android S/W Stack - Runtime
Core Libraries
At the same layer as libraries set of core libraries that enable developers to write android Apps
using java Prog. Language.
Providing most of the functionality available in the core libraries of the Java language
APIs
Data Structures
Utilities
File Access
Network Access
Graphics
Etc
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30. Android S/W Stack – Runtime (Cont)
Dalvik Virtual Machine
Providing environment on which every Android application
runs
Each Android application runs in its own process, with its own
instance of the Dalvik VM.
Dalvik has been written so that a device can run multiple VMs
efficiently.
Register-based virtual machine
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31. Android S/W Stack – Runtime (Cont)
Dalvik Virtual Machine (Cont)
Executing the Dalvik Executable (.dex) format
.dex format is optimized for minimal memory footprint.
Compilation
Relying on the Linux Kernel for:
Threading
Low-level memory management
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32. Android S/W Stack – App Framework
Enabling
and simplifying the reuse of components
Developers have full access to the same framework APIs
used by the core applications.
Users are allowed to replace components.
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33. Android S/W Stack – App Framework
Features
Feature
Role
View
System
Used to build an application, including lists, grids, text
boxes, buttons, and embedded web browser
Content
Provider
Enabling applications to access data from other
applications or to share their own data
Resource
Manager
Providing access to non-code resources (localized string
, graphics, and layout files)
Notification
Manager
Enabling all applications to display customer alerts in the
status bar
Activity
Manager
Managing the lifecycle of applications and providing
a common navigation backstack
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34. Android S/W Stack - Application
Android provides a set of core applications:
Email Client
SMS Program
Calendar
Maps
Browser
Contacts
Etc
All applications are written using the Java language.
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36. Activity lifecycle
An activity has essentially three states:
It is active or running when it is in the foreground of
the screen (at the top of the activity stack for the
current task). This is the activity that is the focus for
the user's actions.
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37.
As an activity transitions from state to state, it is
notified of the change by calls to the following
protected methods:
void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState)
void onStart()
void onRestart()
void onResume()
void onPause()
void onStop()
void onDestroy()
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38.
onCreate() : called when the activity is first created
onStart() :called when activity becomes visible to user
onResume() : called when activity start interacting with user.
onPause() : called when current activity is being paused and
previous activity is being resumed.
onStop() : called when activity is longer visible to user.
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39.
onDestroy(): called before activity is destroyed by the system.
onRestart() : called when activity has been stopped and
restarting again.
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42. Layouts:
Frame Layout: all child views are pinned to the top left
corner of the screen
Linear Layout: each child view is added in a straight
line (vertically or horizontally)
Table Layout: add views using a grid of rows and
columns
Relative Layout : add views relative to the position of
other views or to its parent.
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43.
Absolute Layout : for each view you add, you specify
the exact screen coordinate to display on the screen
Tab Layout : add different tab relative to each other
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46.
Message passing between two or more then two
components of android
Activity interact each other with the help of intent
in android
Basically two type of intent available in android
Implicit Intent
Explicit Intent
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47.
Implicit Intent:
Intent which is sent from one
activity to in built android activity
For ex
1. Dialer
2. Contacts
3. Browser
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55.
Dial:
Intent i = new Intent();
i.setAction(android.content.Intent.ACTION_DIAL);
i.setData(Uri.parse("tel:2121"));
startActivity(i);
Call:
Intent i = new Intent();
i.setAction(android.content.Intent.ACTION_CALL);
i.setData(Uri.parse("tel:2121"));
startActivity(i);
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56.
Browser:
Intent i = new Intent();
i.setAction(android.content.Intent.ACTION_VIEW);
i.setData(Uri.parse("http://www.google.com"));
startActivity(i);
Contacts:
Intent i = new Intent();
i.setAction(android.content.Intent.ACTION_VIEW);
i.setData(Uri.parse("content://contacts/people/"));
startActivity(i);
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57.
Call_Log:
Intent i = new Intent();
i.setAction(Intent.ACTION_VIEW);
i.setData(Uri.parse("content://call_log/calls/1"));
startActivity(i);
Media:
Intent i = new Intent();
i.setAction(android.content.Intent.ACTION_VIEW);
i.setData(Uri.parse("content://media/external/images/media/1"));
startActivity(i);
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58.
Camera:
Intent i = new Intent();
i.setAction(MediaStore.ACTION_IMAGE_CAPTURE);
startActivity(i);
Pick :
Intent i = new Intent();
i.setAction(android.content.Intent.ACTION_PICK);
i.setData(Uri.parse("content://contacts/people/"));
startActivity(i);
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59. Explicit Intent:
intent which is send to one activity
to another own activity
Second Activity must be registered in
manifest.xml file
Intent i=new Intent(First.this,Second.class);
startActivity(i);
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