Welcome to the Android developer guides. These documents teach you how to build Android apps using APIs in the Android framework and other libraries. If you're brand new to Android and want to jump into code, start with the Build Your First App tutorial. And check out these other resources to learn Android development:
Getting Started with Android Follow. Overview. This article gives a summary of the features available on Android. Using the Zoom Cloud Meetings app on Android, you can join meetings, chat with contacts, and view a directory of contacts. This article covers: Sign in and Join; Meet & Chat; Phone; Get started with the Navigation component This topic shows you how to set up and work with the Navigation component. For a high level overview of the Navigation component, see the Navigation overview . This document explains how Xamarin works at a high-level and links through to the getting-started guides for Xamarin.Forms, Android, and iOS. Mobile software development lifecycle This article discusses the software development lifecycle with respect to mobile applications, and discusses some of the considerations required when building mobile To get started with Cloud Functions, try working through this tutorial, which starts with the required setup tasks and works through creating, testing, and deploying two related functions: addMessage() , which exposes a URL that accepts a text value and writes it to Cloud Firestore.
Getting started This page shows you how to set up your environment and build Slices in your app. Note : Android Studio 3.2 or later contains additional tools and functionality that can help you with Slice development:
Get started with the Navigation component This topic shows you how to set up and work with the Navigation component. For a high level overview of the Navigation component, see the Navigation overview . This document explains how Xamarin works at a high-level and links through to the getting-started guides for Xamarin.Forms, Android, and iOS. Mobile software development lifecycle This article discusses the software development lifecycle with respect to mobile applications, and discusses some of the considerations required when building mobile
Many different kinds of people use React Native: from advanced iOS developers to React beginners, to people getting started programming for the first time in their career. These docs were written for all learners, no matter their experience level or background.
Welcome to Android: A Beginner's Guide to Getting Started With Android Chris Hoffman @chrisbhoffman May 24, 2013, 6:40am EDT So you've just picked up your first Android phone, or perhaps you have an Android phone that you don't take full advantage of because that's the only type of low-end phone your carrier is offering these days. In this two-part guide, you will build your first Xamarin.Android application (using Visual Studio or Visual Studio for Mac) and develop an understanding of the fundamentals of Android application development with Xamarin. Along the way, you will be introduced to the tools, concepts, and steps required to build and deploy a Xamarin.Android application. You will need a basic understanding of Android development. If you are new to Android, see Building your first Android app for beginners. Open the sample project. This quickstart uses OpenGL, a programming interface for rendering 2D and 3D vector graphics. Review the Enable ARCore documentation before getting started with the steps below. This guide is a quick start to adding a map to an Android app. Android Studio is the recommended development environment for building an app with the Maps SDK for Android. Step 1. Download Android Studio. Follow the guides to download and install Android Studio.. Step 2. Install the Google Play services SDK Get Started with Kotlin on Android. Android Studio fully supports Kotlin, enabling you to create new projects with Kotlin files, add Kotlin files to your existing project, and convert Java language code to Kotlin. You can use all of Android Studio's existing tools with your Kotlin code, including code completion, lint checking, refactoring Welcome to the Android developer guides. These documents teach you how to build Android apps using APIs in the Android framework and other libraries. If you're brand new to Android and want to jump into code, start with the Build Your First App tutorial. And check out these other resources to learn Android development: