1.
Click New
in the toolbar.
2.
In the window that appears, open the Android
folder, select Android Application Project, and click Next.
3.
Fill in the form that appears:
·
Application
Name is the app name that appears to users. For this project, use
"My First App."
·
Project
Name is the name of your project directory and the name visible in
Eclipse. Package Name is the package name space for your app (following the
same rules as packages in the Java programming language). Your package name
must be unique across all packages installed on the Android system. For this
reason, it's generally best if you use a name that begins with the reverse
domain name of your organization or publisher entity. For this project, you can
use something like "com.example.myfirstapp." However, you cannot
publish your app on Google Play using the "com.example" namespace.
·
Minimum
Required SDK is the lowest version of Android that your app supports,
indicated using the API
level. To support as many devices as possible, you should set this to the
lowest version available that allows your app to provide its core feature set.
If any feature of your app is possible only on newer versions of Android and
it's not critical to the app's core feature set, you can enable the feature
only when running on the versions that support it (as discussed in Supporting
Different Platform Versions). Leave this set to the default value for this
project.
·
Target
SDK indicates the highest version of Android (also using the API level)
with which you have tested with your application.
As new versions of Android become available, you should test your app on
the new version and update this value to match the latest API level in order to
take advantage of new platform features.
·
Compile
With is the platform version against which you will compile your app. By
default, this is set to the latest version of Android available in your SDK.
(It should be Android 4.1 or greater; if you don't have such a version
available, you must install one using the SDK Manager). You can still build
your app to support older versions, but setting the build target to the latest
version allows you to enable new features and optimize your app for a great
user experience on the latest devices.
·
Theme
specifies the Android UI style to apply for your app. You can leave this alone.
Click Next.4.
On the next screen to configure the project,
leave the default selections and click Next.
5.
The next screen can help you create a launcher
icon for your app.
You can customize an icon in several ways
and the tool generates an icon for all screen densities. Before you publish
your app, you should be sure your icon meets the specifications defined in the Iconography
design guide.
Click Next.
6.
Now you can select an activity template from
which to begin building your app.
For this project, select BlankActivity and
click Next.
7.
Leave all the details for the activity in their
default state and click Finish.
Your Android project is now set up with some default files
and you’re ready to begin building the app. Continue to the next lesson.
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