ive created a signature capture app for the transport industry, with all sorts of features, my own app activation method, my own update method, no need for play store at all. But,,,, now,,,, i give up
well in my case it didn't make much since to publish on there anyway. I've released dozens of the same type of application throughout the years without ever posting them to there
there was very little upside and there was a ton of time spent (wasted) on fighting the black box intricacies of the play store
it didn't help that the stakeholders of this app didn't give me any copy or images to use in the posting and then made me change all of the copy and images that I made up for it
i went fron Eclipse to AS, turns out eclipse didnt know i was using fragments incorrectly, with a custom constructor. My own fault because i should know, but im learning so i didnt know. Now ive changed to using bundles to pass arguments to the fragments and i just cant get it right.
Aaan. The learning curve is steep! I made the same mistakes for my first fragments. It was a bitch to correct afterwards. Never construct a fragment using anything else than the empty constructor
Iv learnt that now, codeMagic helped me the other day. Just a shame it means so much editing of the way it currently works.. will get it right in the end, just taking alot of re-testing over, and over, and over and over again haha
But then, when you get it right, it means that your app can go in deep slumber, release all of the used resources, and recreate it all like magic when awoken. (and by magic, I mean liters of developer tears)
Matty, if you're looking for a really great and highly recommended android tutorial, check this out.
I followed it in a couple weeks, it teaches you a simple little forecast app but it covers everything. Databases, services, broadcast receivers, notifications, intents, fragments, UI design, and a lot of other basic topics.
No problem. I actually commented all of the code from that project when I built it, and still refer back to it regularly because I always think 'I did something like this in my Udacity app' lol
its funny because i see games with a lot of threads running different animation, and what looks like would take alot of memory or proccessing power.... But yet i seem to have created so many leaks that its possible to use all of the availible memory haha.
The guy who created libgdx published a physics puzzle game back in the day, it was the game he built while designing the framework. I created a bunch of the levels for that game.
I think that I would have a hard time, while creating a project from scratch, to think far ahead enough to do a properly interfaced code that's portable, on my first try.
@Try_me34 you can make all activities report to a global/singleton class about their onStart/onStop, and keep a counter of activities that are started and not stopped. then application is in foreground iff the counter is > 0
HOW THE FUCK IS IT REMEMBERING THE ROWS IN THE LIST WHEN I CLEAR THE ARRAYADAPTER, CLEAR THE ARRAYLIST WITH THE VALUES, AND RE-CREATE EVERYTHING FROM SCRATCH...................... FUCK SNAKES
@petey true! But as a recyclerview force you to follow the viewholder pattern, I like it. The fact that it handles seemlessly inserting and removing items, with some basic animation, is the icing on the cake
i was rooted on my htc one m7, but then realised i dont get OTA update so was stuck on old version of android. sure they are much better now though and you can get OTA updates
@ntcase You don't quite have enough rep for this room (100), only one answer, and no chat history so I'm going to have to deny for now. Give a couple more stellar answers and request again. room-15.github.io
@SargeBorsch Many many thanks man. They key was due to the fact that onStop is called after the onStart of the new activity that is about to come up. That's the secure way of detecting whether your application is currently running.
if an object has an integer, that is declared final, and i then create multiple instances of the object, does it use the same final int or does it create a new final int each time?
@Try_me34 Nice. :) I actually was not sure about this useful property (call sequence). But… even if it was called before and not after, it's still doable, using postDelayed or something in rxjava.
Yea I didn't know that onStop is called after onStart's other activity and that was the key. And that's the main difference between onStop and onPause. On the internet none is mentioning it
I'm curious how this works, it sounds like the US attacking FIFA, and I'm not really sure what authority the FBI has over an international soccer organization lol.
Also, it's no better in pro sports, where they get paid millions of dollars while working for a non-profit organization. (NFL, NHL, PGA, all non-profit, look it up)
Haha, as a foreigner, I'm still sad that Schwarzenegger can't run, so that Demolition Man becomes a reality... I still dream of a world where I would know what the shells are for...
Nature is one of those tricky words where it depends on how you want to use it, isn't it? If you meant nature as in scenery it would be le paysage if I remember correctly. But I do know 'la nature' is a french word.
I want to localize my app to french first, because it's the language I'm most familiar with, but I still have some things to straighten out. Ocus helped me out a bunch, though.