what I'm waiting the most is Java 8 features. "In order to use the new Java 8 language features, you need to also use the new Jack toolchain" - Jack needed for Java 8.
but at least we've got new emulator and instant run (without jack), which super cool
to real device - still real devices are the best in testing your app behavior, but new emulator works faster, has additional settings (like Genymotion). I'll use emulator more now comparing to real device
Doing espresso tests is hard in a project that uses custom views everywhere. I use the hierarchy viewer to find the ID's of things i'm looking for, or search for text used.
wait wtf... there is a new thunderbirrds cartoon??
I'm still newbie, I think "Well but if I do this it'll be fixed in just a few minutes"
Ugh, great... On this awesome S6 Edge where the app runs amazingly well I can't use hierarchy viewer for some reason. On my crappy Galaxy Ace 2 I can use the hierarchy viewer perfectly but the app runs like shit. :(
I've been told off too many times for saying "I'm just going to put this little bit in here, it won't effect anything and it'll only take a few minutes"
Then a week later testers are finding bugs in it and I'm trying to look as small and insignificant as I can :)
Was just going to ask an espresso question here, good to see i'm not going offtopic ;D
Anyone knows if I need to use the idling resource stuff if I want to wait for some custom views to be loaded in the activity? I know espresso is supposed to know when all UI things are loaded but that doesn't seem to apply in my case.
I'm trying to make things better here but only because I've invested 4 years and there's finally some people hired who actually care about making things better
I've seen examples like this:
public class MaxSeconds {
public static final int MAX_SECONDS = 25;
}
and supposed that I could have a Constants class to wrap constants in, declaring them static final. I know practically no Java at all and am wondering if this is the best way to create const...
Ok we should consider start are own thing actually (Adam called it the Room 15 Ltd). It's depressing such amazing software engineers as people in this room to be treated like this; for real.
But the apprentice in the team was on the periphery of that and he shouldn't have to work in an environment where the guy giving him orders is known to threaten and insult people :P
source, I only have a little bit of experience with them. Before reading the answer on that post, I was thinking the same thing as what it said. But I could be wrong
"and if you would include the snippet that you tried in the post itself, I probably would have upvoted" I would think that would make him want to move his snippet from a comment to the post. Guess not
> At 1:00 a.m., we trekked to an office that had a PowerPC prototype. We looked at each other, took a deep breath, and launched the application. The monitor burst into flames. We calmly carried it outside to avoid setting off smoke detectors, plugged in another monitor, and tried again. The software hadn't caused the fire; the monitor had just chosen that moment to malfunction.
> The secret to programming is not intelligence, though of course that helps. It is not hard work or experience, though they help, too. The secret to programming is having smart friends.