Surely there must be a canonical for findViewById returning null because you called it before setContentView... stackoverflow.com/q/3264610/208273 is for a different case related to custom views, despite the incorrect #2 answer being for the case I'm looking for.
hilariously I was trying to find a dupe for stackoverflow.com/q/23039672, so I went for that one and then searched for one that correctly describes loading HTML assets into a webview
Kotlin as a language is a JVM language, and runs whereever Java runs. More, actually, because there's also Kotlin Native, which runs whereever LLVM runs
You have to manually import every class, and they're all in like com.fucking.unnecessarily.deeply.nested.packages.before.you.get.to.the.class.youre.InterestedIn
Oh, and it also infuriates me that the auto-import system is smart enough to recognise ambiguities and ask, but not smart enough to investigate the return type of a thing and auto-import
@RyanM Which is quite weird, because that's stuck at version 8, which is quite outdated. I find it strange that the norm isn't just to compile to ARM instructions.
The major difference, though, is that at least Vim lets me just move my cursor over using my keyboard and clicking a keybind (including for showing errors) rather than forcing me to manually move my mouse over the error to see it
A few arbitrarily selected popular iOS apps: Spotify is 134.4MB, Telegram in 107MB, Netflix is 124.8MB, Snapchat is 270MB, Google Maps is 209.1MB, Twitter is 214.9MB, Cash App is 468.4MB (!!!), United Airlines is 381.8MB, Facebook is 299.1MB, Uber is 329.8MB, Instagram is 262.9 MB
it could, although it's one of the smaller ones on iOS. Also a bad example to compare since Play Services exists and there's at least some functionality offloaded to that on Android.
I remember Pokemon GO doing something worse (when I was still playing it, which was probably two or three years ago). Basically I think they shipped the update (which was usually around 50-100MB) with the entire app everytime there was a new update
Also, how do you measure their size? If you happened to just get these values from the iOS settings app, their documents and caches are probably included. Caches for a map application can be quite large, for instance.
@RyanM I don't really think that's correct. For one, that includes the assets, and not just the binaries. I also think it includes caches which don't get cleared as often. Try connecting the phone to a computer, and check its file system.
@RyanM No, the iOS UI shows what matters to the user. The user doesn't care about the differences between binaries and assets. They only care about the size of the app itself, and the size of their personal data with that app.
Is this CashApp? It says the size is 43 MB (44,4 in the browser).
Also, keep in mind who the users of Android and iOS devices are. When developing iOS apps, one assumes that the iOS phones have more than enough storage for the apps; as such, optimizing for size is not a goal. However, on Android, this is a goal, because many Android devices are cheap devices, which don't have as much space. So don't necessarily blame the OS for this; it's a choice of the developers.
Android: Telegram is 72.82MB, Netflix is 74.24MB, Snapchat is 171MB, Twitter is 113MB, United is 323MB (comparably horrible on both), Facebook is 204MB, Uber is 354MB (jeeeeez, even larger on Android!), Instagram is 157MB
@Andreasdetestscensorship no, that's something else. This is Cash App.
The sizes aren't even that different, really. I wouldn't attribute this too much to the binaries, and the choices of the OS. It's two different platforms, with different goals, and application developers have different target audiences on the platforms, and engineer their apps differently.
@RyanM Ah. That's quite big, yeah. But not too gigantic. But hey, I see the first review: "freed us from checks". :P Haha. Funny. You Americans live in the past.
@RyanM Pixel 6a is considered a higher end phone, isn't it? Android is also an OS for low-cost devices with 8 GB. As such, application developers must take that into account.
low-end would be something like the Galaxy A03s, starting at USD$160 for 32GB of storage
in the US, you can go a bit lower than that before you start getting into no-name junk, but probably not a lot further (and if you're looking at that price range, you should consider a used phone)
Very likely less in the near foreseeable future, when the US pulls the trigger on the shutgun it holds against its own economy by not raising the debt ceiling
Remind me, which of the two go to extreme lengths to prevent repair, and incentivise buyers of their products to just buy a new and unnecessarily expensive product (that's usually inferior to equivalent products in terms of hardware) rather than repairing?
And what same company has actively been fighting right to repair in the US?
Well, speaking from personal experience, I keep my phones for 5 years. Every time there's been an issue with them, Apple repaired my phones for free. Android phones don't last as long. And also, right to repair is not the only consumer right. Apple does in fact make some good points in their case against letting anybody repair iPhones. But while they do have some good points, I also do agree with you about the criticism of them; they should support it more. But that said, for the most part
,
Apple treats me much better than Google does. And I will choose Apple any day over Google.
@ZoestandswithUkraine Requring USB-C in phones is stupid. I do not want USB-C in my phone. Lightning, except its speed, is a better solution. The criticism against Apple over USB-C is built on lack of knowledge.
And I do want to remind you that Apple has been one of the most prominent supporters of USB-C, while the Android manufacturers messed around with garbage like micro-USB.
USB-C is great, but not for everything. I do not need USB-C in my phone, and neither do I want it. I am very grateful that my headphones use USB-C, though, and I'm annoyed that my mouse uses micro-USB (it should've used USB-C).
but i hate android phones, i'm sure most of it is i've been using ios for more than a decade, but i just can't get used to the way android phones work. they always feel so unresponsive
The iPhone 6 did break, though... Twice. So I got replacement phones for free both times. Apple finally fixed its internal structure, and the phone never broke again (the 3rd one), except for when the battery died.
@KevinB Check if the battery is to blame, first, and if you can replace it affordably.
I just go back to the shop where I bought it (we don't have Apple Stores, btw, in Norway), and hand it in. Then I come pick it up sometime later that week. Well, doesn't have to be the same shop, but must be the same chain.
That said, discussing why apple is bad with people supporting apple is generally a lost cause, for the same reason trying to discuss why a lot of what Musk does is dumb with a Musk shill is an exercise in futility, so I'm gonna go do literally anything else
@ZoestandswithUkraine Well, yeah, I know, and that's why I'm happy we have those laws. Right to repair is a thing here as well, though, and applies when the damage is caused by yourself.
yeah the local shop for my provider doesn't do drop off repair, i'd have to go to one of their other branch locations, the closest of which is an hour and a half away
@ZoestandswithUkraine I'm not "supporting Apple". But you do push me to do so when you make badly supported claims about them, or just simply blame them for something unfair or stupid, such as USB-C.
@Andreasdetestscensorship Their reason not to is rooted in the aforementioned anti-consumer behaviour: theverge.com/2021/9/24/22690338/… - switching to USB-C means they lose control and revenue, because all accessories go via Apple. It also allows them to continue making sub-par products that are designed to break, because if you use Apple, you don't have a choice
Defending apple on USB-C is built on a lack of knowledge
Oh, and in case the article wasn't clear enough about it; one if Apple's arguments is that it'll "create e-waste", an argument they don't use about their alleged move to remove all ports from the iPhone, which would require completely new chargers and also create e-waste. The reason Apple doesn't care there is that they retain control of their charger ecosystem. With USB-C, they don't
@OlegValteriswithUkraine For the record, the OS. After you buy an Android phone, depending on the manufacturer, you get a couple years of major upgrades and security patches
Mine (Nokia X10) has 3 years of software and security upgrades before it's cut off. It is a legitimate criticism against most Android vendors, but it isn't an inherit limitation set by Google. Google itself is actually slightly better. Google Pixel 6A has guaranteed OS version upgrades "until at least" June 2025, and guaranteed security upgrades for another 1.5 years (January 2027), a discrepancy that presumably is rooted in Android getting increasingly heavy, making it difficult to backport
(which also isn't great)
Security upgrades are also "at least" on the page I checked, so it's not a hard cutoff there either
assuming it's a legitimate and accurate source anyway
(The dates are correct, it's the "at least" that might be questionable)