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Me on Twitter

  • #OMG ! I just realised there was SEVERAL apps on #GooglePlay to check the availability of the #nexus devices !! 11 years 42 weeks ago
  • "A quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dogs" is called a pangram because it has all the letters of the alphabet. http://t.co/wyzT5YcY9j 11 years 43 weeks ago
  • @apkudo Good tool, the GUI needs a good failure overview to make it really useful for developers : we need to identify the problematic cases 11 years 43 weeks ago
  • If you post a comment that contains an URL it will be *silently* ignored... #GooglePlay #android http://t.co/f7NPsr714f 11 years 43 weeks ago
  • @ippontech Etude bien utile pour débuter dans le dev #mobile. Certains pts gagneraient en clarté avec qques exemples http://t.co/hdA2990pg4 11 years 43 weeks ago
  • Last night I got #android 4.2.2 on my #nexus7 ! I'm getting accustomed to regular updates... It's not so bad... 11 years 44 weeks ago
  • Communication between Activity and Service using Messaging - #android by the example http://t.co/KlGqJBM3 11 years 44 weeks ago
  • RT @AskJamesApp: Pour en savoir plus sur moi http://t.co/cyFf1WPs #askjames 11 years 45 weeks ago
  • My #AngryBirds Score app for #android : https://t.co/RwQDfUqe. A very limited app compared to the one of @louistouzet but it helps ! 11 years 46 weeks ago
  • Just pushed a 277Mb commit to http://t.co/bJgdwBL9 in a couple of minutes : nice tool ! And it's free #bitbucket 11 years 47 weeks ago

android Where Android Market stores the downloaded .apk

Today I ran into a small problem that might happen sometimes : trying to benefit from a 2 day-only offer to download for free Duke Nukem 3d (just for fun, I don't think it's going to be the killer app this year), I found out that my phone had not enough free memory to install it (Market told me : 56MB required).

After putting several apps off the memory (to SD card) to free enough space to install it and after a first failed attempt to download the 28MB archive, I was able to download the .apk from the Market (that was "phase 1 : download").

Immediately after the file was downloaded, I started up my Open Advanced Task Killer to free more memory for the installation process.

Of course I got the very bad idea to kill the Android Market process, while it was already installing the app ("phase 2 : installation").

From there, even though Duke Nukem 3d was listed in my installed apps, I only had the option to install it, not to launch nor uninstall it. Even launching the Market again was not triggering the installation anymore.

Duke Nukem 3d app icon

android How to organise XML resources

The first time I read Android developer docs, there was something that was unclear to me : what resource to put in which XML file.

In this article, I will focus on resources in res/values and give some hints about how to name your XML resource files and what kind of resource to put inside.

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In my case I had only one or two arrays of strings so it was overwhelming to put them in a separate file just because they were of a different type.

Another problem was accessing constant values from both XML layout and Java code. They are constant strings for internal use only, but in order to avoid duplicate declarations I decided to make them available as XML resources. I wanted those resources to be clearly separated from other, 'user visible', resources like GUI labels.

Another thing adding to the fog was the fact that, in derivate files (e.g. strings-fr.xml is derivated from strings.xml), you only want to find values relevant for the given file.
For instance, if you put all values of type 'string' in the same file but only a part of them should be internationalized, you would have a gap between the original and derivated files not only by the translated values but also by the list of values they declare. When coming back to the project after a long time, you might have a hard time remembering why there is this gap.

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android Tweaking Android Notifications

For SwitchDataSwitch, I wanted to provide users with a 1-click solution to enable and disable data traffic (2G/3G/...).
I chose the notification bar since it is a very accessible place, visible almost all the time and that can be expanded without stopping the running activity :

Expanding the notification bar 
The notification bar is usually presented in its reduced form (here the dark bar at the top of the screen with the smallest icons) but can be expanded by sliding it downwards.

Unfortunately, Android's Notification API is really made for instant notifications, not persistent ones, and that implies several inconveniences :

  • when creating a notification, the developer has to put an icon in the reduced notification bar, taking some precious space
  • by default an 'event timestamp' is shown next to the expanded content of the notification, which means nothing for a permanent service
  • there is no programmatic way to know if a notification is currently displayed or not

This article describes a way to create a notification that :

  • doesn't show up in the reduced notification bar
  • doesn't have a timestamp in the expanded notification bar
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