The authoritative guide for Android programming is a good book and a textbook for our Android Fundamentals course.
The course encourages students to use Android Studio, but the development tool used in this book is ADT. To help students better use the textbook, I re-implemented some of the chapters in the book with Android Studio. And some of the case explained and made a replacement and fine-tuning.
In order to facilitate the index, the structure of this article is basically consistent with the textbook. No changes are made to the chapters or large sections, only the code snippets are retained, and the text is no longer described repeatedly. Please refer to the textbook to understand and complete the content of the corresponding chapters.
This blog is used to record the "re-implementation" of the case of the process, and add their own understanding, only for the student curriculum Practice reference, please do not reprint. Convention on the Code of good faith
The following will be considered as your commitment:
I will not submit the work/results of any other person solely by my personal efforts to complete all experiments, assignments, midterm and final exams;
Hold only one user account and do not let others use my user account and/or password;
Do not engage in any act that may not honestly improve my performance or improve or impair the performance of others;
The course encourages students
Work with others to complete exercises, assignments and experiments;
Discuss general concepts and information with others in the course;
Show ideas and results to classmates or other people to get their comments and comments.
Directory
No. 01 Android App first Experience
No. 02 Android and MVC Design model
Fundamentals of Android Course guide