How to install SDK in android studio? - android-studio

I once completely deleted Android Studio, but when I want to install it again, during installation, tick of SDK is not checked and it is not installed.
The installation location of SDK cannot be determined, whatever I do
I add ANDOID_HOME in environment variables in windows
I create C:\Android\Sdk SDK but But unfortunately SDK was not installed and

You will probably find the answer to your question here.
(I don't know if this will be your answer.
Because I have never come across such a problem).

I Think SDK is not in your system But you can download SDK from android official site for Android, mac or Linux.
Here is the link : https://developer.android.com/studio/releases/platform-tools
And paste the SDK here : C:\Android\Sdk

Related

Android Emulator Directory is Missing

I have recently come up with coding in dart and using flutter ...
after longtime spending for setting up SDK and stuffs for dart and flutter the only thing I need is an android studio set up and running SDK to it.
I'm actually running on Kali Linux and when I open an android studio I give it the directory file of the Android SDK but it says the folder is empty and there is no SDK (Sth like that ...). But I have downloaded the SDK recently... By the way when i click on next it warns me that the android emulator directory is missing!
Do the emulator or SDK needs a kind of root access !?
is there any way to connect the android SDK to vscode instead of an android studio?
Do android emulator only work on Ubuntu and no response for Debian based ?!
You don't need to download the SDK separately android studio will automatically install it, and you can even choose with version of the SDK you want.
If you haven't gotten that option when installing. Reinstall it form the website!
Not some stupid PPA or app market https://developer.android.com/studio

Android Studio SDK Issue

I was installed new version of Android Studio but its not show the SDK .Any one help to solve this path issue.See this images.
Android studio configure that not show the SDk where i fix it path of sdk[enter image description here]1
Generally the stored path of android sdk in generally hidden.
So as per my experiences go as i say,
First allow your Pc to show hidden file.
Go to the following directory of your Pc or Lappy:
C:\Users\user\AppData\Local\Android
Here You can see your Sdks.
Open Android Studio
Press CTRL+ALT+SHIFT
In search bar type "sdk" .(Beside it you will see the android sdk location.Change it.)
Set the path of android sdk which you went into earlier in your lappy's directory shown above.
http://filehippo.com/download_android_sdk/download/dd03cc329af0cd74b0e34afce1b4888e/
Here's the link..
And I ain't on Skype. Sorry😔
Thanks to all who give me suggestion.
Now its fix to reinstall complete android studio.
jdk file croup t or missing that why its show many problem.
I copy sdk file in another place and paste again when i reinstall my android studio its fix:) and no need to be download again sdk packages.

Android Studio on Ubuntu 14

I am unable to install android studio on ubuntu 14.
The archive provided here https://developer.android.com/sdk/index.html#Other does not have the entire setup. The readme file says -
The Android SDK archive initially contains only the basic SDK tools. It does
not contain an Android platform or any third-party libraries. In fact, it
doesn't even have all the tools you need to develop an application.
Tried with the procedure described here, but the ppa is not available https://launchpad.net/~paolorotolo/+archive/ubuntu/android-studio.
Android Studio can be found here.
The link you posted points to the Android SDK which is required for Android programming - when you install the Android Studio it'll ask you to provide the Android SDK too.

Google Glass (Not installed)

I am new to Android Studio and google-Glass.
I am trying to create a knew project that will use google-glass but my problem is when I have to Check/select glass it is Disabled and I do not know how to fix this problem.
See the Image below.
and here is my SDK that shows that i have installed APK 19.
and with the Image below it shows that the glass does appear on Android Studio
can anyone please help me if the is something wrong that i am doing.
will appreciate your Help.
In my case, I needed to make sure I also installed the latest Android SDK Tools, Android SDK Platform-tools, and Android SDK Build-tools. Lastly, also install Android SDK Build-tools rev. 20. All four of these are under "Tools" in the SDK Manager.
Downloading the above allowed me to create a new Glass project.
Also try:
Go to File -> Project Structure -> SDK Location. Make sure it is the correct SDK directory.
I installed the GDK with version 1.3.2 but, even checking the correct path of the SDK and GDK, the initial wizard for starting a new project didn't recognize it (still was saying "Glass (not installed)").
I had then to uninstall the current version of Android Studio and delete the SDK; I installed version 1.1 and downloaded again the SDK and GDK and then it works.

Android Studio quick documentation always "fetching documentation"

I just moved to Android Studio from Eclipse, and I found that it always shows "fetching documentation" when I use quick documentation (Ctrl+Q).
How can I solve this problem?
I downloaded the documentation for API 19, and the problem persists.
The problem is Android Studio does not automatically update the source link of reference even when the documentation is already downloaded.
The default link in jdk.table.xml is http://developer.android.com/reference/ (android studio tries to connect to this online server even if the network is blocked).
To solve the problem, we can just redirect the reference to local source.
MacOS
On MacOS, the config file jdk.table.xml is under
~/Library/Preferences/AndroidStudio<version>/options/, and the docs are here:
~/Library/Android/sdk/docs/, or the custom path of your Android SDK.
In jdk.table.xml, find all the lines:
<root type="simple" url="http://developer.android.com/reference/">
and modify them to
<root type="simple" url="file://$USER_HOME$/Library/Android/sdk/docs/reference/">
Windows
On Windows, the file jdk.table.xml is under
C:\Users\Name\.AndroidStudio<version>\config\options
In AndroidStudio 3.3, modify to
<root type="simple" url="file://$USER_HOME$/AppData/Local/Android/sdk/docs/reference" />
Android Studio (any os)
Then, in File -> Invalidate Caches / Restart… select Invalidate, and retry using Quick Documentation. It should display instantly. If it doesn't, select Invalidate and Restart, and you should be good to go.
Update:
On the newest Android Studio versions you can do as following:
Navigate to Tools > SDK Manager
Select the SDK Platforms tab
Make sure the Show Package Details checkbox, at the bottom right, is checked.
Select your target API level from the list, check the Sources for Android [API_Level] and click apply.
For older Android Studio versions:
Go to: Tools > Android > SDK Manager. Select SDK Tools tab and:
if Documentation for Android SDK is unchecked, check it and click apply
If Documentation for Android SDK is checked, uncheck it and click apply. After uninstall completes check it again and click apply.
UPDATE: out-of-date, please check #Htea's answer.
I was having the same issue as you. Here's what fixed it for me:
Make sure you have the Documentation package downloaded in SDK Manager.
Exit Studio if it's running.
Delete the file named "jdk.table.xml" located in ~/.AndroidStudioX.Y/config/options/ (remember to take a backup first!).
Relaunch Android Studio. should work correctly now and it should regenerate the file automatically.
Note:
This worked for me on Ubuntu 14.04 & Android Studio 0.8.11 (EDIT: Several users are reporting this solution also works for newer versions of Android Studio).
If it still doesn't work, try deleting and re-downloading the Documentation package from inside Android SDK Manager then try the above steps.
If you're running Windows, the file is located at "%UserProfile%.AndroidStudio\config\options", and if you're running OS X, it's located at "~/Library/Preferences/AndroidStudio/options" (credits to #Gero and #Alex Lipov).
Hope it helps.
The reason for me was that I had not downloaded sources for my SDK version defined by compileSdkVersion property in the build file (now called compileSdk in AGP 7.0.0).
So, in Android Studio 4.0 and higher do this:
Go to Settings 🡲 Android SDK 🡲 SDK Platforms tab 🡲 select Show Package Details checkbox at the bottom 🡲 under your target API Android section check the Sources for Android xx 🡲 click Ok and wait for the download to finish.
Thanks to Cyn45 for their answer.
As other answers said, it's because the Android Studio is trying to fetch the javadoc online (from http://developer.android.com/reference/), which will be very slow if the network not good, especially in China because google is blocked. So we should change this setting and let Android Studio fetch javadoc locally:
Download Android SDK Documentation using the Android SDK Manager.
Open the file ~/Library/Preferences/AndroidStudio2.2/options/jdk.table.xml, see notes below to make sure the correct file is edited.
In the file jdk.table.xml, replace all http://developer.android.com/reference/ to the path to your sdk reference folder. For example file://$USER_HOME$/tools/adt-bundle-mac/sdk/docs/reference on my Mac.
On OS X, if you have used several versions of Android Studio, there may be several configuration folders for each version (under ~/Library/Preferences/), you should change the jdk.table.xml in the right folder, in my case I should edit jdk.table.xml under the folder AndroidStudio2.2.
On Windows
File location of jdk.table.xml
C:\Users\[your windows user name]\.AndroidStudio2.3\config\options\jdk.table.xml
Notes
"." before AndroidStudio directory
version number after ".AndroidStudio". Be sure to edit the version number of Android Studio you're currently using. Previous versions will still have directories here as well.
Line to edit
Before
<root type="simple" url="http://developer.android.com/reference/" />
After
<root type="simple" url="file://C:/Android/sdk/docs/reference" />
Notes
C:/Android/sdk/docs/reference replace with Android SDK location on your machine
if you're copy/pasting location from File Explorer, replace backslashes (\) with forward slashes (/)
Each installed Android SDK version will have its own docs XML entry
Edit the line above in each SDK version found in jdk.table.xml (if you want quick docs when targeting those versions in build.gradle). e.g. If you have Android SDK API 25 installed, you'd find a section to edit under <name value="Android API 25 Platform" />
Invalidate Caches / Restart after change!
File -> Invalidate Caches / Restart...
I also found this issue with Android studio 0.8.9 & 0.8.14, here's a simple solution:
File -> Invalid Caches/Restart -> Invalidate and Restart
Sometimes the documentation package may be missing or not up-to-date.
Try open the Android SDK manager(Tool->Android->SDK Manager) and install the 'Documentation for Android SDK' in the latest release, for now it's Android 5.0(API 21), then restart Android studio.
If this happens again, just invalidate the caches.
For android studio 3.4, all you need to do is go to sdk manager -> SDK Tools, check "Documentation for Android SDK" and click apply.
It will automatically update the jdk.table.xml to point to the source you have downloaded.
I found a solution.
Close the android studio and delete the c:\Users\xxx.AndroidStudioBeta\ (in my case)
Change the android sdk path name
Open the android studio, it will ask for the sdk path
Now you can change back the sdk path or using the new sdk path.
You will find Ctrl+Q will work fine. (Don't import old setting)
I think we need download the sdk document before set the sdk path to Android studio. But the Android studio should handle this case or give us a option to set it.
For a quick workaround edit /etc/hosts (or C:\Windows\System32\Drivers\etc\hosts) file and add the line:
0.0.0.0 developer.android.com
This will prevent it but you can comment it out when you need to fetch the latest or ones not cached or read the docs online.
UPDATE: From unknown exactly version, just simply download Android Documentation in SDK Manager could fix the problem. My 3.4.1 do so.
But I don't know whether older version could works as well or not.
I meet the same issue too,but I solved it just now. I used the Android Studio with SDK before I solved it,and then I download a Android Studio Zip without SDK,and run it,and the issue disappeared.
You can try it.
you can disable it, in Android Studio Preference
Android Studio -> Preference -> Editor -> General -> Code Completion -> Show the documentation pupup in XX ms
see my another answer Link

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