Visual Studio Community Visual Studio Professional Visual Studio Enterprise This device is not currently supported for these products. To continue downloading, click here. Visual Studio Emulator for Android. Deploy, test and debug Android apps with our fast, free, and best-of-breed Android emulator Download the emulator. Android Studio's various functions work together seamlessly, meaning that any changes to code can be seen instantly in the virtual device emulator.
This brings a whole new level of immediacy often lacking in other development suites. While this software will not be suitable for an absolute beginner, anyone with a basic coding background will understand it quickly.
Android have provided a fantastic free tool for their development community which should be used by any serious app creator. Android Studio dramatically increases development time, meaning that the tricky creation of interesting apps is more focused on the creative side rather than wrestling with a number of separate systems.
Android have always been a community-focused company but with this release the world of app development is open like never before. Laws concerning the use of this software vary from country to country. Android Studio - Arctic Fox Push code and resource changes to your app running on a device or emulator and see the changes instantly come to life.
Instant Run dramatically speeds up your edit, build, and run cycles, keeping you "in the flow. Write better code, work faster, and be more productive with an intelligent code editor that helps you each step of the way. Android Studio is built on IntelliJ and is capable of advanced code completion, refactoring, and code analysis.
Install and run your apps faster than with a physical device and test your app on virtually any Android device configuration: Android phones, Android tablets, Android Wear, and Android TV devices.
The new Android Emulator 2. Easily configure your project to include code libraries and generate multiple build variants from a single project. With Gradle, Android Studio offers high-performance build automation, robust dependency management, and customizable build configurations.
Android Studio. Download What's new User guide Preview. Meet Android Studio. Manage your project. Write your app. Build and run your app. Run apps on the emulator. Run apps on a hardware device. Configure your build. Optimize your build speed. Debug your app. Test your app. Profile your app. Android Studio profilers. Profile CPU activity. Benchmark your app. Measure performance. Publish your app. Command line tools.
Android Developers. Watch the following video for an overview of some emulator features. Requirements and recommendations The Android Emulator has additional requirements beyond the basic system requirements for Android Studio , which are described below: SDK Tools Android virtual devices Each instance of the Android Emulator uses an Android virtual device AVD to specify the Android version and hardware characteristics of the simulated device.
Run an app on the Android Emulator You can run an app from an Android Studio project, or you can run an app that's been installed on the Android Emulator as you would run any app on a device. Double-click an AVD, or click Run. The Android Emulator loads. Run the Android Emulator directly in Android Studio Run the Android Emulator directly in Android Studio to conserve screen real estate, to navigate quickly between the emulator and the editor window using hotkeys, and to organize your IDE and emulator workflow in a single application window.
Start your virtual device using the AVD Manager or by targeting it when running your app. Limitations Currently, you can't use the emulator's extended controls when it's running in a tool window. Snapshots A snapshot is a stored image of an AVD Android Virtual Device that preserves the entire state of the device at the time that it was saved — including OS settings, application state, and user data.
Save Quick Boot snapshots When you close an AVD, you can specify whether the emulator automatically saves a snapshot when you close. To control this behavior, proceed as follows: Open the emulator's Extended controls window. In the Snapshots category of controls, navigate to the Settings tab. Use the Auto-save current state to Quickboot drop-down menu to select one of the following options: Yes : Always save an AVD snapshot when you close the emulator.
No : Don't save an AVD snapshot when you close the emulator. Delete a snapshot To manually delete a snapshot, open the emulator's Extended controls window, select the Snapshots category, select the snapshot, and click the delete button at the bottom of the window. Load a snapshot To load a snapshot at any time, open the emulator's Extended controls window, select the Snapshots category, choose a snapshot, and click the load button at the bottom of the window.
Select Cold boot. Snapshot requirements and troubleshooting Snapshots do not work with Android 4. Snapshots do not work with ARM system images for Android 8. Snapshots are not reliable when software rendering is enabled. Loading or saving a snapshot is a memory-intensive operation. If you do not have enough RAM free when a load or save operation begins, the operating system may swap the contents of RAM to the hard disk, which can greatly slow the operation.
If you experience very slow snapshot loads or saves, you may be able to speed these operations by freeing RAM. Closing applications that are not essential for your work is a good way to free RAM. Navigate the emulator screen Use your computer mouse pointer to mimic your finger on the touchscreen; select menu items and input fields; and click buttons and controls.
Table 1. Gestures for navigating the emulator Feature Description Swipe the screen Point to the screen, press and hold the primary mouse button, swipe across the screen, and then release. Drag an item Point to an item on the screen, press and hold the primary mouse button, move the item, and then release. Tap touch. Pressing Control Command on Mac brings up a pinch gesture multi-touch interface. The mouse acts as the first finger, and across the anchor point is the second finger.
Drag the cursor to move the first point. Clicking the left mouse button acts like touching down both points, and releasing acts like picking both up.
Point to the screen, press and hold the primary mouse button, swipe across the screen, and then release. Point to an item on the screen, press and hold the primary mouse button, move the item, and then release.
Android SDK for Windows. Softonic review. Cathy Buggs Updated 3 months ago. More Close. Genymotion 3. Android Studio 4. MSWLogo 6.
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