Mockups2Android is the missing link between UX design and development. You’ve created the perfect Android UX using Balsamiq Mockups but before spending the time and money having a developer produce it, you want to try it out in front of the client. Showing them using a laptop or pieces of paper just isn’t working. Mockups2Android will.
Mockups2Android (m2a) is an Android application that reads your Balsamiq Mockup files and creates your UX on the phone or tablet, using real Android controls and using the real data you entered. Imagine being able to let your client actually try out your design on a phone, letting them navigate through screens, enter text, scroll through lists, interact with maps and much more. With m2a it’s all possible. If you want to move a button or introduce a whole new screen into the flow, you can do it in seconds by making the changes in Mockups and m2a will do the rest. No code, no time, just the perfect prototyping tool. All screen sizes are supported.
Simple is a high performance XML serialization and configuration framework for Java. Its goal is to provide an XML framework that enables rapid development of XML configuration and communication systems. This framework aids the development of XML systems with minimal effort and reduced errors. It offers full object serialization and deserialization, maintaining each reference encountered. In essence it is similar to C# XML serialization for the Java platform, but offers additional features for interception and manipulation.
PhoneGap is an open source development framework for building cross-platform mobile apps. Build apps in HTML and JavaScript and still take advantage of core features in iPhone/iTouch, iPad, Google Android, Palm, Symbian and Blackberry SDKs.
We are building a community-written O'Reilly Cookbook about how to build great Android applications. It will be full of how-to information along with code snippets that illustrate the ideas presented. It will be complete, featuring both how-to's that overlap with the official documentation, and material that goes beyond this to be more tutorial, more in-depth, or explaining "lessons from the trenches": what actually works to get the application functioning well. Unlike most books written by one, two or a few individuals, this will have input from hundreds of contributors, who will be able to view and comment on each others' recipes before the book is printed. And after the book is printed, this site will continue to exist - with a larger collection of recipes than will fit in the printed book - and serve as an Android developer resource site long after.
We welcome contributions from anybody who has something useful to say about how to make usable and successful Android applications. There are several ways of contributing: experienced Android developers can write recipes; newer ones can suggest recipes that they'd like to see; anybody can read and comment on recipes; anybody can vote for existing recipes (voting indicates that you like the recipe and/or think it should be included in the printed edition of the book). All we ask of contributors is the following:
The Android Build Cookbook offers code snippets to help you quickly implement some common build tasks. For additional instruction, please see the other build documents in this section.
JSON.simple is a simple Java toolkit for JSON. You can use JSON.simple to encode or decode JSON text.
Features¶
* Full compliance with JSON specification (RFC4627) and reliable (see compliance testing)
* Provides multiple functionalities such as encode, decode/parse and escape JSON text while keeping the library lightweight
* Flexible, simple and easy to use by reusing Map and List interfaces
* Supports streaming output of JSON text
* Stoppable SAX-like interface for streaming input of JSON text (learn more)
* Heap based parser
* High performance (see performance testing)
* No dependency on external libraries
* Both of the source code and the binary are JDK1.2 compatible
It is a tool for reengineering 3rd party, closed, binary Android apps. It can decode resources to nearly original form and rebuild them after making some modifications; it makes possible to debug smali code step by step. Also it makes working with app easier because of project-like files structure and automation of some repetitive tasks like building apk, etc.
It is NOT intended for piracy and other non-legal uses. It could be used for localizing, adding some features or support for custom platforms and other GOOD purposes. Just try to be fair with authors of an app, that you use and probably like.
This is a project to port Android open source project to x86 platform, formerly known as "patch hosting for android x86 support". The original plan is to host different patches for android x86 support from open source community. A few months after we created the project, we found out that we could do much more than just hosting patches. So we decide to fork our code base that will provide android x86 support on different x86 platforms, and set up a git server to host it. To reflect this major change, we create this new project.
The Android Scripting Environment (ASE) brings scripting languages to Android by allowing you to edit and execute scripts and interactive interpreters directly on the Android device. These scripts have access to many of the APIs available to full-fledged Android applications, but with a greatly simplified interface that makes it easy to:
* Handle intents
* Start activities
* Make phone calls
* Send text messages
* Scan bar codes
* Poll location and sensor data
* Use text-to-speech
* And more
p-unit
An open source framework for unit test and performance benchmark, which was initiated by Andrew Zhang, under Apache License v2.0. p-unit supports to run the same tests with single thread or multi-threads, tracks memory and time consumption, and generates the result in the form of plain text, image or pdf file.