Pro Android with Kotlin
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@de android telegram Pro Android with Kotlin Developing Modern Mobile
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- Table 2-1.
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CHAPTER 2: Application The most important attribute of the root entry of your app, and if you plan to publish your app, this must be a worldwide unique ID for it. A good idea is to use your domain (or your company’s domain) reversed and then an unique application identifier, as shown in the previous code. Table 2-1 describes all the possible attributes of all you need is the package attribute and a single Table 2-1. Manifest Main Attributes Name Description android: installLocation Defines the installation location. Use internalOnly for installing only in the internal storage, auto for letting the OS decide with affinity toward using the internal storage (the user can switch later in the system settings), or preferExternal for letting the OS decide with affinity toward using the external storage. The default is internalOnly. Note that a couple of restrictions apply to using external storage for that aim; see the online documentation for should never need to specify preferExternal here. package Defines the worldwide unique ID of your app and is a string like abc. def.ghi.[...] where the nondot characters may contain the letters A–Z and a–z, the numbers 0–9, and underscores. Don’t use a number after a dot! This is also the default process name and the default task affinity; see the online text companion to learn what those mean. Note that once your app is published, you cannot change this package name in the Google Play Store. There is no default; you must set this attribute. android: sharedUserId Defines the name of the Android OS user ID assigned to the app. You can prior to Android 8.0 or API level 26 do things such as assigning the same user ID to different apps, which lets them freely interchange data. The apps must then be signed with the same certificate. However, you normally don’t have to set this attribute, but if you set it, make sure you know what you are doing. android: sharedUserLabel If you also set sharedUserId, you can set a user-readable label for the shared user ID here. The value must be a reference to a string resource (for example, @string/myUserLabel). android: targetSandboxVersion Serves as a security level and is either 1 or 2. Starting with Android 8.0 or API level 26, you must set it to 2. With 2, the user ID can no longer be shared between different apps, and the default value for usesClearTextTraffic (see the online text companion) is set to false. android: versionCode Defines an internal version number of your app. This is not shown to users and used only for comparing versions. Use an integer number here. This defaults to undefined. android: versionName Defines a user-visible version string. This is either the string itself or a pointer to a string resource ("@string/..."). This is not used for anything else but informing the user. |
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