Jim McKeeth shows off a preview of the Android support in Delphi in a YouTube video.
Jim McKeeth shows off a preview of the Android support in Delphi in a YouTube video.
Video direct link: Preview: Android SDK, NDK and Device support
http://delphi.org/2013/08/sneak-peak-android-sdk-ndk-and-device-support-in-delphi/
Video direct link: Preview: Android SDK, NDK and Device support
http://delphi.org/2013/08/sneak-peak-android-sdk-ndk-and-device-support-in-delphi/
Funny though that at no point he presses the play button so this video shows exactly nothing :)
ReplyDeleteStefan Glienke maybe...the debugger isn't even working, yet ]:D
ReplyDeleteIt shows that when he plugs in his Nexus, it's appearance is picked up by the IDE. That's more than I have been able to. (with my Nexus)
ReplyDeleteJennifer-Ashley Kuiper within Delphi or the Google SDKs?
ReplyDeleteWell as usually the first thing they show is that "button, edit, listbox" application and click the button couple times I was surprised that he did NOT do that which made me thinking.
ReplyDeleteWell, I connected my Nexus to my laptop, and as far as I know, it should show up in the list of targets and it didn't
ReplyDeleteI did run the "TabletMasterDetail" app on my laptop, and it was very slow to start up. No wonder, because the .so file was about 43 megs in size. (To load)
Ran it on my Nexus, of course. :)
ReplyDeleteAny beta testers should heed their NDA.
ReplyDeleteLOL, funny you should say that, Lars.
ReplyDeleteHow come, Jennifer-Ashley Kuiper ?
ReplyDeleteJennifer-Ashley Kuiper again, in Delphi or Google SDKs? Sofar i had no problems with using my Nexus4 with the Google SDKs(USB debugging enabled, and i wonder if they use the same drivers for the debugging/remote targets like google?)
ReplyDeleteNever mind, Lars, I talk too much. In any case, you are right. I shouldn't speak of test results.
ReplyDelete