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This is a summay of the tricks I have learned making an application called courseApp project.  This application was developed in the Mobile Information Systems that I took at University of Oslo. Eclipse is a very good tool to use for Android development. To start with you need to download Andriod SDK. After installing both of these(and ofcourse Java Development Kit, JDK which is a pre-requirement for both of these), you need to make Eclipse and Android SDK talk together. This is done by a plugin called “ADT plugin for Eclipse” from Google. You can read more about how to install this plugin by clicking hereIn case of Android SDK installation(the exe file) doesn’t recognize JDK on your computer, you can simply download the zip file and extract it. Don’t forget appending that folder to the %PATH% environment variable. Now some more tips follows :

background color for your layout :
add the following code to your layout XML code(#ff32cf is the color code)

android:background="#ff23cf"

Background Image for your layout :
1- Add the image you want to the layout folder of your project.
2- Add the following code to your layout XML code

android:background="@drawable/bbg"

EditText features :
one of the features I want to talk about is android:singleLine which is very useful. If you want to get some info from the user, this text box is a good tool to use, but make sure you set the SingleLine variable to true. If not if they paste a 20 lines of text by mistake your whole GUI gets out of shape. Also if you want to use this for example to write an email text, then this should be set to false as you want it to contain several lines. The good thing about several lines EditText is that they do have scrolling function.

<EditText ... android:singleLine="true">//Single Line box for getting email address
</span><span style="font-family: Consolas, Monaco, 'Courier New', Courier, monospace; font-size: 12px; line-height: 18px; white-space: pre;"><EditText ... android:singleLine="false">//Multi Line box for getting email text

in case you want limit the number of lines of an EditText:

<span style="font-family: monospace; font-size: 12px; line-height: 18px; white-space: pre;"><EditText android:layout_width="fill_parent"</span>
<pre><code>            android:layout_height="wrap_content" android:gravity="center"
android:singleLine="false" android:lines="5"
android:layout_marginLeft="10dip" android:layout_marginRight="10dip"
/></code><span style="font-family: Georgia, 'Times New Roman', 'Bitstream Charter', Times, serif; font-size: 13px; line-height: 19px; white-space: normal;">

 

Simple Item List :
Setting up a simple Item list with an already filled Arrayadapter.


static final String[] COUNTRIES = new String[] {"Afghanistan", "Albania", "Algeria", "American Samoa", "Andorra","Angola", "..."}
<pre>setListAdapter(new ArrayAdapter<String>(this,
android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1, COUNTRIES));
getListView().setTextFilterEnabled(true);</pre>

Drop Down List :
In Android drop down list is a little bit complicated to give value to. You first need to add one Spinner to your layout and then connect it to

 String[] Countries = { "India", "France", "Japan", "China", "U.S" };

// //////////////////Countries Spinner/////////////////////////////////
SpinnerCountries = (Spinner) findViewById(R.id.Spinner01);

// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// create an arrayAdapter an assign it to the spinner
AdapterCountries = new ArrayAdapter<CharSequence>(this,
android.R.layout.simple_spinner_item);
AdapterCountries
.setDropDownViewResource(android.R.layout.simple_spinner_dropdown_item);
SpinnerCountries.setAdapter(AdapterCountries);

int lenCountries = Countries.length;

for (int i = 0; i < lenCountries; i++) {
// test += Areas[i] + "\n";
AdapterCountries.add(Countries[i]);
}

source

Disabling the Landscape Mode :
You have two ways to do this, either in the code, or in the XML layout file :

XML :

</span><span style="font-family: monospace; font-size: 12px; line-height: 18px; white-space: pre;"><activity android:name=".SomeActivity"</span>
<pre>
<pre><code>              android:label="@string/app_name"
android:screenOrientation="portrait"></code>

OR in the code :

[/java]

setRequestedOrientation (ActivityInfo.SCREEN_ORIENTATION_PORTRAIT);     //  Fixed Portrait orientation[/java]

Layouts in Android :
LinearLayout :
LinearLayout aligns all children in a single direction — vertically or horizontally, depending on how you define the orientation attribute. All children are stacked one after the other, so a vertical list will only have one child per row, no matter how wide they are, and a horizontal list will only be one row high (the height of the tallest child, plus padding). A LinearLayout respects margins between children and the gravity (right, center, or left alignment) of each child.

TableLayout :
TableLayout positions its children into rows and columns. TableLayout containers do not display border lines for their rows, columns, or cells. The table will have as many columns as the row with the most cells. A table can leave cells empty, but cells cannot span columns, as they can in HTML.

RelativeLayout
RelativeLayout lets child views specify their position relative to the parent view or to each other (specified by ID). So you can align two elements by right border, or make one below another, centered in the screen, centered left, and so on. Elements are rendered in the order given, so if the first element is centered in the screen, other elements aligning themselves to that element will be aligned relative to screen center. Also, because of this ordering, if using XML to specify this layout, the element that you will reference (in order to position other view objects) must be listed in the XML file before you refer to it from the other views via its reference ID.

On Thursday I hold one of the most difficult presentations of my life. I was representing Robotica Osloensis, a student community which I am deputy chairman of, at Ignite Oslo. I talked about Rapid Prototyping which we use as our main method at Robotica in our projects. Ignite is a style of presentation where participants are given five minutes to speak on a subject accompanied by 20 slides. Each slide is displayed for 15 seconds, and slides are automatically advanced. The Ignite format is similar to Pecha Kucha, which features 20 slides displayed for 20 seconds each.

The Ignite Oslo was a very nice event. They had 5 minutes presentations about different topics which were very interesting. Presentations about art, film making, music composition with applications on iPad, 3D printing, air balloons and fashion, etc. It was pretty stressful when it came to my turn. The whole idea of 15 seconds intervals and having a lot to say about a subject that actually belongs to the nerd world made me very nervous. Thanks to my friends Magnus Lange and Ole Jacob, who helped me both about the content and preparing in advance for the presentation, I was well prepared. Also I should thank my friends who came there to support me when I was actually holding the presentation. My presentation can be downloaded by clicking here.

As the programming phase is almost finished, we have entered the design phase. We are working on our 3D design and plan to buy tracking belts and sprocket wheels. At the same time we are discussing the sponsorship of the project with RobotShop.com & hope we receive a positive answer from them. You can read full reports on our activities & have full access to our codes and designs on Super Crawler worklog at Robotica Osloensis forum or the project weblog.

Bilde

I am now a member of student robotics community at university of Oslo, called Roboitca Osloensis. I have joined the board team and currently I am in charge of all projects at the community. Our first project will be my summer project from last year( Super Crawler ), which we did not finish it …

Master student @ UiO

January 25th, 2010 | Posted by Shahab in My Projects | My Studies | Shahab | UiO - (0 Comments)

I am admitted as a master student at university of Oslo. I can choose between many different fields, but I guess I am going to stick to Robotics. I think I’ll be writing my thesis in algorithm optimalization of intelligent systems.

Wish me lots of LUCK.

PHP project, report #1

December 20th, 2009 | Posted by Shahab in My Projects | Shahab - (0 Comments)

I have already made a login system successfully with ability to login for users and root. The login system can redirect users to user pages and root to administration page. The root user has the power to delete or update the user informations(facing some difficulties here). The goal with this part was gaining experience with PHP and Mysql database.

Next step in this project will be debugging and securing the login system and designing the right database tables for the main project(game).

PHP based website project

December 11th, 2009 | Posted by Shahab in My Projects | Shahab - (0 Comments)

Recently I have been talking to a colleague to make a PHP based website with MySql database. The code with the database is supposed to make lists over users who play a roleplaying game online. More info about project later. Most likely it is going to be an opensource project.

Compiler for a simplified C

November 21st, 2009 | Posted by Shahab in Shahab - (0 Comments)

My friend (Jim) and I are finally finished with coding for a compiler in Java. The compiler is implemented in Java to run the code written in a language called Rusc wich is a kind of simplified C. The language contains integer, variables, functions, IF, Else, While, for, expressions, names, libraries of pre-coded functions. We finished testing and running the code. This code was written for a course at university of Oslo, IFI, called INF2100-Programming project. The code is available here.

Robotic Project Report #3

August 16th, 2009 | Posted by Shahab in My Projects | Shahab - (1 Comments)

Tank Type Design

Tank type design

Top Cover Sample

Top Cover

Robot Project Report, report #2

July 27th, 2009 | Posted by Shahab in My Projects | Shahab | UiO - (0 Comments)

This is the newest design of the robot chassis getting more and more closer to reallity … Now we have places for Motor#1 & #2, sprock wheels, Microcontroller and laptop inside the robot for Image Processing. The 3D design was designed at SolidWorks 2008 and will be printed by a 3D printed with a mixture of plastics material.

Robotic project, shahab