briefcase-android-gradle-template
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A template for generating Android Gradle projects with Briefcase
Briefcase Android Gradle Template
A Cookiecutter <https://github.com/cookiecutter/cookiecutter/>__ template for
building Python apps that will run under Android.
Using this template
The easiest way to use this project is to not use it at all - at least, not
directly. Briefcase <https://github.com/beeware/briefcase/>__ is a tool that
uses this template, rolling it out using data extracted from a
pyproject.toml configuration file.
However, if you do want use this template directly...
-
Install
cookiecutter_. This is a tool used to bootstrap complex project templates::$ pip install cookiecutter
-
Run
cookiecutteron the template::$ cookiecutter https://github.com/beeware/briefcase-android-gradle-template
This will ask you for a number of details of your application, including the
nameof your application (which should be a valid PyPI identifier), and theFormal Nameof your application (the full name you use to describe your app). The remainder of these instructions will assume anameofmy-project, and a formal name ofMy Project. -
Add your code to the template, into the
My Project/app/src/main/pythondirectory. At the very minimum, you need to have an<app name>/__main__.pyfile that invokesorg.beeware.android.MainActivity.setPythonApp(), providing anIPythonAppinstance. This provides the hooks into the Android application lifecycle (onCreate,onResumeand so on); it's up to you what your code does with those lifecycle hooks.If your code has any dependencies, they should be listed in the file
My Project/app/requirements.txt.
If you've done this correctly, a project with a formal name of My Project,
with an app name of my-project should have a directory structure that
looks something like::
My Project/
app/
src/
main/
python/
my_project/
__init__.py
__main__.py (declares IPythonApp)
cpp/
...
java/
...
res/
...
AndroidManifest.xml
build.gradle
proguard-rules.pro
requirements.txt
briefcase.toml
build.gradle
gradle.properties
gradlew
gradlew.bat
settings.gradle
You're now ready to build and run your project! Either open the My Project
directory in Android Studio, or use the command line tools <https://developer.android.com/studio/build/building-cmdline>__.
Next steps
Of course, running Python code isn't very interesting by itself - you'll be able to output to the console, and see that output in the Logcat, but if you tap the app icon on your phone, you won't see anything - because there isn't a visible console on an Android.
To do something interesting, you'll need to work with the native Android system
libraries to draw widgets and respond to screen taps. The Chaquopy_ Java
bridging library can be used to interface with the Android system libraries.
Alternatively, you could use a cross-platform widget toolkit that supports
Android (such as Toga_) to provide a GUI for your application. Toga
automatically handles creating the IPythonApp instance and responding to the
app's lifecycle hooks.
.. _cookiecutter: https://github.com/cookiecutter/cookiecutter .. _Chaquopy: https://chaquo.com/chaquopy/ .. _Toga: https://beeware.org/project/projects/libraries/toga