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Google is ready to focus all its effort in the Android Studio IDE, so they are killing support for previous developer tools. Click through to get all the details!
Google officially ended support for the Android Developer Tools plug-in that for a time turned Eclipse into the go-to platform for non-iOS mobile coders.
For months Google had warned Android developers that the official IDE for programming in Java against its popular mobile OS would eventually become its own Android Studio, supplanting the venerable ...
Android mobile developers have reason to celebrate with Google's new Android development environment, which pairs rich layout and build capabilities with IntelliJ IDEA's famous ease.
To make development easier, Google has written a plug-in for Eclipse called the Android Development Tools (ADT). To use it, you need to have Eclipse 3.2 or later.
Google today announced that it will be ending support for its Eclipse Android Developer Tools. They will be replaced by Android Studio 2.2, which is Google's own integrated development environment.
According to a post on the Google Developers blog, the company is planning to retire support for Android Developer Tools in Eclipse later this year: ...
Months after the release of the stand-alone Android Studio version 2.2, Google is officially getting rid of support for the older IDE in favor of its own internal project.
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