Date: April 2009
API Level: 3
Android 1.5 is a major platform release deployable to Android-powered handsets starting in May 2009. The release includes new features for users and developers, as well as changes in the Android framework API.
For developers, the Android 1.5 platform is available as a downloadable component for the Android SDK. The downloadable platform includes a fully compliant Android library and system image, as well as a set of emulator skins, sample applications, and more. The downloadable platform is fully compliant and includes no external libraries.
To get started developing or testing against the Android 1.5 platform, use the Android SDK and AVD Manager tool to download the platform into your Android 1.6 or later SDK. For more information, see Adding SDK Components.
For a list of new user features and platform highlights, see the Android 1.5 Platform Highlights document.
The system image included in the downloadable platform provides these built-in applications:
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The system image included in the downloadable platform provides a variety of built-in locales. In some cases, region-specific strings are available for the locales. In other cases, a default version of the language is used. The languages that are available in the Android 1.5 system image are listed below (with language_country/region locale descriptor).
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Localized UI strings match the locales that are accessible through Settings.
The downloadable platform includes a set of emulator skins that you can use for modeling your application in different screen sizes and resolutions. The emulator skins are:
For more information about how to develop an application that displays and functions properly on all Android-powered devices, see Supporting Multiple Screens.
The sections below provide information about the application framework API provided by the Android 1.5 platform.
The Android 1.5 platform delivers an updated version of the framework API. As with previous versions, the Android 1.5 API is assigned an integer identifier — 3 — that is stored in the system itself. This identifier, called the "API Level", allows the system to correctly determine whether an application is compatible with the system, prior to installing the application.
To use APIs introduced in Android 1.5 in your application, you need to
set the proper value, "3", in the attributes of the <uses-sdk>
element in your application's manifest.
For more information about how to use API Level, see the API Levels document.
SlidingDrawer
widgetHorizontalScrollview
widgetAppWidgets
. For information about how to use AppWidgets, see the Developer's
Guide AppWidgets
documentation. Also see
Introducing home screen widgets and the AppWidget
framework on the Android Developer's Blog.Live Folders
with custom content.Input Method
Service
frameworkApplications can now use a new element in their manifest files, <uses-configuration>
to indicate to the Android system what hardware features
they require in order to function properly. For example, an application might
use the element to specify that it requires a physical keyboard or a particular
navigation device, such as a trackball. Prior to installing the application, the
Android system checks the attributes defined for the
<uses-configuration>
element and allows the installation to
continue only if the required hardware is present.
RecognizerIntent
.Sensor Manager
APIs
For a detailed view of API changes in Android 1.5 (API Level 3), as compared to the previous version, see the API Differences Report.