Android Studio 3.3 advances with the Navigation Editor
Android Studio, Google’s IDE for Android development, is advancing. A stable release of version 3.3 is now available.
As per the organization the principle features incorporate authority support for a Navigation Editor, improved steady Java gathering, C++ code build up examinations, a refreshed task wizard and a speedier Android emulator when sparing depictions.
There are likewise ease of use fixes for the execution profilers and the discharge purportedly addresses 200 client revealed bugs.
Route Editor
I should concede the Navigation Editor was different to me. It is by all accounts a XML-based visual proofreader for streamlining the route, or 'activities', between 'goal hubs' in your application.
Jamal Eason, Product Manager at Google,
Android Studio 3.3 kicks off the broader quality focus area for the year, which we call Project Marble. Announced at the Android Developer Summit in November 2018, Project Marble is the Android Studio team’s focus on making the fundamental features and flows of the Integrated Development Environment (IDE) rock-solid, along with refining and polishing the user-facing features that matter to you in your day-to-day app development workflows.
In Project Marble, we are specifically looking at reducing the number of crashes, hangs, memory leaks, and user-impacting bugs. We are also investing in our measurement infrastructure to prevent these issues from occurring. Stay tuned for more updates and details as we progress on this initiative. This release of Android Studio is a solid milestone for the product.
Note that alongside Android Studio 3.3, you can also download Android 9 system images for the emulator for your app testing.
The Google Play emulator system images not only passes the official Android Compatibility Test Suite (CTS), says Google, they also include support for Peer-to-Peer Wi-Fi direct connections between two emulators.