Reputation: 1303
I have to create a library that I am going to export to the client in a jar file. Is there any way to create a jar with the resources in it?
The Google adMob have such a jar, which includes resource file such as R$layout.class in it. This page describes some way to do that but I am not able to understand exactly how am I supposed to import the library project to an application using the method above.
Upvotes: 75
Views: 103344
Reputation: 4791
As per latest Android Studio v1.2, its as easy as having a cake. Already answered complete solution with screenshots on this link
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 31503
Here is an easy way to do it with ant, found this in the Volley sourcecode. Add the code below to custom_rules.xml then build with ant jar
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project name="volley-rules" default="help">
<!-- A rule to generate the JAR for inclusion in an Android
application. Output file will be bin/volley.jar -->
<target name="jar" depends="-compile">
<jar destfile="bin/volley.jar"
basedir="bin/classes" />
</target>
</project>
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1007584
This is the closest that you can get:
Step #1: Create a regular Android library project, and get it working.
Step #2: Copy that Android library project into another directory.
Step #3: Create a JAR from the compiled Java classes from the original Android library project, and put that JAR in the libs/
directory of the copy you made in Step #2. You should be able to run ProGuard on this JAR manually, though I haven't tried that.
Step #4: Remove everything inside the src/
directory of the copied library project, leaving behind and empty src/
directory.
Step #5: ZIP up or otherwise distribute the copied Android library project.
This will give you an Android library project like the Play Services one, where the resources are available, but the source code is not.
UPDATE: An even better approach nowadays is to package your library project as an AAR, which is Android's native way of creating a reusable artifact from your compiled code plus required resources. At the present time (July 2014), Gradle for Android, Android Studio, and the android-maven-plugin
can create and consume AARs.
Upvotes: 81
Reputation: 967
With Eclipse ADT v22.6.2 you can just export jar by clicking File->Export->Java->Jar File, select directories and destination where to save.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 33
Tested with adt 22.2.1
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1303
This works!
This will work fine with all the resources. Thanking you all. for your responce
Upvotes: 22
Reputation: 1801
Follow the below steps to obtain a distributable jar of your library (verified for library project without external dependencies):
Ctr+Shift+O
(on Windwows/Linux) or Cmd+Shift+O
(on Mac) to resolve any import dependencies from the library added.Comment in case facing any issue.
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 133580
You cannot package resource files into jar. You can export your project as a library project.
You export your utility classes that do not refer to resources in android ie pure java classes as jar file.
Check the link below
http://developer.android.com/tools/projects/index.html
To make your project a library project
Right click on your project. Go to properties. Choose Android. Make sure Is Library is checked.
To refer the library project in your android project
Right click on your project. Go to properties. Choose Android. Click Add. Browse and the library project.
Quoting from the docs
A library project differs from a standard Android application project in that you cannot compile it directly to its own .apk and run it on an Android device. Similarly, you cannot export the library project to a self-contained JAR file, as you would do for a true library. Instead, you must compile the library indirectly, by referencing the library in the dependent application and building that application.
Upvotes: 3