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Android NDK Beginner`s Guide - Second Edition

You're reading from   Android NDK Beginner`s Guide - Second Edition Discover the native side of Android and inject the power of C/C++ in your applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783989645
Length 494 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Sylvain Ratabouil Sylvain Ratabouil
Author Profile Icon Sylvain Ratabouil
Sylvain Ratabouil
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Setting Up Your Environment FREE CHAPTER 2. Starting a Native Android Project 3. Interfacing Java and C/C++ with JNI 4. Calling Java Back from Native Code 5. Writing a Fully Native Application 6. Rendering Graphics with OpenGL ES 7. Playing Sound with OpenSL ES 8. Handling Input Devices and Sensors 9. Porting Existing Libraries to Android 10. Intensive Computing with RenderScript 11. Afterword Index

Mastering module Makefiles

Android Makefiles are an essential piece of the NDK building process. Thus, to build and manage a project properly, it is important to understand the way they work.

Makefile variables

Compilation settings are defined through a set of predefined NDK variables. We have already seen the three most important ones: LOCAL_PATH, LOCAL_MODULE, and LOCAL_SRC_FILES, but many others exist. We can differentiate the following four types of variables, each with a different prefix:

  • LOCAL_ variables: These are dedicated to individual module compilation and are defined in Android.mk files.
  • APP_ variables: These refer to application-wide options and are set in Application.mk.
  • NDK_ variables: These are mainly internal variables that usually refer to environment variables (for example, NDK_ROOT, NDK_APP_CFLAGS, or NDK_APP_CPPFLAGS). There are two notable exceptions: NDK_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION and NDK_APPLICATION_MK. The latter can be passed to the NDK-Build in parameter to define a different...
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