• Home
  • Line#
  • Scopes#
  • Navigate#
  • Raw
  • Download
1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2<!--
3 Copyright 2013 The Android Open Source Project
4
5 Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
6 you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
7 You may obtain a copy of the License at
8
9     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
10
11 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
12 distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
13 WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
14 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
15 limitations under the License.
16-->
17
18<sample>
19    <name>SpeedTracker</name>
20    <group>Wearable</group>
21    <package>com.example.android.wearable.speedtracker</package>
22
23    <minSdk>18</minSdk>
24    <targetSdkVersion>25</targetSdkVersion>
25
26    <minSdkVersionWear>23</minSdkVersionWear>
27    <compileSdkVersionWear>26</compileSdkVersionWear>
28    <targetSdkVersionWear>26</targetSdkVersionWear>
29    <multiDexEnabled>true</multiDexEnabled>
30
31    <wearable>
32        <has_handheld_app>true</has_handheld_app>
33    </wearable>
34
35    <dependency>com.android.support:design:25.3.1</dependency>
36    <dependency_wearable>com.android.support:wear:26.0.0</dependency_wearable>
37
38    <dependency>com.google.android.gms:play-services-maps</dependency>
39    <dependency>com.google.android.gms:play-services-location</dependency>
40    <dependency_wearable>com.google.android.gms:play-services-location</dependency_wearable>
41
42    <strings>
43        <intro>
44            <![CDATA[
45This sample uses the FusedLocation APIs of Google Play Services
46to gather location and speed. The sample provides a simple screen that shows the
47current speed of the device on the watch. User can set a speed
48limit and if the speed approaches that limit, it changes the
49color to yellow and if it exceeds the limit, it turns red. User
50can also enable recording of coordinates and when it pairs back
51with the phone, this data will be synced with the phone
52component of the app and user can see a track made of those
53coordinates on a map on the phone.
54            ]]>
55        </intro>
56    </strings>
57
58    <template src="base"/>
59    <template src="WearPlusShared"/>
60
61    <metadata>
62        <!-- Values: {DRAFT | PUBLISHED | INTERNAL | DEPRECATED | SUPERCEDED} -->
63        <status>PUBLISHED</status>
64        <!-- See http://go/sample-categories for details on the next 4 fields. -->
65        <!-- Most samples just need to udpate the Categories field. This is a comma-
66             seperated list of topic tags. Unlike the old category system, samples
67             may have multiple categories, so feel free to add extras. Try to avoid
68             simply tagging everything with "UI". :)-->
69        <categories>GPS, Wearable</categories>
70        <technologies>Android</technologies>
71        <languages>Java</languages>
72        <solutions>Mobile</solutions>
73        <!-- Values: {BEGINNER | INTERMEDIATE | ADVANCED | EXPERT} -->
74        <!-- Beginner is for "getting started" type content, or essential content.
75             (e.g. "Hello World", activities, intents)
76
77             Intermediate is for content that covers material a beginner doesn't need
78             to know, but that a skilled developer is expected to know.
79             (e.g. services, basic styles and theming, sync adapters)
80
81             Advanced is for highly technical content geared towards experienced developers.
82             (e.g. performance optimizations, custom views, bluetooth)
83
84             Expert is reserved for highly technical or specialized content, and should
85             be used sparingly. (e.g. VPN clients, SELinux, custom instrumentation runners) -->
86        <level>INTERMEDIATE</level>
87        <!-- Dimensions: 512x512, PNG fomrat -->
88
89        <!-- List of APIs that this sample should be cross-referenced under. Use <android>
90        for fully-qualified Framework class names ("android:" namespace).
91
92        Use <ext> for custom namespaces, if needed. See "Samples Index API" documentation
93        for more details. -->
94        <api_refs>
95            <android>com.google.android.gms.maps.MapFragment</android>
96            <android>com.google.android.gms.common.ConnectionResult</android>
97            <android>com.google.android.gms.common.api.GoogleApiClient</android>
98            <android>com.google.android.gms.common.api.ResultCallback</android>
99            <android>com.google.android.gms.common.api.Status</android>
100            <android>com.google.android.gms.location.LocationListener</android>
101            <android>com.google.android.gms.location.LocationRequest</android>
102            <android>com.google.android.gms.location.LocationServices</android>
103            <android>com.google.android.gms.wearable.DataApi</android>
104            <android>com.google.android.gms.wearable.PutDataMapRequest</android>
105            <android>com.google.android.gms.wearable.PutDataRequest</android>
106            <android>com.google.android.gms.wearable.Wearable</android>
107        </api_refs>
108
109        <!-- 1-3 line description of the sample here.
110
111            Avoid simply rearranging the sample's title. What does this sample actually
112            accomplish, and how does it do it? -->
113        <description>
114            Sample demonstrates recording location and speed with a Wear device in mind. Location is
115            retrieved via FusedLocatinProvider which retrieves coordinates from the phone or Wear
116            depending on whether the phone is disconnected or not and whether the Wear device has a
117            GPS chip.
118        </description>
119
120        <!-- Multi-paragraph introduction to sample, from an educational point-of-view.
121        Markdown formatting allowed. This will be used to generate a mini-article for the
122        sample on DAC. -->
123        <intro>
124<![CDATA[
125
126Steps for trying out this sample:
127* Compile and install the mobile app onto your mobile device or emulator.
128* Compile and install the wearable app onto your Wear device or emulator.
129(**Note:** wearable apps are not automatically pushed from your mobile device
130unless you build a production release, see [here][1] for more info).
131
132Sample demonstrates retrieving location and speed samples on Wear using the FusedLocationProvider.
133It also passes GPS location information back to the mobile device via the Data Layer to be rendered
134on a Map Fragment.
135
136[1]: https://developer.android.com/training/wearables/apps/creating.html#Install
137]]>
138        </intro>
139    </metadata>
140
141</sample>
142