Android Mobile App – A Published RSS Reader App
Android Mobile App – A Published RSS Reader App, available at $34.99, has an average rating of 4.35, with 41 lectures, based on 54 reviews, and has 1920 subscribers.
You will learn about Design and code beautiful Android apps Market themselves as freelance software engineers This course is ideal for individuals who are Beginners who know little to nothing about coding or People that want to WOW people on the app store with their designs It is particularly useful for Beginners who know little to nothing about coding or People that want to WOW people on the app store with their designs.
Enroll now: Android Mobile App – A Published RSS Reader App
Summary
Title: Android Mobile App – A Published RSS Reader App
Price: $34.99
Average Rating: 4.35
Number of Lectures: 41
Number of Published Lectures: 41
Number of Curriculum Items: 41
Number of Published Curriculum Objects: 41
Original Price: $199.99
Quality Status: approved
Status: Live
What You Will Learn
- Design and code beautiful Android apps
- Market themselves as freelance software engineers
Who Should Attend
- Beginners who know little to nothing about coding
- People that want to WOW people on the app store with their designs
Target Audiences
- Beginners who know little to nothing about coding
- People that want to WOW people on the app store with their designs
I will take you from beginner to COMPLETELY published on the Google Play Store. NO OTHER COURSE takes you all the way through the process and in so much detail !!
———–Review of this course————–
Really engaging, like the way you explain all the little things, good for us beginners!
——————————————————–
———–You will be published————–
By the time you’re done with this course you will have an app on the Play Store. One that earns passive income from advertising!
That’s money STRAIGHT into your pocket!
——————————————————–
Please stop buying ‘How to code 10 Android apps in 10 days‘ courses…
There is so much more to Android app development than just plain coding tutorials!
That’s why I created this Android development course! No other Android development course takes you from beginner (with no experience) to published. They only show you ‘How to make an Android app’, wth no reference to all the other parts such as:
- Signing your Android app
- Becoming a Google Android developer
- Creating signing keystrokes for Android
- Submitting an Android app to the Play Store
- Marketing through your Android app listing
This course is for you if you want to:
- Learn the Android development process – from complete beginner to Play Store publishing (no-one else does this, they only show ‘how to code’ app tutorials)
- Get paid $100 – $150 per hour to make apps for paying clients
- Create your own wildly popular apps
- See the whole development process as it really is.
- Have a real app you can publish under your own account
This course is not for you if:
- You are an expert or intermediate programmer
What software do you need?
- Android studio (free) which needs to be run on a Pc or Mac or Linux
Do you need experience?
- No. I assume you are a complete beginner to Android development
What makes this course different?
It reveals the true nature of app development – an involved process with many design and usability iterations. Top clients (those with money) will expect a certain level of professionalism and do not mind large bills to match if you bring them value.
My last invoice amounted to £18,000 for a simple, unpublished version 1 app. It was paid off immediately with the project manager commenting ‘great value and cheaper than large studios’. He loved it because we had gone through several design stages beforehand, allowing him to get exactly what he envisioned.
If I had simply presented my ‘app coding abilities’ I would have only been able to charge one third of that amount.
The reality is that making beautiful apps allows you to charge far more andproduce fantastic looking work.
That work becomes your calling card, with clients seeking you out instead of the other way around.
The extras you get when taking this course:
- I break down some app industry guidelines you should follow when creating an Android app (hint: we borrow from other creative industries).
- You learn to think outside the box, giving you an advantage over all your competitors
- A good basic grounding in Android Studio app development (and the Java language)
- An app you can actually publish yourself!
Course Curriculum
Chapter 1: Introduction and setup
Lecture 1: Introduction and what you will learn
Lecture 2: Installing Android Studio and creating your first project
Lecture 3: A quick tour of the Android studio interface
Chapter 2: Beautiful Android Apps
Lecture 1: Why the need for beautiful Android apps?
Lecture 2: What exactly is beautiful?
Lecture 3: Blasphemy. Using Apples app guidelines for Android apps.
Chapter 3: Designing our user experience
Lecture 1: Designing our UX
Chapter 4: Designing our User Interface in Android Studio
Lecture 1: Testing our current user interface in the Android Simulator
Lecture 2: Designing the main screen layout in Android XML
Lecture 3: Designing the add feed layout in Android XML
Lecture 4: Designing the edit feeds screen in Android XML
Lecture 5: Setting our app theme in the styles.xml file and Android manifest
Chapter 5: Creating and navigating between new activities within Android apps
Lecture 1: Connecting up our activities using intents
Chapter 6: Databases on Android (SQLite)
Lecture 1: How to set up an SQLite database in an Android app
Lecture 2: Java code to store and get information from an SQLite database
Lecture 3: Storing our RSS feed in the SQLite database
Chapter 7: List Views and adapters on Android
Lecture 1: Setting up a ListView adapter for a list of RSS feeds
Lecture 2: Editing a ListView and removing elements
Chapter 8: App permissions on Android via manifest.xml
Lecture 1: Android app permissions (accessing the internet in our app via manifest.xml)
Chapter 9: How to use libraries in Android projects
Lecture 1: Creating our RSS Feed Item class to use with the library
Lecture 2: Installing a library within an Android project
Chapter 10: Fetching our feed items and fixing bugs in Android apps
Lecture 1: Fetching the RSS feed items from the internet (and our first bug)
Lecture 2: Fixing our RSS library bug using 'try' catch'
Chapter 11: Finishing our list of RSS items – putting data into a ListView on Android
Lecture 1: Placing the collected feed items into our list view using an adapter on Android
Lecture 2: Making our list look good
Chapter 12: Creating a web view on Android for our RSS item
Lecture 1: Creating our RSS item viewer using a web view
Chapter 13: How to make money with an Android app (optional)
Lecture 1: General monetisation strategies on Android
Lecture 2: Getting paid via Google Ads (AdMob) on the web view page
Chapter 14: Testing and Debugging Android apps
Lecture 1: Test, test and test again!
Chapter 15: Preparing an Android app for release
Lecture 1: How to create an Android app icon
Lecture 2: How to sign an Android app for release
Chapter 16: How to create a Google Developer account and prepare a Google Play listing
Lecture 1: Creating a Google Developer account for Android
Lecture 2: Setting up a basic Android app Google Play listing
Lecture 3: Required icons and Feature graphics for the Google Play Store
Lecture 4: Android app screenshots for the Google Play listing (aka, free marketing)
Chapter 17: Homework for your shiny new Android app
Lecture 1: Easy Task – Validate feed name
Lecture 2: Intermediate task – Validate RSS address
Lecture 3: Intermediate Task – Arrange RSS Items by published date
Lecture 4: Hard task – Create GUI to choose individual feed stories
Lecture 5: Hard task – Check internet before getting feeds
Chapter 18: Round up and farewell
Lecture 1: What you have learnt and where to go next
Instructors
-
Grant Klimaytys
Software Engineer and Investor
Rating Distribution
- 1 stars: 3 votes
- 2 stars: 2 votes
- 3 stars: 5 votes
- 4 stars: 15 votes
- 5 stars: 29 votes
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