##Usage
Requires sbt
To use the plugin in a project, you just need to create project/plugins/Plugins.scala:
import sbt._
class Plugins(info: ProjectInfo) extends PluginDefinition(info) {
val android = "org.scala-tools.sbt" % "android-plugin" % "0.4.1"
}
and make the project definition in project/build/Project (for example):
import sbt._
import java.io.File
class Project(info: ProjectInfo) extends AndroidProject(info) {
override def androidPlatformName = "android-1.5"
// or preferably set the ANDROID_SDK_HOME environment variable
override def androidSdkPath = Path.fromFile(new File("/home/mark/code/java/android-sdk-linux_x86-1.5_r2"))
// set to the keystore alias you used when creating your keychain
val keyalias = "my_keys"
// set to the location of your keystore
override def keystorePath = Path.userHome / ".keystore" / "mykeys.keystore"
}
Alternatively, you can also use a provided script to set everything up for you:
$ script/create_project MyAndroidProject com.foo.project
This will generate the project structure as well as all needed files plus skeleton tests, specs and activities.
To build the package:
$ cd myAndroidProject
$ sbt update package-debug
To install the package:
$ sbt install-emulator
To build a signed package for release into the Marketplace
$ sbt sign-release
##Hacking on the plugin
If you need make modifications to the plugin itself, you can compile and install it locally (you need at least sbt 0.7.x to build it):
$ git clone git://github.com/jberkel/android-plugin.git
$ cd android-plugin
$ sbt publish-local
##Credits
This code is based on work by Walter Chang (saisiyat), turned into a plugin by Mark Harrah.