Had same issue on my first project yesterday (on Mac OS X) and cured  
it by doing a 'build/clean'. Once that was done it worked fine.

Mark

On 30 Jul 2009, at 11:30, Sean Hodges wrote:

>
> Eclipse works just as well in Linux as it does in Windows. The error
> you are getting can have several manifestations, try pulling any
> third-party .jars out of your project and start Eclipse using the
> -clean switch.
>
> Building from command-line works as well, you can write a build script
> in ANT or make, and produce an APK just the same as Eclipse. If you
> would prefer to go down this path, start by reading this:
> http://developer.android.com/guide/developing/other-ide.html
>
>
> On Wed, Jul 29, 2009 at 12:32 PM, Bytes<[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Thanks for this post. I'm looking for this.
>>
>> I'd like to work on Linux... as I know GDB and linux internals much
>> better than Windows....
>>
>> But my concern is
>>
>> Will Eclipse fine on Linux ?? Or command line is the best option....
>>
>> I just started my HelloWorld program on Android and getting the
>> mysterious error
>> [I directly downloaded 1.5, not an updation]
>>
>> [2009-07-29 14:53:13 - First] no classfiles specified
>> [2009-07-29 14:53:13 - First] Conversion to Dalvik format failed with
>> error 1
>>
>> People saying do refresh and it will give go away. Yes, its going  
>> some
>> times but persistent most of the times.....
>>
>>
>> But if I use command line on Linux for building and installing, can I
>> assume I've a stable build system...... ???
>>
>>
>> Thanks for your suggestions
>>
>> regards
>> -Venu
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Jul 14, 10:10 pm, MCON Dev <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> I have compared multiple Linux distro's before I started with  
>>> Android. As of
>>> now I have a windows setup and a Fedora setup. I love the fedora  
>>> setup.
>>> Windows is really slow. Fedora zips fast with android development.
>>> I have tried OpenSuse and Debian before Fedora.
>>> Siddharth
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Tue, Jul 14, 2009 at 9:56 PM, mjlissner <[email protected]>  
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I'd also add that if you're planning on doing much coding, in the  
>>>> long
>>>> run knowing Linux and the way it thinks about things is pretty
>>>> valuable. It reveals many of the details of how things work that
>>>> Windows just doesn't do, or doesn't do as well.
>>>
>>>> Again though, the sweeping generalization caveat should apply.
>>>
>>>> M
>>>
>>>> On Jul 13, 10:18 pm, wonglik <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>> I would say it is pretty much up to preferences. Android SDK works
>>>>> both on Linux and windows.
>>>>> I personaly believe that Linux is better environment especially in
>>>>> terms of coding.
>>>>> The only real difference in the systems in Android domain I know  
>>>>> is
>>>>> that compiling android os from sources works only on Linuxes and
>>>>> MacOS , so if you plan to play with those windows is not for you.
>>>
>>>>> m
>>>
>>>>> On Jul 13, 7:12 pm, tdapple <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>>>> Hello,
>>>
>>>>>> I am very interested in working with google stuff, including  
>>>>>> android.
>>>>>> Which leads me to Java. I am wondering if Windows is good  
>>>>>> enough for
>>>>>> working on android and various other google stuff...wave, voice  
>>>>>> and
>>>>>> stuff.....Any advice on best system set up would be great to  
>>>>>> get me
>>>>>> started...
>>>
>>>>>> Also interested in python, but can't make android apps with it  
>>>>>> as far
>>>>>> as I know.
>>>
>>>>>> Thanks- Hide quoted text -
>>>
>>> - Show quoted text -
>>
>>>
>>
>
> >


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