Every time I make a new screen I find myself debating which buttons
should be on screen buttons, and which should be menu items, and or
which should be both. I was wondering what others thing about this.
Are there general guidelines or logical approaches that people are
using? I apologize up front if this is a silly question, but it comes
up again and again in my own head, and I haven't found any
documentation or direction on it really.

I notice that the built in contacts app, for example, has the sort of
"main" actions like "new contact," "edit contact," "save," "discard,"
etc, as menu items.  But it also has "Add Icon" as both a menu item
and as an on screen button.

I personally think it makes the most sense to use the menu for high
level "actions," so "save" and "add" and so on make sense in the menu.
But maybe that is subjective? Is it just whatever works best with the
screen real estate and layout, etc.

Seems like the menu is faster/more intuitive if you can use it, but
with the d-pad all the on screen buttons work too whether or not the
device is touch capable, and being on screen makes the choices more
obvious.
What to the UI gurus and Android devs think are some best practices in
terms of making button/menu choices?
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