It's not called amazing AID, its called AIDE and it is amazing! haha

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.aide.ui&hl=en

It's an IDE that you use directly on your device to code android. You then 
compile it there and then on your device, install the apk, and test 
instantly. You don't need a separate machine to develop.

However, on the N7 you can't view logs, unless rooted, so hence why I want 
a machine I can plug in to my device and use adb logcat to help debug 
stuff. Also, I think I would be more productive with a full keyboard and 
possibly 2 screens to code on.



On Monday, December 3, 2012 4:58:35 PM UTC, bob wrote:
>
> What is the amazing AID app?
>
> On Sunday, December 2, 2012 1:51:14 PM UTC-6, Russell Wheeler wrote:
>>
>> So far I have been developing directly on my galaxy nexus and nexus 7 
>> using the amazing AID app.
>>
>> However, as the N7 can't provide logs due to it being jelly bean, i feel 
>> the need to get a mini notebook in order to utilise adb logcat.
>>
>> My main worry is that something with only 1gb (2gb if i upgrade, which i 
>> will) and a 1.5-1.83GHz atom CPU won't be powerful enough.
>>
>> I can possibly get around certain worries by not using emulators and 
>> testing directly on my two devices, so that will save me a great deal. Also 
>> I am tempted to just use vim and command line tools instead of eclipse 
>> which again might save me from a slow PC.
>>
>> What do you guys think? Is the notebook way under powered? What if i just 
>> use vim and no emulators? 
>>
>> Side note, does anyone actually code in vim/command line?
>>
>> Cheers
>>
>> Russ
>>
>>

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