When developing Android app in Eclipse I always set BuildProjectTarget under Eclipse and android:targetSdkVersion in the manifest to the latest available Android version. Is this practice correct? NOTE:I do set android:minSdkVersion according to the project (usually value is 10)
Yes. That way you ensure you're always using the latest build sdk.
I know that doing the above will trigger Eclipse warning about unsupported API when using something not available in version under android:minSdkVersion (for example using fragments without support library) are there any examples when these shouldn't be trusted and what will happen if you build the project using Gradle/Ant script or manually?
Just make sure that older devices will not get to that part of the code, using Build.Version.SDK_INT
. This will give you the current SDK of the device.
What would happen if I set BuildProjectTarget and android:targetSdkVersion to for example 16 and then use some deprecated API like WebView setCertificate() (which was deprecated in API level 17). Will this method work on all devices or just those up to Android 4.1, will it crash the app or just be ignored?
Deprecated methods will continue to work, but better alternatives are available. When you have the option to use that better alternative, use it. When you're supporting devices that don't have this alternative yet due to older versions, continue using the deprecated method. You might have to do some if else
branching based upon the Build.Version.SDK_INT
value.
I know that Eclipse uses Java library android.jar from SDK/platforms folder and that when on the device app links to that library stored on device but what I don't get is are there multiple versions of this library on android phones or just one (the latest for that android version) ? Also does a version of framework.jar play a role in this?
The newer devices contain the code of the older devices. Therefore it is not necessary to keep references to other versions.
What happens with the libraries when you use something like google_play_services? Are these packed into the apk or reference the library that is already on the device? I know that when you use Facebook sdk the jar gets packed into apk but don't know are these google libraries different?
The class files in the jar will be packaged in the .apk. The Google Play Services on the device communicates with your app using those classes.