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Professional Mobile Application Development


Professional Mobile Application Development

Paperback by McWherter, Jeff; Gowell, Scott

Professional Mobile Application Development

£34.99

ISBN:
9781118203903
Publication Date:
31 Aug 2012
Language:
English
Publisher:
John Wiley & Sons Inc
Imprint:
Wrox Press
Pages:
432 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 21 - 23 May 2024
Professional Mobile Application Development

Description

Create applications for all major smartphone platforms Creating applications for the myriad versions and varieties of mobile phone platforms on the market can be daunting to even the most seasoned developer. This authoritative guide is written in such as way that it takes your existing skills and experience and uses that background as a solid foundation for developing applications that cross over between platforms, thereby freeing you from having to learn a new platform from scratch each time. Concise explanations walk you through the tools and patterns for developing for all the mobile platforms while detailed steps walk you through setting up your development environment for each platform. Covers all the major options from native development to web application development Discusses major third party platform development acceleration tools, such as Appcelerator and PhoneGap Zeroes in on topics such as developing applications for Android, IOS, Windows Phone 7, and Blackberry Professional Mobile Cross Platform Development shows you how to best exploit the growth in mobile platforms, with a minimum of hassle.

Contents

Introduction xxiii Chapter 1: Preliminary Considerations 1 Why You Might Be Here 2 Competition 2 Quality vs. Time to Market 2 Legacy System Integration 2 Mobile Web vs. Mobile App 3 Cost of Development 3 Hardware 3 Software 4 Licenses and Developer Accounts 5 Documentation and APIs 5 The Bottom Line 6 Importance of Mobile Strategies in the Business World 6 Why is Mobile Development Difficult? 6 Mobile Development Today 8 Mobile Myths 8 Third-Party Frameworks 9 Appcelerator Titanium Mobile Framework 9 Nitobi PhoneGap 10 MonoDroid and MonoTouch 10 Summary 10 Chapter 2: Diving into Mobile: App or Website? 11 Mobile Web Presence 12 Mobile Content 13 Mobile Browsers 14 Mobile Applications 17 You're a Mobile App If . . . 17 When to Create an App 18 Benefits of a Mobile App 22 Marketing 24 Quick Response Codes 25 The Advertising You Get from the App Market 26 Third-Party Markets 32 Your App as a Mobile Web App 33 Summary 36 Chapter 3: Creating Consumable Web Services for Mobile Devices 37 What is a Web Service? 37 Examples of Web Services 38 Advantages of Web Services 39 Web Services Languages (Formats) 40 eXtensible Markup Language (XML) 40 JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) 42 Transferring Nontextual Data 42 Creating an Example Web Service 42 Using the Microsoft Stack 43 Using the Linux Apache MySQL PHP (LAMP) Stack 77 Debugging Web Services 83 Tools 83 Advanced Web Service Techniques 85 Summary 86 Chapter 4: Mobile User Interface Design 89 Effective Use of Screen Real Estate 90 Embrace Minimalism 90 Use a Visual Hierarchy 90 Stay Focused 90 Understanding Mobile Application Users 91 Proximity 91 Closure 91 Continuity 92 Figure and Ground 92 Similarity 92 The Social Aspect of Mobile 92 Usability 93 Accessibility 94 Understanding Mobile Information Design 96 Information Display 96 Design Patterns 96 Content Structure and Usage 107 Understanding Mobile Platforms 109 Android 110 iOS 110 BlackBerry OS 111 Windows Phone 7 112 Mobile Web Browsers 112 Using the Tools of Mobile Interface Design 113 User Acceptance Testing 113 Information Design Tools 114 Summary 115 Chapter 5: Mobile Websites 117 Choosing a Mobile Web Option 118 Why Do People Use Your Website on Mobile Devices? 118 What Can Your Current Website Accommodate? 118 How Much Do You Want to Provide for Mobile Users? 119 Adaptive Mobile Websites 120 Get Your Queries in Place 121 Add Mobile Styles 125 Dedicated Mobile Websites 140 Mobile Web Apps with HTML5 143 What Exactly is HTML5? 143 And What Exactly is a Mobile Web App? 144 How Do You Use HTML5 in a Mobile Web App? 144 Make Your Mobile Web App Even More Native 148 Summary 150 Chapter 6: Getting Started with Android 151 Why Target Android? 152 Who Supports Android? 152 Android as Competition to Itself 152 Multiple Markets and Market Locks 152 Getting the Tools You Need 153 Downloading and Installing JDK 153 Downloading and Installing Eclipse 153 Downloading and Installing the Android SDK 154 Downloading and Configuring the Eclipse ADT Plug-in 155 Installing Additional SDK Components 157 Development 158 Connecting to the Google Play 172 Getting an Android Developer Account 172 Signing Your Application 172 Android Development Practices 172 Android Fundamentals 172 Fragments as UI Elements 173 Ask for Permission 173 Mind the Back Stack 174 Building the Derby App in Android 174 Common Interactions 174 Offline Storage 176 Web Service 177 GPS 180 Accelerometer 181 Summary 182 Chapter 7: Getting Started with iOS 183 The iPhone Craze 183 Apple in Its Beauty 184 Apple Devices 185 Getting the Tools You Need 187 Hardware 187 xCode and the iOS SDK 191 The iOS Human Interface Guideline 193 iOS Project 193 Anatomy of an iOS App 194 Getting to Know the xCode IDE 195 Debugging iOS Apps 199 The iOS Simulator 199 Debugging Code 200 Instruments 204 Objective-C Basics 204 Classes 205 Control Structures 206 Try Catch 207 Hello World App 208 Creating the Project 208 Creating the User Interface 211 Building the Derby App in iOS 214 User Interface 215 Team Roster 217 Details 219 Leagues and Team Names 220 Other Useful iOS Things 223 Offline Storage 223 GPS 224 Summary 227 Chapter 8: Getting Started with Windows Phone 7 229 New Kid on the Block 229 Metro 230 Application Bar 230 Tiles 232 Tombstoning 233 Getting the Tools You Need 234 Hardware 234 Visual Studio and Windows Phone SDK 234 Windows Phone 7 Project 236 Silverlight vs. Windows Phone 7 236 Anatomy of a Windows Phone 7 App 237 The Windows Phone 7 Emulator 238 Building the Derby App in Windows Phone 7 239 Creating the Project 239 User Interface 240 Derby Names 241 Leagues 243 Distribution 244 Other Useful Windows Phone Things 245 Offline Storage 245 Notifications 247 GPS 249 Accelerometer 250 Web Services 252 Summary 252 Chapter 9: Getting Started with BlackBerry 253 The BlackBerry Craze 254 BlackBerry Devices 254 BlackBerry Playbook 259 Getting the Tools You Need 259 BlackBerry Developer Program 259 Code Signing Keys 260 BlackBerry Java Development Environment 260 Implementing the Derby App with BlackBerry for Java 265 BlackBerry Eclipse Specifics 269 BlackBerry Development with WebWorks 270 Other Useful BlackBerry Things 276 Offline Storage 277 Location Services 278 BlackBerry Distribution 280 Summary 280 Chapter 10: Getting Started with Appcelerator Titanium 283 Why Use Titanium? 284 Who is Using Titanium? 284 NBC 285 GetGlue 286 Getting the Tools You Need 287 Installing Titanium Studio 287 Downloading the Kitchen Sink 290 Development 291 Connecting Titanium to the Markets 294 Versioning Your App 296 Building the Derby App in Titanium 297 Common UI Patterns 297 Offline Storage 301 Web Service 302 GPS 305 Accelerometer 306 Summary 308 Chapter 11: Getting Started with PhoneGap 309 History of PhoneGap 309 Why Use PhoneGap? 310 Who is Using PhoneGap? 310 METAR Reader 310 Logitech Squeezebox Controller 311 Wikipedia 311 Differences between PhoneGap and HTML5 311 Getting the Tools You Need 312 Installing PhoneGap for iOS 312 Installing PhoneGap for Android 314 Installing PhoneGap for Windows Phone 7 317 PhoneGap Tools and IDE 319 PhoneGap Project 323 Anatomy of a PhoneGap Application 323 Creating User Interfaces 324 Debugging 324 Useful JavaScript Libraries 325 Building the Derby App in PhoneGap 330 Other Useful Phone Gap Things 335 Pickers 336 Offline Storage 337 GPS 339 Accelerometer 340 Connecting PhoneGap to the Markets 341 Summary 341 Chapter 12: Getting Started with MonoTouch and Mono for Android 343 The Mono Framework 343 MonoTouch 344 Mono for Android 345 Assemblies 346 Why MonoTouch/Mono for Android? 347 Downsides 347 Xamarin Mobile 348 Getting the Tools You Need 350 Mono Framework 350 MonoTouch 351 Mono for Android 352 Getting to Know MonoDevelop 353 Debugging 354 MonoTouch Specifics 355 Mono for Android Specifics 356 Mono Projects 357 Anatomy of a MonoTouch App 358 Anatomy of a Mono for Android App 361 Building the Derby App with Mono 362 MonoTouch 362 Mono for Android 368 Other Useful MonoTouch/Mono Features 374 Local Storage 374 GPS 375 Summary 377 Index 379

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