- syntax:
<application android:allowTaskReparenting=["true" | "false"] android:backupAgent="string" android:debuggable=["true" | "false"] android:description="string resource" android:enabled=["true" | "false"] android:hasCode=["true" | "false"] android:hardwareAccelerated=["true" | "false"] android:icon="drawable resource" android:killAfterRestore=["true" | "false"] android:largeHeap=["true" | "false"] android:label="string resource" android:logo="drawable resource" android:manageSpaceActivity="string" android:name="string" android:permission="string" android:persistent=["true" | "false"] android:process="string" android:restoreAnyVersion=["true" | "false"] android:taskAffinity="string" android:theme="resource or theme" android:uiOptions=["none" | "splitActionBarWhenNarrow"] > . . . </application>
- contained in:
<manifest>
- can contain:
<activity>
<activity-alias>
<service>
<receiver>
<provider>
<uses-library>
- description:
- The declaration of the application. This element contains subelements
that declare each of the application's components and has attributes
that can affect all the components. Many of these attributes (such as
icon
,label
,permission
,process
,taskAffinity
, andallowTaskReparenting
) set default values for corresponding attributes of the component elements. Others (such asdebuggable
,enabled
,description
, andallowClearUserData
) set values for the application as a whole and cannot be overridden by the components. - attributes
android:allowTaskReparenting
- Whether or not activities that the application defines can move from
the task that started them to the task they have an affinity for when that task
is next brought to the front — "
true
" if they can move, and "false
" if they must remain with the task where they started. The default value is "false
".The
<activity>
element has its ownallowTaskReparenting
attribute that can override the value set here. See that attribute for more information. android:backupAgent
- The name of the class that implement's the application's backup agent,
a subclass of
BackupAgent
. The attribute value should be a fully qualified class name (such as, "com.example.project.MyBackupAgent
"). However, as a shorthand, if the first character of the name is a period (for example, ".MyBackupAgent
"), it is appended to the package name specified in the<manifest>
element.There is no default. The name must be specified.
android:debuggable
- Whether or not the application can be debugged, even when running
on a device in user mode — "
true
" if it can be, and "false
" if not. The default value is "false
". android:description
- User-readable text about the application, longer and more descriptive than the application label. The value must be set as a reference to a string resource. Unlike the label, it cannot be a raw string. There is no default value.
android:enabled
- Whether or not the Android system can instantiate components of
the application — "
true
" if it can, and "false
" if not. If the value is "true
", each component'senabled
attribute determines whether that component is enabled or not. If the value is "false
", it overrides the component-specific values; all components are disabled.The default value is "
true
". android:hasCode
- Whether or not the application contains any code — "
true
" if it does, and "false
" if not. When the value is "false
", the system does not try to load any application code when launching components. The default value is "true
".An application would not have any code of its own only if it's using nothing but built-in component classes, such as an activity that uses the
AliasActivity
class, a rare occurrence. android:hardwareAccelerated
- Whether or not hardware-accelerated rendering should be enabled for all
Activities and Views in this application — "
true
" if it should be enabled, and "false
" if not. The default value is "false
".Starting from Android 3.0, a hardware-accelerated OpenGL renderer is available to applications, to improve performance for many common 2D graphics operations. When the hardware-accelerated renderer is enabled, most operations in Canvas, Paint, Xfermode, ColorFilter, Shader, and Camera are accelerated. This results in smoother animations, smoother scrolling, and improved responsiveness overall, even for applications that do not explicitly make use the framework's OpenGL libraries.
Note that not all of the OpenGL 2D operations are accelerated. If you enable the hardware-accelerated renderer, test your application to ensure that it can make use of the renderer without errors.
android:icon
- An icon for the application as whole, and the default icon for
each of the application's components. See the individual
icon
attributes for<activity>
,<activity-alias>
,<service>
,<receiver>
, and<provider>
elements.This attribute must be set as a reference to a drawable resource containing the image (for example
"@drawable/icon"
). There is no default icon. android:killAfterRestore
- Whether the application in question should be terminated after its
settings have been restored during a full-system restore operation.
Single-package restore operations will never cause the application to
be shut down. Full-system restore operations typically only occur once,
when the phone is first set up. Third-party applications will not normally
need to use this attribute.
The default is
true
, which means that after the application has finished processing its data during a full-system restore, it will be terminated. android:largeHeap
- Whether your application's processes should be created with a large Dalvik heap. This applies to
all processes created for the application. It only applies to the first application loaded into a
process; if you're using a shared user ID to allow multiple applications to use a process, they all
must use this option consistently or they will have unpredictable results.
Most apps should not need this and should instead focus on reducing their overall memory usage for improved performance. Enabling this also does not guarantee a fixed increase in available memory, because some devices are constrained by their total available memory.
To query the available memory size at runtime, use the methods
getMemoryClass()
orgetLargeMemoryClass()
. android:label
- A user-readable label for the application as a whole, and a default
label for each of the application's components. See the individual
label
attributes for<activity>
,<activity-alias>
,<service>
,<receiver>
, and<provider>
elements.The label should be set as a reference to a string resource, so that it can be localized like other strings in the user interface. However, as a convenience while you're developing the application, it can also be set as a raw string.
android:logo
- A logo for the application as whole, and the default logo for activities.
This attribute must be set as a reference to a drawable resource containing the image (for example
"@drawable/logo"
). There is no default logo. android:manageSpaceActivity
- The fully qualified name of an Activity subclass that the system
can launch to let users manage the memory occupied by the application
on the device. The activity should also be declared with an
<activity>
element. android:name
- The fully qualified name of an
Application
subclass implemented for the application. When the application process is started, this class is instantiated before any of the application's components.The subclass is optional; most applications won't need one. In the absence of a subclass, Android uses an instance of the base Application class.
android:permission
- The name of a permission that clients must have in order to interact
with the application. This attribute is a convenient way to set a
permission that applies to all of the application's components. It can
be overwritten by setting the
permission
attributes of individual components.For more information on permissions, see the Permissions section in the introduction and another document, Security and Permissions.
android:persistent
- Whether or not the application should remain running at all times —
"
true
" if it should, and "false
" if not. The default value is "false
". Applications should not normally set this flag; persistence mode is intended only for certain system applications. android:process
- The name of a process where all components of the application should run.
Each component can override this default by setting its own
process
attribute.By default, Android creates a process for an application when the first of its components needs to run. All components then run in that process. The name of the default process matches the package name set by the
<manifest>
element.By setting this attribute to a process name that's shared with another application, you can arrange for components of both applications to run in the same process — but only if the two applications also share a user ID and be signed with the same certificate.
If the name assigned to this attribute begins with a colon (':'), a new process, private to the application, is created when it's needed. If the process name begins with a lowercase character, a global process of that name is created. A global process can be shared with other applications, reducing resource usage.
android:restoreAnyVersion
- Indicate that the application is prepared to attempt a restore of any
backed-up data set, even if the backup was stored by a newer version
of the application than is currently installed on the device. Setting
this attribute to
true
will permit the Backup Manager to attempt restore even when a version mismatch suggests that the data are incompatible. Use with caution!The default value of this attribute is
false
. android:taskAffinity
- An affinity name that applies to all activities within the application,
except for those that set a different affinity with their own
taskAffinity
attributes. See that attribute for more information.By default, all activities within an application share the same affinity. The name of that affinity is the same as the package name set by the
<manifest>
element. android:theme
- A reference to a style resource defining a default theme for all
activities in the application. Individual activities can override
the default by setting their own
theme
attributes. For more information, see the Styles and Themes developer guide. android:uiOptions
- Extra options for an activity's UI.
Must be one of the following values.
Value Description "none"
No extra UI options. This is the default. "splitActionBarWhenNarrow"
Add a bar at the bottom of the screen to display action items in the ActionBar
, when constrained for horizontal space (such as when in portrait mode on a handset). Instead of a small number of action items appearing in the action bar at the top of the screen, the action bar is split into the top navigation section and the bottom bar for action items. This ensures a reasonable amount of space is made available not only for the action items, but also for navigation and title elements at the top. Menu items are not split across the two bars; they always appear together.For more information about the action bar, see the Action Bar developer guide.
This attribute was added in API level 14.
- introduced in:
- API Level 1
- see also:
<activity>
<service>
<receiver>
<provider>