

Head First Android Development: A Brain-Friendly Guide [Griffiths, Dawn, Griffiths, David] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Head First Android Development: A Brain-Friendly Guide Review: Very Good Intro/Intermediate/"Touch of Advanced" Book if You are Starting Out With Android Development - For the company I work for I was tasked to write an Android application. I had no mobile experience at all and since we use C# we went with Xamarin to build the app. I did the typical "look on the Internet" for training videos and articles to learn what I needed to learn. Within a handful months, version 1.0 of the app was done and published. I don't typically like to go out and get books since doing so can drag on and on and you spend a lot of extra time getting "up to speed". But, I knew I blew through a bunch of stuff getting the app ready and there was more to learn. I then began to look at various Android development books to go back and pick up on stuff I didn't fully grasp. With knowing what I learned on my own and looking at this book's list of chapters and the details of the chapters "out there in the open" in the table of contents (which makes referencing easy when going back to find something), it appeared this book was well laid out and hit the most important topics. Plus, reading through some of the topics in the book I had learned on my own, I liked the way things were explained. I'm only about half-way through but here's what I like about the book: 1) Simple and to the point 2) Not the typical page after page of text. I'm visual when learning. There are lots of diagrams and charts and such. 3) The "dumb questions" sections which actually tend to reflect the "dumb questions" I have when I reach those sections. 4) Chapter summaries which pretty much hit everything covered in the chapter. 5) Space to write your own notes (the notes they include also are pretty spot on) 6) Examples (and I mean good examples) that refer you back to earlier examples in the book, but spell it out again for you right there instead of saying "please go back and re-learn this part". This may add a few pages to the book but when you are learning, having to switch back and forth and fit the pieces together seems to break up the learning process. This books basically says "here is what we did back in chapter X and here it is again". I am very pleased with this book so far. It may not cover all the intricate details in depth of Android development, but I highly recommend it if you are new to it. Plus, adding EVERYTHING to a "welcome to Android" book would just make the learning process hard. This book seems to cover a vast majority of what we need to know to get things done. It has some sections in the end to give an intro to some more technical details plus a list of things not covered in the book to give clues on what else is out there, with links to get you started. It would seem this book gives a very good foundation to build from. Review: Great book so far for beginners - Great book so far!!! I was looking for a good android development book for beginners. I tried a couple other books but this book is fun to read with a lot of fun examples and antidotes. The book has several projects that you build and learn using Android Studio. I was concerned that this book may be dated and not usable with the current Android Studio but it has worked out fine. I have gone through the first 4 chapters and I already have a better understanding of Android programming and has started on my own simple app. I only gave it four stars because I have not completed the book.


















| Best Sellers Rank | #3,751,823 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #848 in Java Programming #1,013 in Mobile App Development & Programming #4,139 in Computer Programming Languages |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (164) |
| Dimensions | 7 x 2 x 9 inches |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 1449362184 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1449362188 |
| Item Weight | 3 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 732 pages |
| Publication date | July 28, 2015 |
| Publisher | O'Reilly Media |
E**C
Very Good Intro/Intermediate/"Touch of Advanced" Book if You are Starting Out With Android Development
For the company I work for I was tasked to write an Android application. I had no mobile experience at all and since we use C# we went with Xamarin to build the app. I did the typical "look on the Internet" for training videos and articles to learn what I needed to learn. Within a handful months, version 1.0 of the app was done and published. I don't typically like to go out and get books since doing so can drag on and on and you spend a lot of extra time getting "up to speed". But, I knew I blew through a bunch of stuff getting the app ready and there was more to learn. I then began to look at various Android development books to go back and pick up on stuff I didn't fully grasp. With knowing what I learned on my own and looking at this book's list of chapters and the details of the chapters "out there in the open" in the table of contents (which makes referencing easy when going back to find something), it appeared this book was well laid out and hit the most important topics. Plus, reading through some of the topics in the book I had learned on my own, I liked the way things were explained. I'm only about half-way through but here's what I like about the book: 1) Simple and to the point 2) Not the typical page after page of text. I'm visual when learning. There are lots of diagrams and charts and such. 3) The "dumb questions" sections which actually tend to reflect the "dumb questions" I have when I reach those sections. 4) Chapter summaries which pretty much hit everything covered in the chapter. 5) Space to write your own notes (the notes they include also are pretty spot on) 6) Examples (and I mean good examples) that refer you back to earlier examples in the book, but spell it out again for you right there instead of saying "please go back and re-learn this part". This may add a few pages to the book but when you are learning, having to switch back and forth and fit the pieces together seems to break up the learning process. This books basically says "here is what we did back in chapter X and here it is again". I am very pleased with this book so far. It may not cover all the intricate details in depth of Android development, but I highly recommend it if you are new to it. Plus, adding EVERYTHING to a "welcome to Android" book would just make the learning process hard. This book seems to cover a vast majority of what we need to know to get things done. It has some sections in the end to give an intro to some more technical details plus a list of things not covered in the book to give clues on what else is out there, with links to get you started. It would seem this book gives a very good foundation to build from.
E**K
Great book so far for beginners
Great book so far!!! I was looking for a good android development book for beginners. I tried a couple other books but this book is fun to read with a lot of fun examples and antidotes. The book has several projects that you build and learn using Android Studio. I was concerned that this book may be dated and not usable with the current Android Studio but it has worked out fine. I have gone through the first 4 chapters and I already have a better understanding of Android programming and has started on my own simple app. I only gave it four stars because I have not completed the book.
M**M
Great book. Highly recommended.
I'm almost finished with my second read of this new Head First book. It's an excellent introduction. Like the HF Design Patterns book, there is something about the detailed approach to conveying complex information that really does the job. It's engaging and progresses with those little steps, repeatedly, to drive home essential Android skills. I've been programming in Java for over a year, have taken four OOP courses, including Java, in college, and have read many books on Java and related topics. This works. It is not cartoonish by any means and a great first step; highly detailed, with arrows and explanations that leave no (beginner) stone unturned. Android programming is not that easy, to my surprise. But beware: you better know your Java.
T**.
Great book
Head First gets you passionate into the boring world of computer programing with graphical story telling. It atleast keeps you alert and interested in an otherwise abstract concepts. We are more visual than imaginative, I will hope you become more imaginative and as well visual to really benefit from this book. This book takes you one step at a time and walks you through the dark alleys of Android programing; explaining every step you take and why you took that step. It helps a great deal to have some Java knowledge as a pre-requisite. I love this book.
A**N
Good for the basics only.
This book is good for giving you the basics of working with android but no more. The clam that reading this book is like having an experience programmer beside you is very much exaggerated. Reading this book alone is not enough to get you started on serious apps, and a lot is left to the index at the back which manly sends you to read the google documentation and figure it out from there.
W**R
This is a great book on Android programming
This is a great book on Android programming. The one I will be recommending to all people that wish to start on this subject. The reader's experience is surely not boring and the examples are useful, covering the tricky details of the Android programming. Subjects like services, databases and multi-threading, are not forgotten, even if in introduction level but full of great hints. It is a quick start to application development, even for the experienced Java programmers that want to enter in this branch.
J**I
This book is a great way to get a hands-on introduction to Android. If you are looking for a fast and practical way to get into the Android world, I definitely recommend it. If you are looking for more in-depth knowledge of Android this will not be the book for you.
A**A
Nel mondo della programmazione Android esistono molti libri che ti permettono di fare i primi passi, tuttavia li ho trovati tutti "arretrati", ossia non aggiornati allo sviluppo di Android. Se cercate per Android 4, se ne trovano a bizzeffe. Questo, invece, è aggiornato ad Android 6 ed ai nuovi ambienti di sviluppo. Non permettere di diventare master, ma permette di incamminarsi in un mondo di sviluppo differente, lasciandoci poi autonomi nell'approfondire.
I**D
Firstly, I am a C++ programmer so before I bought this book, I skimmed through a tutorial java playlist on youtube which really made this book completely stress free. It is a FANTASTIC book! It explains everything, and in a way that is so comfortable. It speaks to the reader in a very casual manner and never takes itself too seriously which makes learning so easy. I am fed up of educational books that bore the heck out of me. This book wants you to keep learning and it does that by making sure you actually want to keep on reading, Love it! I would recommend it to anybody that wants to make an app and has a bit of programming experience.
S**Y
I know like some said that this book is for beginner but while trying to understand how Android works, I read a couple of samples of book with my Kindle about the subject and this one is by far the best book to visually understand all the processes behind the interaction of your application and the system. For sure, you will have to grab a much advanced book to be able to construct something more complicated than a todo list app but it's a really well written book like about every Head First book that I've read.
B**N
Ce bouquin est tout simplement LE livre à avoir pour apprendre le développement sous Android. Les auteurs ont tenu compte des recherches récentes en matière de sciences de l'apprentissage: de nombreux schémas, images. Des annotations du code. Bravo ! Et merci...
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