- Introduction
- Setting up your environment
- Installing Application Designer
- How to contribute
- Links for users
This project is actively maintained. The developer wiki (including release notes) and issues tracker are located under the ODK-X Tool Suite project. This repository contains the ODK-X Application Designer software. Complete Android apps, including data entry, synchronization, and distribution, can be written using HTML and JavaScript files. ODK-X Tables and ODK-X Survey will serve these files as the skin of your app. Projects intending to write a Tables app can clone this repository and use it as a starting point. Much of the boilerplate of app creation can be avoided by employing the Grunt tasks specified in the Gruntfile.
- Java -> Java is required by the Android SDK (installation is described below).
- Chrome -> Google's Chrome browser.
- NodeJS -> a framework for easily building fast, scalable applications (installation is described below).
- Grunt -> a task-based scripting environment (installation is described below).
- Android SDK -> the software development kit for Android devices (installation is described below).
Make sure Java 8 or higher is installed on the computer you plan to use. If it is not, download and install it. If you are using MacOSX, it may require special care and attention.See MacOSX Java install and MacOSX Java FAQ.
You must use Version 20 or higher. To avoid directory path problems on Windows, we require npm version 10 or higher (generally npm will be bundled with NodeJS installer). Follow the instructions to install NodeJS.
When installing on Windows you can use an automated NodeJS installer that uses Chocolatey. If you chose not to let the installer use Chocolatey to install a bunch of packages after installing NodeJS, you will need to ensure the location of the npm
folder is added to the PATH variable of your system. If it is not, subsequent calls to access grunt will fail. For example: C:\Users\[username]\AppData\Roaming\npm
. For instructions on modifying PATH, see the section at the bottom of this page called Add adb to your PATH For Windows. Instead of navigating to the location of Android SDK, navigate to the location of the npm
folder.
You can check if npm has been installed properly by typing npm --version
in cmd or Powershell.
After installing NodeJS, open a terminal (which you can do by clicking the spotlight in the top right corner of the screen, typing terminal, and clicking the program named Terminal) and type: $ npm --version
Warning: If a number is not displayed, but you instead receive a message that the command npm cannot be found, you will have to perform some additional configuration.
As of this writing, by default NodeJS installs its commands into /usr/local/bin/
. In the terminal, type:
$ ls /usr/local/bin/npm
If this command outputs something like /usr/local/bin/npm
, but you are still unable to run:
$ npm --version
try running:
$ /usr/local/bin/npm --version
If this is successful, then npm is successfully installed, and you will just have to add /usr/local/bin/
to your system PATH variable (see below).
If the command:
$ ls /usr/local/bin/npm
outputs a message telling you permission is denied, then you will have to change the ownership of the /usr/local/
and /usr/local/bin/
directories. On Mac, follow the instructions to take ownership of these directories, or to at least give yourself read permission. On other Linux systems, use the chown command or the user-interface appropriate to your distribution to do so.
After installing NodeJS, install grunt by doing the following: Note: These installation steps are copied from the Grunt Getting Started guide. On Windows, open a cmd window (go to Start Menu, search for cmd and open it); on MacOSX, open a terminal window. Within this window, type:
$ npm install -g grunt-cli
If the above command is unsuccessful, some machines may need to append sudo at the beginning of the command. If grunt is successfully installed, the following command:
$ grunt --version
Should display the installed version of grunt. For example the version might be grunt-cli v1.2.0
.
Warning: If grunt is not found, you may need to add it to the PATH variable of your system.
To install the Android SDK:
-
Browse to the Android SDK download page.
-
Scroll down on this page to the section labeled: Get just the command line tools. Note: You can alternatively install the full Android Studio if you so wish, in which case you should follow Google's instructions and then skip to step 6 of this guide.
-
Within that section, download the appropriate file(s) based on your operating system.
-
Accept the license agreement
-
Wait for the install of the SDK Tools to complete. Windows will need to manually run the .exe file previously downloaded to start installation.
Note: There is no graphical tool for package management when using only the command line tools in either of Mac/Windows/Linux. You need to do a complete setup of Android Studio, more information in step 7. -
Run the SDK Manager
- On Windows, it is available in the
Start Menu
under Android SDK Tools Warning: If the packages fail to install, you may need to run the Android SDK as an Administrator. - On Mac/Linux, there is a
sdkmanager
CLI, more information can be found here.
- On Windows, it is available in the
-
Select the latest versions of the following packages (by checking their checkboxes):
- Android SDK Tools
- Android Platform-tools
- Android Build-tools
-For this step on Mac/Linux, you'll need to make a complete setup of Android Studio. You may skip the steps 8-11 since, the above tools will be included in the Android Studio install you just did.
-
If extra packages are selected, you may unselect them before installation.
-
Click
Install 3 packages
in the lower right corner of the screen. -
A licensing pop-up dialog will appear. Accept the license agreement(s) by selecting the
Accept License
option. If there are multiple licenses, you may need to select each license in the Packages window on this dialog and check thisAccept License
option for each of them before theInstall
button will become enabled. -
Click the
Install
button on that dialog to begin the installation process.
Among many other things, this will install the Android Debug Bridge software on your computer. This tool enables the scripted pushing of files and APKs down to your Android device. See adb (Android Debug Bridge) for a listing of its capabilities.
Next, on Windows open a cmd window (open the Start menu, type cmd in the search box, select and open it), and on Mac/Linux open a terminal window. Type:
$ adb version
If this displays a version string, then your installation is complete; you are done with this section and can move on to Installing Application Designer.
Warning: - If there is an error complaining about Java not being installed, you will need to close this cmd or terminal window and download and install Java. After installing Java, open a new cmd or terminal window and type this command again. - If adb is not found, then you need to add it to the PATH variable of your system.
- Open a Windows File Explorer and navigate to the location of your Android SDK. This will typically be at one of:
C:\Users\your_username\android-sdks
orC:\ProgramFiles\Android\android-sdk
orC:\Program Files (x86)\Android\android-sdk
. - Navigate into the
platform-tools
folder. - Click in the file path at the top of the File Explorer window. The path will become aselected text string. Copy it into your copy-and-paste buffer.
- Open the Start menu.
- Right-click on
Computer
. - Choose
Properties
. The System Control Panel screen opens. - Select
Advanced system setting
on the left sidebar. The System Properties dialog opens. - Click on the
Environment Variables...
button at the bottom of the screen. The Envi-ronment Variables dialog opens. - Select the
Path
variable in the bottom System variables scroll window. - Click
Edit...
- Click into the
Variable value
text box. - Press your
End
key to move to the very end of this extremely long string. - Enter ’;’ and paste the
platform-tools
directory path after that semicolon. - Click on
OK
and exit all of the windows. - Verify that you have made the change by closing all cmd windows and open a new one(so it picks up the change), and type
$ adb version
You should now see the version of the adb tool. For example: Android Debug Bridge version 1.0.31
. You can now move on to Installing Application Designer.
The PATH variable is nothing more than a default list of places the system looks for commands. Open a terminal. Type:
$ echo $PATH
You will see a colon-separated list of folders on your computer. (echo means just print whatever comes next, and the ${ }
means that the system will treat PATH as a variable, not a program. You don't need to know this to follow these instructions, but knowledge is power.) For example, you might see something like this:
$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/bin:/bin
This means that when you type:
$ adb --version
the system will look for the command called adb in the directories /usr/local/bin/
, /usr/local/sbin/
, /usr/bin/
, and /bin/
.
Note the location where you downloaded the Android SDK. It should contain a folder called platform-tools
, which itself contains the program adb. If this was in the folder /Users/someuser/Desktop/android-sdk/
you should be able to run:
$ /Users/someuser/Desktop/android-sdk/platform-tools/adb --version
This works because we're telling the computer exactly where the program adb exists. By putting the platform-tools
directory on the system's PATH variable, we will be able to just type adb and have the system find it in the /Users/someuser/Desktop/android-sdk/platform-tools/
directory.
This process is more involved on Mac/Linux than on Windows. Use a text editor (not Word, but something like TextEdit), select the option to open a file, and browse to your home directory. You can find your home directory by typing:
$ echo ~
in a terminal. ('~' is a shortcut for the home directory.) Macs use a hidden file called .zsh
in the home directory to set variables like PATH. Other Linux systems use files like .bashrc
. You might have to check the specifics for your distribution to know which you should use. Open the appropriate file. If the file does not already exist, create a new file that will be saved with the appropriate name in your home directory.
We want to add the location of the adb tool to your PATH while preserving the existing PATH information. Assuming that your adb program is in the /Users/someuser/Desktop/android-sdk/platform-tools/
directory, you would add the following command to the end of the .zshrc
file:
$ export PATH=${PATH}:/Users/someuser/Desktop/android-sdk/platform-tools
Save the file, close the terminal window, open a new terminal window, and type:
$ echo $PATH
You should see your old path with the new directory you added above, and you should now be able to run:
$ adb --version
Tip: If you are going to be heavily customizing the look-and-feel of the application with a lot of external JavaScript libraries, you might also choose to install bower.
Open a Terminal and type
$ git clone https://github.com/odk-x/app-designer.git
If you're using Github Desktop, clone this repository by clicking on Code
.
Now you need to install the node packages:
$ cd app-designer
$ npm install grunt --save-dev
To open Application Designer, navigate to the location of your local cloned repository in cmd/Terminal, and type:
$ grunt
This command runs the script contained in Gruntfile.js, so be sure it is in the current directory. If the Chrome browser does not open, try opening it yourself and browsing to http://localhost:8000/index.html.
If the page never times-out, but never loads (it remains blank or constantly spinning), then stop grunt and try this command instead:
$ grunt --verbose connect:livereload:keepalive
This will start grunt, but disable the file-change detection mechanisms that automatically reload an HTML page when it or any JavaScript file it uses has been modified. Others have reported that uninstalling npm and node, and then re-installing them may correct the issue.
You will be opening a cmd window and changing your current directory (using the cd command) into this directory every time you use this tool. It is therefore useful to create a shortcut that opens a cmd window directly into this directory:
- Open a file browser and navigate to the unzipped directory containing a number of files and directories, including a Gruntfile.js.
- Click into the top location bar that displays the nested list of folders to this folder.
- Copy this path to the cut-and-paste buffer.
- Now, move down to the list of files, right-click.
- Select New...,Shortcut.
- Type cmd for the location of the item.
- Click Next, and then Finish.
- Select this newly-created cmd.exe shortcut and right-click.
- Select Properties.
- Click on the Start in text box, delete its contents, and paste the path to this folder.
- Click OK to accept the change.
- Double-click the cmd.exe shortcut to open a cmd window.
- Confirm that it opens in the intended directory (you should see the full path to that directory displayed to the left of the blinking cursor).
Terminal will open a new terminal window if you drag a folder (or pathname) onto the Terminal application icon, and you can also drag a folder to the tab bar of an existing window to create a new tab in that folder.
You have now completed the installation of the ODK-X Application Designer software.
If you’re new to ODK-X you can check out the documentation:
Once you’re up and running, you can choose an issue to start working on from here:
Issues tagged as good first issue should be a good place to start.
Pull requests are welcome, though please submit them against the development branch. We prefer verbose descriptions of the change you are submitting. If you are fixing a bug, please provide steps to reproduce it or a link to an issue that provides that information. If you are submitting a new feature, please provide a description of the need or a link to a forum discussion about it.
This document is aimed at helping developers and technical contributors. For information on how to get started as a user of ODK-X, see our online documentation, or to learn more about the Open Data Kit project, visit https://odk-x.org.