Android Studio provides everything you need to start developing apps for Android, including the Android Studio IDE and the Android SDK tools.
If you didn't download Android Studio, go download Android Studio now, or switch to the stand-alone SDK Tools install instructions.
Before you set up Android Studio, be sure you have installed
JDK 6 or higher (the JRE alone is not sufficient)—JDK 7 is required when
developing for Android 5.0 and higher. To check if you
have JDK installed (and which version), open a terminal and type javac -version
.
If the JDK is not available or the version is lower than 6,
go download JDK.
[ Show instructions for all platforms ]
To set up Android Studio on Windows:
- Launch the
.exe
file you just downloaded. - Follow the setup wizard to install Android Studio and any necessary SDK tools.
On some Windows systems, the launcher script does not find where Java is installed. If you encounter this problem, you need to set an environment variable indicating the correct location.
Select Start menu > Computer > System Properties > Advanced System Properties. Then open Advanced tab > Environment Variables and add a new system variable
JAVA_HOME
that points to your JDK folder, for exampleC:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_21
.
The individual tools and other SDK packages are saved outside the Android Studio application directory. If you need to access the tools directly, use a terminal to navigate to the location where they are installed. For example:
\Users\<user>\sdk\
To set up Android Studio on Mac OSX:
- Unzip the downloaded zip file,
android-studio-ide-<version>-mac.zip
. - Drag and drop Android Studio into the Applications folder.
- Open Android Studio and follow the setup wizard to install any necessary SDK tools.
Depending on your security settings, when you attempt to open Android Studio, you might see a warning that says the package is damaged and should be moved to the trash. If this happens, go to System Preferences > Security & Privacy and under Allow applications downloaded from, select Anywhere. Then open Android Studio again.
- Follow the links to install the SDK outside of the Android Studio directories.
The individual tools and other SDK packages are saved outside the Android Studio application directory. If you need access the tools directly, use a terminal to navigate into the location where they are installed. For example:
/Applications/sdk/
To set up Android Studio on Linux:
- Unpack the downloaded Tar file,
android-studio-ide-<version>-linux.zip
, into an appropriate location for your applications. - To launch Android Studio, navigate to the
android-studio/bin/
directory in a terminal and executestudio.sh
.You may want to add
android-studio/bin/
to your PATH environmental variable so that you can start Android Studio from any directory. - If the SDK is not already installed, follow the setup wizard to install the SDK and any
necessary SDK tools.
Note: You may also need to install the ia32-libs, lib32ncurses5-dev, and lib32stdc++6 packages. These packages are required to support 32-bit apps on a 64-bit machine.
Android Studio is now ready and loaded with the Android developer tools, but there are still a couple packages you should add to make your Android SDK complete.
The stand-alone SDK Tools package does not include a complete Android development environment. It includes only the core SDK tools, which you can access from a command line or with a plugin for your favorite IDE (if available).
If you didn't download the SDK tools, go download the SDK now, or switch to the Android Studio install instructions.
[ Show instructions for all platforms ]
To get started on Windows:
Your download package is an executable file that starts an installer. The installer checks your machine for required tools, such as the proper Java SE Development Kit (JDK) and installs it if necessary. The installer then saves the Android SDK Tools to a specified the location outside of the Android Studio directories.
- Double-click the executable (
.exe
file) to start the install. - Make a note of the name and location where you save the SDK on your system—you will need to refer to the SDK directory later when using the SDK tools from the command line.
- Once the installation completes, the installer starts the Android SDK Manager.
To get started on Mac OSX:
Unpack the ZIP file you've downloaded. By default, it's unpacked
into a directory named android-sdk-mac_x86
. Move it to an appropriate location on your
machine, such as a "Development" directory in your home directory.
Make a note of the name and location of the SDK directory on your system—you will need to refer to the SDK directory later when using the SDK tools from the command line.
To get started on Linux:
Unpack the .zip
file you've downloaded. The SDK files are download separately to a
user-specified directory.
Make a note of the name and location of the SDK directory on your system—you will need to refer to the SDK directory later when using the SDK tools from the command line.
Troubleshooting Ubuntu
- If you need help installing and configuring Java on your development machine, you might find these resources helpful:
- Here are the steps to install Java:
If you are running a 64-bit distribution on your development machine, you need to install additional packages first. For Ubuntu 13.10 (Saucy Salamander) and above, install the
libncurses5:i386
,libstdc++6:i386
, andzlib1g:i386
packages usingapt-get
:sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386 sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install libncurses5:i386 libstdc++6:i386 zlib1g:i386
For earlier versions of Ubuntu, install the
ia32-libs
package usingapt-get
:apt-get install ia32-libs
- Next, install Java:
apt-get install sun-java6-jdk
The Android SDK tools are now ready to begin developing apps, but there are still a couple packages you should add to make your Android SDK complete.
If you haven't already, download the Android SDK bundle for Android Studio or the stand-alone SDK Tools.
Then, select which SDK bundle you want to install: