// Copyright 2015 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. // DO NOT EDIT. GENERATED BY 'gomobile help documentation doc.go'. /* Gomobile is a tool for building and running mobile apps written in Go. To install: $ go get golang.org/x/mobile/cmd/gomobile $ gomobile init At least Go 1.5 is required. Until it is released, build tip from source: http://golang.org/doc/install/source Initialization rebuilds the standard library and may download the Android NDK compiler. Usage: gomobile command [arguments] Commands: bind build a shared library for android APK and iOS app build compile android APK and iOS app init install android compiler toolchain install compile android APK and install on device Use 'gomobile help [command]' for more information about that command. NOTE: iOS support is not ready yet. Build a shared library for android APK and iOS app Usage: gomobile bind [-target android|ios] [-o output] [build flags] [package] Bind generates language bindings for the package named by the import path, and compiles a library for the named target system. The -target flag takes a target system name, either android (the default) or ios. For -target android, the bind command produces an AAR (Android ARchive) file that archives the precompiled Java API stub classes, the compiled shared libraries, and all asset files in the /assets subdirectory under the package directory. The output is named '.aar' by default. This AAR file is commonly used for binary distribution of an Android library project and most Android IDEs support AAR import. For example, in Android Studio (1.2+), an AAR file can be imported using the module import wizard (File > New > New Module > Import .JAR or .AAR package), and setting it as a new dependency (File > Project Structure > Dependencies). This requires 'javac' (version 1.7+) and Android SDK (API level 9 or newer) to build the library for Android. The environment variable ANDROID_HOME must be set to the path to Android SDK. For -target ios, gomobile must be run on an OS X machine with Xcode installed. Support is not complete. The -v flag provides verbose output, including the list of packages built. The build flags -a, -i, -n, -x, and -tags are shared with the build command. For documentation, see 'go help build'. Compile android APK and iOS app Usage: gomobile build [-target android|ios] [-o output] [build flags] [package] Build compiles and encodes the app named by the import path. The named package must define a main function. The -target flag takes a target system name, either android (the default) or ios. For -target android, if an AndroidManifest.xml is defined in the package directory, it is added to the APK output. Otherwise, a default manifest is generated. For -target ios, gomobile must be run on an OS X machine with Xcode installed. Support is not complete. If the package directory contains an assets subdirectory, its contents are copied into the output. The -o flag specifies the output file name. If not specified, the output file name depends on the package built. The -v flag provides verbose output, including the list of packages built. The build flags -a, -i, -n, -x, and -tags are shared with the build command. For documentation, see 'go help build'. Install android compiler toolchain Usage: gomobile init [-u] Init downloads and installs the Android C++ compiler toolchain. The toolchain is installed in $GOPATH/pkg/gomobile. If the Android C++ compiler toolchain already exists in the path, it skips download and uses the existing toolchain. The -u option forces download and installation of the new toolchain even when the toolchain exists. Compile android APK and install on device Usage: gomobile install [-target android] [build flags] [package] Install compiles and installs the app named by the import path on the attached mobile device. Only -target android is supported. The 'adb' tool must be on the PATH. The build flags -a, -i, -n, -x, and -tags are shared with the build command. For documentation, see 'go help build'. */ package main