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I'm new to Android. When I add a button/views in Graphical layout it adds the label text this way- android:text="Button" . Why doesnt it add "android:text="@string/my_label" and add a string resource in string.xml file. Can't it be done automatically in eclipse?

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  • It could but someone over at google needs to implement that
    – zapl
    Aug 31, 2012 at 16:36
  • You're going to have to change the default text 99.9% anyway of the time and you could use either the layout xml or the strings xml. The second they do this "automatically" for you is the second devs get upset that they have to change the text declaration in the layout xml and remove the String value added.
    – jnthnjns
    Aug 31, 2012 at 16:39

6 Answers 6

17

I have searched a lot but I have not get any automated way to add a string to the resource file But This will save your time a lot IMHO.

Select a String, click Refactor --> Android --> Extract Android String.

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  • You need to select the text in the xml file while beeing in text-mode.
    – math
    Sep 25, 2012 at 11:48
  • What about Android Studio Dec 29, 2015 at 11:36
9

Thanks to Brent Hronik. CTRL-1 on Windows works fine.

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7

Because you don't have to use the @string resource. The purpose of the @strings resource is to make it easier to change elements about your code. For example, if you are using your application title in mutliple places, let's say in every dialog box, then if you change the title you would have to change it in all the instances that the app title is being display. So in this instance the @string/App_Title could be set to "My Program" and all of the dialog boxes can reference that. If you change the title to "Hello World" then all of these are changed. The @strings resource, while eclipse tries, doesn't have to be used for every string. Not using it is the equivalent to hard coding the value. There are plenty of reasons for and against using @string for everything.

I am not sure if there is a setting in eclipse that will automatically add a string to the resource file when the control is added.

(EDIT: Based on other users CTRL+1 is the short cut to do this.)

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You can add the string to the strings.xml by clicking command and 1(on a mac, assume it would be control 1 on a Windows or Linux box) simultaneously. This will add the resource to strings.xml and then open that up in the editor.

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Thanks Siddiq Abu Bakkar! I didn't think it would be there.

On Eclipse (and Windows) the shortcut is:

Alt+Shift+A (release all and then press) S

When you use Eclipse for first time it's not easy understand how to use these kind of "complex" shortcuts.

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I can't vote and i can't comment answers yet (missing reputation as i'm a new user)

But i confirm :

1) hard type the string in your code like
   mydlg.setTitle("hello guys");
2) select your string (e.g : "hello guys")
3) press Alt + Shift + A then press S

a dialog will appear to let you add a new string into resources. Everything should be already filled into that dialog box.

1
  • IMHO you should update this as a comment if possible.
    – Laur Ivan
    Apr 6, 2016 at 10:21

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