I just downloaded and installed the new Android SDK. I wanted to create a simple application to test drive it.

The wizard created this code:

package eu.mauriziopz.gps;

import android.app.Activity;
import android.os.Bundle;

public class ggps extends Activity {
    /** Called when the activity is first created. */
    @Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
        setContentView(R.layout.main);
    }
}

but Eclipse give me the error

R cannot be resolved

on line

setContentView(R.layout.main);

Why?

PS: I do have an XML file named main.xml under res/layout/.

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40 Answers

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After tracking down this problem as well, I found this note in the Android documentation:

http://source.android.com/source/using-eclipse.html

Note: Eclipse sometimes likes to add an "import android.R" statement at the top of your files that use resources, especially when you ask eclipse to sort or otherwise manage imports. This will cause your make to break. Look out for these erroneous import statements and delete them.

While going through the Android sample tutorials, I would often use the Ctrl + Shift + O command to "Organize Imports" and generate any missing import statements. Sometimes this would generate the incorrect import statement which would hide the R.java class that is automatically generated when you build.

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4  
This is indeed the correct answer. – Allen Gingrich Jul 28 '10 at 16:53
12  
This guy needs more votes for this answer. – Mark Ingram Oct 21 '10 at 21:58
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Each time I had a problem with R not been generated, or even disappeared, this was due to some problem in the XML layout file that prevented the application from being built.

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+1 for this. I had an older styles.xml file with parent="android:WindowTitleBackground" and it was breaking my build and preventing anything generated to "gen". The error wasn't actually reported except in the Console window right when I first opened the project. – Scott Persinger Mar 8 at 0:56
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> my project have include a r.java.at the beginning ,R.layout.main work good.But,after adding some code it doesn't work,and the error is R.layout.main can't resolved.what's the problem? >

Look at your imports. Chances are that the line:

import android.R;

will be there. If that's the case, remove it, so that your project will resolve R not with the default Android Resources class, but with the one auto-generated from your /res/ folder.

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Thanks @Dimitar,that fixed my issue! Eclipse and the auto-import feature seem to have gotten me by adding that import line automatically. – Steven Jun 8 '10 at 3:12
3  
I've also had similar issues when I named a layout using capital letters – Travis Oct 24 '10 at 20:46
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Whenever you get

R cannot be resolved

then check for the /res directory and there must be some file that have some error in it and that is preventing the application from being built. For example, it may be a layout file or it may be due to some missing resource is, but you already defined it in the XML file.

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4  
How can you check for errors? I get nothing in my console when building/running – Vincent Apr 11 '11 at 9:33
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R.java is a file that the Android Eclipse plugins creates while building your application. R.java is created under the "gen" directory. This file is generated from the information in the "res" directory. If you run select "Project" -> "Clean..." on the Eclipse menu, it will remove and then regenerate the R.java file.

The problem "R cannot be resolved" happens when you change your package name in the AndroidManifest.xml file. It uses your Android package name to create a subdirectory under the "gen" directory where it stores the R.java file.

Eclipse may have problems executing clean, because it is confused about where the R.java file is when you have changed the Android package name. You can either rename the subdirectory under gen to match your new package name, or you can change your package name back to the old name. Do the clean and then change the package name to the new name you want. This works best if you stop Eclipse from trying to build while you are changing the package name. Under the "Project" menu uncheck the option to "Build Automatically" and also when the "Clean..." dialog asks if it should "Start a build immediately" uncheck the box so it doesn't try to build while you are changing the package name. After you have changed the name you can turn "Build Automatically" back on again.

Note that if your AndroidManifest.xml file package name does not match your Java package name, Eclipse will end up automatically adding an "import <your Android package name>.R;" line in all your .java files that have any references to R. If you change your AndroidManifest.xml package name, sometimes Eclipse does not update all of these added imports. If that happens, use the Eclipse refactoring (ALT + Shift + R) to change the import statement in one of your Java files to your new AndroidManifest.xml package name. It is best to do this while you have disabled "Build Automatically".

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10  
This looks like a cut and paste without reference – Casebash Apr 28 '10 at 0:06
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up vote 17 down vote accepted

What Will said was right

R is an automatically generated class that holds the constants used to identify your >resources. If you don't have an R.java file (it would be gen/eu.mauriziopz.gps/R.java in >Eclipse with the 1.5 SDK) I would recommend closing and reopening your project or going to >Project > Build all (and selecting "Build Automatically" while there as recommended by >Josef). If that doesn't work than try making a new project, if the problem is recreated than >post here again and we'll go into more detail.

but I've found out that there was another problem that was causing the first one. The tools in the SDK directory didn't have the permissions to be executed, so it was like the didn't exist for Eclipse, thus it didn't build the R.java file.

So modifying the permission and selecting "Build Automatically" solved the problem.

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R is an automatically generated class that holds the constants used to identify your resources. If you don't have an R.java file (it would be gen/eu.mauriziopz.gps/R.java in Eclipse with the 1.5 SDK) I would recommend closing and reopening your project or going to Project > Build all (and selecting "Build Automatically" while there as recommended by Josef). If that doesn't work than try making a new project, if the problem is recreated than post here again and we'll go into more detail.

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This worked for me, but I had to "Project -> Clean..." first. – Matt Connolly Feb 19 '11 at 21:20
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It is worth checking in AndroidManifest.xml. The attribute package has the correct value.

That is, <manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" package="your.correct.package.name" ...

After you change that, the R.java will be re-generated.

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Simplest solution - Sometimes you just need to save the XML file you were working on to get the autogenerator to kick in.

Save the file (e.g. main.xml) then delete the R.java file and see if regenerated R.java resolves the R resolve problem.

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I just had this problem for the millionth time and realized what was causing it: I created an XML file with uppercase letters in the name. All your XML filenames in /res must match [a-z0-9\\._].

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Close Eclipse and restart once again. It's working fine for me.

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This error can also be caused by adding an activity to a namespace that is different to the root namespace for your package.

For example, if com.example.myapp is the root namespace for your package, you can then add an activity to the com.example.myapp.activities namespace.

This will produce the "R cannot be resolved" error.

To fix the import the R in the default namespace in your activity should be:

import com.example.myapp.R;
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Remove main.out.xml. I'm new to this and don't yet know what this file is used for, but removing it cleared the problem.

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Change build target from 1.5 or 1.6 to 2.2 (API version 8), and check if you have the % character in string.xml. If yes, replace with %%.

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In my case, I had an error in my AndroidManifest.xml. Others have said that your XML files must be free from errors, but I was only looking in the res/ folder. Find and fix as many possible errors and the problem may well resolve itself.

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Check the XML file names. Be sure that they're all in lowercase.

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Try to make your new XML layout file name lower case. For example, use my_file.xml instead of myFile.xml.

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Often times this is because of the MinSDK version number you supplied when creating the project. Example:

If you want 2.1 to be the minimum, Android 2.1 is actually API Level 7.

You can see what I am talking about when you browse the SDK you downloaded and installed. Navigate to the place you installed the SDK to (C:\android-sdk-windows for example) and open the folder named "platforms". You will see something like "android-7" listed as a folder, and if you open that there is a source.properties file that, when opened with a text editor, will show you the corresponding platform version.

When you create a project, and you must select a "Build Target" API, the last column in that list named "API Level" shows the number you are looking for when populating the MinSDK setting.

This is probably one of the most common mistakes that results in the R.java file not being created under Project > gen > packagename > R.java.

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Wow. I resolved my R issue by tracking down all possible errors in all XML files and related resources. I know that is a handful of layers, but simply you must:

  • Make sure any referenced resource image is actually there
  • Everybody already mentioned so much that this is just echo... Remove all Eclipse injected R.* imports if need be.
  • I like to restart Eclipse when I do the above.
  • Make sure all XML files are properly structured. Like, just do your stuff. Hahaha
  • Go through as many lines as you can. Get in the habit of hitting Ctrl + Shift + S often to get compiler results quickly changed.

Hahah. Sure it is nice to get the R Cannot be resolved fixed though...

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My problem was that I left out the = mark from the strings in strings.xml e.g. <string name"dialog_grl... It did not appear to me even when the graphical layout of my .xml file could not show the strings. After a project clean all files got messed up.

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R is a generated class. If you are using the Android Development Tools (ADT) it is generated whenever the project is built. Maybe you have 'Build Automatically' turned off?

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I had this problem as well, it turned out that I had inadvertently deleted the "app_name" string resource from the strings.xml file, which was causing a silent error. Once I added it back, the R class was generated successfully and everything was back up and running.

HTH.

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I had the examples of Android 8 and was trying to use Android 7 SDK. When I closed the project and reopened the application folder and chose to use Android 8 SDK, it was able to find the R file. Hope this helps.

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This error cropped up on my x64 Linux Mint installation. It turned out that the result was a failure in the ADB binary, because the ia32-libs package was not installed. Simply running apt-get install ia32-libs and relaunching Eclipse fixed the error.

Hope this helps someone.

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Recently, I faced a similar situation with R that could not be resolved.

  1. Project -> Clean (it usually works, but this time it didn't).
  2. I tried to remove the gen/ folder (which automatically gets built) - nope.
  3. Dummy modifying a file. Nope again. By now I was going grey!
  4. I checked in the AndroidManifest.xml file if appName was present. It was - checked!
  5. Looked again at my res/ folder...

And this is where it gets weird... It gives an error, in some but not all cases..

I added the formatted="false" flag:

<resources>
    <string name="blablah" formatted="false">
    </string>
</resources>

Bingo!

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I changed android:versionName in AndroidManifest.xml from 1.0 to 1.1. That regenerated my R.java and I'm a happy camper. Hope this might help somebody

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Yet another reason R.java might not get autogenerated is if you have directories like res/drawable-hdpi, res/drawable-mdpi, or res/drawable-ldpi. 1.6+ seems to be OK w/ these directories, but 1.5 doesn't want them. When I removed those directories, R.java started autogenerating for me again.

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So I have run into this problem multiple times when switching build targets. Usually doing a Project >> Clean worked for me. This last time, however, it did not. Finally I tried to open my default.properties file, located under the root project folder. I received an error message stating that it was out of sync with the file system. I actually deleted it and copied a coworkers version which allowed eclipse to rebuild my R file. I will paste what it looks like below. It is named 'default.properties'.

# This file is automatically generated by Android Tools.
# Do not modify this file -- YOUR CHANGES WILL BE ERASED!
# 
# This file must be checked in Version Control Systems.
# 
# To customize properties used by the Ant build system use,
# "build.properties", and override values to adapt the script to your
# project structure.

# Indicates whether an apk should be generated for each density.
split.density=false
# Project target.
target=android-3
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In case anyone is interested (I might be saving your life here) I had the error - R.xml cannot be resolved - slightly different - on a GLS project. hmmmm. After looking in R.java I found an auto generated class XML.java (I think) was not there.

Solution? It needed a new folder in res: res\xml and a file called default_values.xml in there. Then all OK.

Just in case you have not got that file its:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<PreferenceScreen
    xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android">
</PreferenceScreen>
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Another way this can occur is if you start a new project from one of the samples. When you later decide to change the package name from com.example.android.foo to your own domain, you will need to modify several values in the manifest and in individual .java files.

If you're in Eclipse, find the package statement for the .java file and choose QuickFix. There may be several choices there, but the one you want is the one that indicates to "Move 'foo.java' to package 'com.youdomain.android.yourapp'. Save the file and it may autobuild or do as others have suggested and try "Project->Clean".

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protected by Bill the Lizard Nov 19 '10 at 12:17

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