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I have recently became interested in android development however the biggest road block for me has been even the mere thought of using java to develop for a mobile phone. I do not have confidence in java's ability to make possible a high performance game with a consistent frame-rate and I do not want my program to stall during garbage collection. I am a C/C++ programmer primarily (I also use assembly if needed) who has programmed in java before and have from past experience found that due to the fact that I have more control over various aspects such as memory allocation I can optimize my program further and I general prefer low level programming.

I have already read questions and answers here and they suggest using the NDK, now I have looked at the NDK and it still introduces the bloat of java. Basically if I understand correctly what I would have to do is write some short java code that would call my native code. The problem with this java is still running in the background therefor consuming valuable ram which mobile phones lack of and java would still need to launch and even on my computer java takes a little bit to start-up and given the fact that I am programming for a mobile phone which I am sure has a much slower cpu it will take even longer. I have found that java and low memory footprint to be a oxymoron and do not want java running in the background idling using ram. I want this program to be accepted in the official application store which I believe is know as "google play". Given the fact that I am programing for such a resource limited device I am very surprised that java is the recommended way.

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  • When you said "resources limited device", did you check how much RAM and processing power most Android Smartphones have nowadays? Also, did you check open libraries that allow you to create games in Android and actually tried doing so? Sorry but your question boils down to "I'm a C++ Developer and I want to develop an Android game but Java is too inefficient memory wise. Smartphones are slow and clunky so I don't think they can handle Java."
    – Razgriz
    Nov 23, 2014 at 16:45
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    You prejudice against Java, which is very different on Android than on the desktop, does you no favours. My phone is more powerful than my desktop and Java causes me no problems whatsoever.
    – Simon
    Nov 23, 2014 at 16:45
  • Your concerns are not invalid, but fortunately there are some optimizations, such as the fact that the vm is not "started" but simply forked off a running instance. You can write a "native activity" where you supply no java code, but plenty supplied by the system will still be utilized, both in your process and in those it talks to. Nov 23, 2014 at 16:50
  • @Razgriz I admit to being a bit behind in regards to mobiles (phones and tablets). I have done some preliminary research and hit a roadblock on how I could use only native code hence this questions existence. Yes you are correct in what my question boils down to. I own a raspberry pi and a beaglebone black both of which if I understand correctly has similar hardware to what would be found in a modern mobile phone. It is not as fast as a modern desktop/laptop but with good programming practices I can still make nice programs for it. That is what I wanted to do for android mobile phones. Nov 23, 2014 at 17:04
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    @Simon What are the specs on your desktop? I have some old computers that I am sure could be beaten by a mobile phone however that is not a fair comparison as the desktop is much older than the phone. Nov 23, 2014 at 17:09

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First, I believe you are worrying too much about the performance of java. You cannot avoid "java running in the background", because most of Android is implemented in Java, anyway. And the resources of smartphones are not so limited.

Now if you really can't stand java, you can use a NativeActivity: http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/NativeActivity.html And make your game with OpenGL.

See also that question: 100% Native C Application on Android?

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  • I was not aware of that question however when reading it although it appears that the goal of completely avoiding java was not successful as in it is not possible. However the question is three years old, has anything changed or is there really no way to avoid java completely as in I will have to use the JNI or native activity? Nov 23, 2014 at 17:23

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