My XML
layout is not rendering with this error message. I am already using Java 8.
Also using latest build tools in Gradle.
android {
compileSdkVersion 'android-N'
buildToolsVersion 24.0.0 rc1
...
}
XML Error -
I got the same error you describe but on OS X. I know this may not solve your problem (because I don't know the equivalent for Windows), but since this is not OS specific I am leaving the solution for any OS X fellow out there.
Edit the file /Applications/Android\ Studio.app/Contents/Info.plist
, and remove the 1.6 version (in my case), you may place 1.6+, 1.7+ or 1.8, whichever you prefer. Mine ended up like this
...
<key>JVMVersion</key>
<string>1.7+</string>
...
Be aware there's an incompatibility with drag and drop with java versions 1.8_60 to 1.8_75 (IDEA-146691) which the IDE will report once you successfully change the version.
For non Terminal Users
Android Studio.app
file. If it's in the dock you can right click it and choose Options > Show in Finder
.Show package content
. Contents/Info.plist
).<key>JVMVersion</key> <string>1.8</string>
So annoying Android Studio!
Click on the letter N, next to the android icon in the Preview window and select API level 23 or lower. That should solve it.
Set JDK_HOME
and JAVA_HOME
environment variables, in my case C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_60
.
Check Java version in Help > About
. It should show the JRE version you just set.
That is it, now you can preview your layout in N
.
> compileSdkVersion 'android-24' requires JDK 1.8 or later to compile.
Commented
Jun 16, 2016 at 20:06
For Mac users with this issue (I'm running OS X 10.11.5 and Android Studio 2.1.2), here's how you can solve it:
Currently, the Mac version of Android Studio is run with Java 6 (not necessarily the same as the JDK version for the app), because Java 6 has better font rendering than Java 7 & 8, and that's apparently more important than rendering your layout.
First of all, make sure you have JDK 8 installed.
Then run the following commands:
$ export STUDIO_JDK=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_91.jdk
$ open /Applications/Android\ Studio.app/
You may need to change the 91
in jdk1.8.0_91.jdk
to a different version. You can see which JDK versions you have with:
$ ls /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/
Unfortunately, this method requires opening the app from the terminal, but you could always create a script for it.
Edit: And if you really don't want to open it from the terminal:
do shell script "export STUDIO_JDK=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_91.jdk; open /Applications/Android\\ Studio.app/"
error "sh: /usr/local/bin/studio: No such file or directory" number 127
any way to fix it? when I run it from terminal it works perfectly
I met the same issue.
I installed jdk1.6,jdk1.7,jdk1.8, and deployed Studio as what you did.
My solution is uninstall jdk1.6 and jdk1.7, only leave jdk1.8
sudo rm -rf ${path to jdk1.6}
sudo rm -rf ${path to jdk1.7}
That's all.
I'm using Ubuntu 14.04 and I was facing a similar error, with the difference I don't have NDK. My solution was, after setting up Java 8 in project definition, reboot Android Studio, no more.
Check system Java version, in console "java -version", output should say something like this
java version "1.8.0_91"
Had the same problem with Ubunutu. The problem was not running the IDE with Java8.
I fixed it with updating the default java program of the OS, using:
sudo update-alternatives --config java
And choosing the relevant Java8 path.
I faced the problem "Android N requires the IDE to be running with Java 1.8 or later." The error kept showing up in spite of setting C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_92
as the project's JDK in File > Project Structure
.
I solved it by updating JAVA_HOME in my environment variables from C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_67
to C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_92
. When I did that and restarted Android Studio, the design mode became available.
OS: Windows 10
Android Studio: 2.1.2
I have solved it in these way.(AS+MAC OX El Capitan)
Go to Help>Edit Custom Properties> A dialog will prompt(press yes) then write
JVMVersion=1.8
Then close Android Studio fully and reload the project
From the docs: https://developer.android.com/studio/intro/studio-config.html#file_location
STUDIO_JDK: set the JDK with which to run Studio
I prefer using the STUDIO_JDK variable and leave other default java home variables alone.
My issue was that the Android N was "partially installed".
My solution was to go to - Preferences/Appearances and Behavior/System Settings/Android SDK and check the Status. If it's "partially installed" then you have to uninstall then reinstall. (Uncheck the checkbox and hit apply; it will uninstall; then you can check the box and install it again) Worked for me. If you go to lower version(like 23) then you have to change the buildToolsVersion variable to "23.0.0" in the build.gradle.
I was facing the same problem recently. Try changing the API preview level to 23 or lower. That worked for me.
I had faced the same problem. Please make sure that you are rendering the XML layout for the compiled SDK version (Must not be greater) . Means you will face this if you are compiling the code using Targeted SDK version 23 and your trying to render the XML in SDK version 24.
There are several thing to remember when set the STUDIO_JDK on Mac OS:
The difference between two is that Apple's Java IMO provides nicer and better fonts antialiasing in the IDE.
A reply here is referencing a bug in Android Studio regarding the fonts antialiasing. The ticket is already closed but still rendering is different for Apple Java and Oracle SDK (I have v1.8.0_102). And the former still has better perception than the last.
try to use in project Java 1.8 - download last version of JDK and install it(if JSK is absent)
Then add to build.gradle these lines android { ... // Configure only for each module that uses Java 8 // language features (either in its source code or // through dependencies). compileOptions { sourceCompatibility JavaVersion.VERSION_1_8 targetCompatibility JavaVersion.VERSION_1_8 } // For Kotlin projects kotlinOptions { jvmTarget = "1.8" } }
machine: windows8 64bit in my case the jdk1.7 I had installed was 32bit hence I was using studio.exe (32bit) so even when I downloaded the new jdk1.8 (64bit) the studio instance I was using (32bit) couldn't detect it, but when I uninstalled the older jdk and tried to rerun studio.exe I was told to install a 32bit jdk. so I ran studio64.exe and it ran smoothly. ensure you have the correct path in your environment variables. cheers android N
Directory cannot have its readable permission cleared for everybody
. Apparently it's a known bug and google is working on it.