182

My goal is to see the tree of dependencies (such as: appcompat, dagger, etc) in a particular project.

Like the one IntelliJ:

enter image description here

9 Answers 9

344

The image in the question doesn't really show a tree, just a flat list of everything compiled into the app.

Are you using Gradle?

If so, you can truly see the "tree" by running a Gradle command

Android documentation: View the dependency tree

GUI

  1. Select View > Tool Windows > Gradle (or click Gradle icon in the tool windows bar).
  2. Expand AppName > Tasks > android and double-click androidDependencies. After Gradle executes the task, the Run window should open to display the output.

CLI

(produces tree-like list)

./gradlew app:dependencies

and/or

(produces flat list)

./gradlew app:androidDependencies

Where app is your module's name

And you get something like so

+--- MyApp:mylibrary:unspecified
|    \--- com.android.support:appcompat-v7:25.3.1
|         +--- com.android.support:animated-vector-drawable:25.3.1
|         |    \--- com.android.support:support-vector-drawable:25.3.1
|         |         \--- com.android.support:support-v4:25.3.1
|         |              \--- LOCAL: internal_impl-25.3.1.jar
|         +--- com.android.support:support-v4:25.3.1
|         |    \--- LOCAL: internal_impl-25.3.1.jar
|         \--- com.android.support:support-vector-drawable:25.3.1
|              \--- com.android.support:support-v4:25.3.1
|                   \--- LOCAL: internal_impl-25.3.1.jar
\--- com.android.support:appcompat-v7:25.3.1
     +--- com.android.support:animated-vector-drawable:25.3.1
     |    \--- com.android.support:support-vector-drawable:25.3.1
     |         \--- com.android.support:support-v4:25.3.1
     |              \--- LOCAL: internal_impl-25.3.1.jar
     +--- com.android.support:support-v4:25.3.1
     |    \--- LOCAL: internal_impl-25.3.1.jar
     \--- com.android.support:support-vector-drawable:25.3.1
          \--- com.android.support:support-v4:25.3.1
               \--- LOCAL: internal_impl-25.3.1.jar

For specific flavor use the command

gradle app:dependencies --configuration <flavorNameRuntimeClasspath>

Note: If you run ls (or dir on Windows) in that folder, and don't see gradlew (or gradlew.bat), you are in the wrong folder.

24
  • 1
    Thanks, helped me a lot in tracking down some transient dependencies.
    – Mark
    Commented Sep 2, 2017 at 10:40
  • 4
    It's not what you are showing in this answer though, it's just a non interactive text list of dependencies
    – Tristan
    Commented Nov 29, 2018 at 7:50
  • 12
    This may be a newer gradle version thing, but the dependency tree seems to be displayed with ./gradlew appName:dependencies. In Android Studio it can be found under appName > Tasks > help > dependencies.
    – omahena
    Commented Jan 8, 2019 at 14:19
  • 3
    @cricket_007 I agree with you that the two tasks are different. And I may be holding it wrong... But I could not find a way to display a dependency tree with Gradle 4.6 and the androidDependencies task like the one in your answer. The results were just a flat list like the end result of a Gradle dependency search. Any idea why and how to get a tree like in your answer?
    – omahena
    Commented Jan 11, 2019 at 7:33
  • 3
    Sorry, but I highly doubt that. If you create a new project with a "Basic Activity" on Android Studio, and you run the ./gradlew app:androidDependencies task, the tree will be flat as oppose to what your answer describes. I understand you copied from the docs, but it won't be the first time they are wrong/outdated.
    – Mokkun
    Commented Feb 21, 2019 at 9:31
33

On the right side, open the gradle tab > click the gradle icon (execute gradle task), in the popup dialog enter :

app:dependencies

in the command line field > ok

5
  • 2
    This worked for me once I removed app: and just executed dependencies. This gives more useful output than the method in norbDEV's answer as it shows a dependency tree. Possibly the same output as ./gradlew dependencies but without the requirement of installing a JDK.
    – jk7
    Commented Oct 2, 2018 at 15:29
  • 1
    @jk7 app is the default module for Android Studio projects. If you have no modules, or want to see dependencies for all modules, yes, gradle dependencies also works Commented Nov 17, 2018 at 3:20
  • How to find dependencies of a specific flavor? Commented May 5, 2021 at 18:16
  • 1
    @M.UsmanKhan check stackoverflow.com/a/63137778/2641657
    – Jamal S
    Commented May 6, 2021 at 7:28
  • Definitely the best and fastest answer ! Commented Sep 24, 2022 at 10:05
31

Android Studio 3.4

Inspect and visualize each dependency in the dependency graph of your project, as resolved by Gradle during project sync, by following these steps:

  1. Android Studio -> File -> Project Structure (Dialog)
  2. In the left pane of the "Project Structure" window, select Dependencies.
  3. In the Modules pane, select a module for which you’d like to inspect the resolved dependencies.

Project Structure

  1. For Android Studio 3.6 and above: On the right side of the "Project Structure" window, look at the Resolved Dependencies pane. An example is shown below, where you can click on the Expand arrows to navigate into each sub-dependency. However, it does not allow text searching, like the console output does.

Resolved Dependencies Pane

Learn more.

3
  • this is almost what we want. too bad, it neither supports search nor opening/browsing them from here.
    – Ace
    Commented Aug 22, 2021 at 12:03
  • 3
    Actually you can also search .. just click somewhere within resolved dependencies and start typing. However I'm facing performance issues
    – Tima
    Commented Feb 15, 2022 at 8:35
  • This helped me get there. But in AS Bumblebee Patch 2, the central pane is flat, not a tree. You have to expand the Target Mdules/Artifacts on the right to see parent dependencies of a selected dependency. There's a possibility that I see different output due to using custom flavors in my build. Commented Mar 19, 2022 at 1:10
22

Android Studio 3.+

  • Open the Gradle panel
  • Click the elephant icon, which has the tooltip "Execute Gradle Task"

Gradle panel screenshot + elephant icon

  • Select the app gradle project
  • In the command line paste: dependencies
  • Click OK

Screenshot: Run Gradle Task - Window

In the Run panel you will find the dependency tree.


Another method:

  • Open the Gradle panel

  • Find the "(root)" postfix and open (app's folder name)

  • Open the Tasks node

  • Open the android node

  • Double click on the "androidDependencies"

In the Run panel you will find the dependency list

Before a normal build switch back to the normal Build Configuration (next to the hammer)


Another useful tool:

How to find what dependency is updated: https://github.com/ben-manes/gradle-versions-plugin

Usage

  • Add this to project level build.gradle

    apply plugin: "com.github.ben-manes.versions"
    
    buildscript {
      repositories {
        jcenter()    
      }
    
      dependencies {
        classpath "com.github.ben-manes:gradle-versions-plugin:0.20.0"
      }
    }
    
  • Sync Now

  • Open the Gradle panel
  • Click the elephant icon
  • Select the root project
  • In the command line paste: dependencyUpdates
  • Click OK
  • Wait a little bit

In the Run panel you will find the result.

1
  • 1
    This creates a flat list of dependencies rather than a tree, so not as useful if you need to figure out which library is using a particular dependency. +1 for the "switch back to the normal build configuration" tip.
    – jk7
    Commented Oct 2, 2018 at 15:49
20

In latest android studio canary version you have dependency analyzer in Gradle tool

enter image description here

2
16

Finally, I figured it out. What I do is to select Project from Project menu (See the image below).

enter image description here

1
  • 17
    This is in no way a dependency tree. Dependency trees are used e.g. to find conflicting versions when library A uses library B version 1 while library C uses library B version 2. As the question stands, this answer is not correct. The question should be updated to request a list of used libraries, or cricket_007's answer should be the accepted one.
    – JHH
    Commented Jun 21, 2018 at 10:20
7

terminal command to see all dependencies list is

 ./gradlew -q dependencies app:dependencies --configuration implementation
7

Click the Gradle tab and go to AppName > Tasks > help > dependencies

Android studio dependencies

6

Simple use is to type text to Terminal or PowerShell:

./gradlew app:dependencies

Advanced usage:

./gradlew app:dependencies --configuration implementation
./gradlew app:dependencies --configuration testImplementation
./gradlew app:dependencies --configuration androidTestImplementation

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