package android.support.v4.app does not exist ; in Android studio 0.8
I've recently updated the android studio IDE to 0.8 to work with the new android L SDK. To start I imported a finished android project that receives no errors in the older version of android studio. In version 0.8 i lines such as
import android.support.v4.app.Fragment;
get: Support cannot be resolved causing the rest of the code to have errors. The logcat returns 101 instances of
Error:(8, 30) error: package android.support.v4.app does not exist
1 for each time I call the support library in an import statement.
I've tried
- reinstalling the IDE
- deleting contents of idea folder
- re installing all the SDK's - including the support libraries
- syncing the gradle
- copying the support library into the libs folder manually
- rebuilding the project
- as well as creating a new project to test the library
not entirely sure what's left to do.
Solution 1:
Ok, so I had the same problem and found a solution in a udacity forum:
In Android Studio:
- Right click on your projects "app" folder and click on -> module settings
- Click on the "dependencies" tab
- Click on the + sign to add a new dependency and select "Library Dependency"
- Look for the library you need and add it
Solution 2:
@boernard 's answer solves this from the Android Studio IDE, but if you want to understand what's happening under the covers, it's a simple gradle build file update:
You can edit the build.gradle file from within the IDE (left pane: Gradle Scripts -> build.gradle (Module: app)
) or use the raw path (<proj_dir>/app/build.gradle
)
and add/update the following dependency section:
dependencies {
//
// IDE setting pulls in the specific version of v4 support you have installed:
//
//compile 'com.android.support:support-v4:21.0.3'
//
// generic directive pulls in any available version of v4 support:
//
compile 'com.android.support:support-v4:+'
}
Using the above generic compile directive, allows you to ship your code to anyone, provided they have some level of the Android Support Libraries v4
installed.
Solution 3:
None of the above solutions worked for me. What finally worked was:
Instead of
import android.support.v4.content.FileProvider;
Use this
import androidx.core.content.FileProvider;
This path is updated as of AndroidX (the repackaged Android Support Library).
Solution 4:
[for some reasons this answer is related to Eclipse, NOT Android Studio!]
Have you tried setting the support libraries to your class path? This link from the Android Developer's website has some info on how to do that.
Try following these steps from the website:
Create a library project based on the support library code:
- Make sure you have downloaded the Android Support Library using the SDK Manager.
-
Create a library project and ensure the required JAR files are included in the project's build path:
- Select File > Import.
- Select Existing Android Code Into Workspace and click Next.
- Browse to the SDK installation directory and then to the Support Library folder. For example, if you are adding the appcompat project, browse to /extras/android/support/v7/appcompat/.
- Click Finish to import the project. For the v7 appcompat project, you should now see a new project titled android-support-v7-appcompat.
- In the new library project, expand the libs/ folder, right-click each .jar file and select Build Path > Add to Build Path. For example, when creating the the v7 appcompat project, add both the android-support-v4.jar and android-support-v7-appcompat.jar files to the build path.
- Right-click the library project folder and select Build Path > Configure Build Path.
- In the Order and Export tab, check the .jar files you just added to the build path, so they are available to projects that depend on this library project. For example, the appcompat project requires you to export both the android-support-v4.jar and android-support-v7-appcompat.jar files.
- Uncheck Android Dependencies.
- Click OK to complete the changes.
-
You now have a library project for your selected Support Library that you can use with one or more application projects.
- Add the library to your application project:
- In the Project Explorer, right-click your project and select Properties.
- In the category panel on the left side of the dialog, select Android.
- In the Library pane, click the Add button.
- Select the library project and click OK. For example, the appcompat project should be listed as android-support-v7-appcompat.
- In the properties window, click OK.
Solution 5:
Delete
/.idea/libraries
Then sync gradle to build project.