How do I detect the heap size usage of an android application

here's what I use:

public static void logHeap() {
        Double allocated = new Double(Debug.getNativeHeapAllocatedSize())/new Double((1048576));
        Double available = new Double(Debug.getNativeHeapSize())/1048576.0;
        Double free = new Double(Debug.getNativeHeapFreeSize())/1048576.0;
        DecimalFormat df = new DecimalFormat();
        df.setMaximumFractionDigits(2);
        df.setMinimumFractionDigits(2);

        Log.d("tag", "debug. =================================");
        Log.d("tag", "debug.heap native: allocated " + df.format(allocated) + "MB of " + df.format(available) + "MB (" + df.format(free) + "MB free)");
        Log.d("tag", "debug.memory: allocated: " + df.format(new Double(Runtime.getRuntime().totalMemory()/1048576)) + "MB of " + df.format(new Double(Runtime.getRuntime().maxMemory()/1048576))+ "MB (" + df.format(new Double(Runtime.getRuntime().freeMemory()/1048576)) +"MB free)");
    }

Yes. Please note that also there are heap view in DDMS and you can use MAT Eclipse which is more than helpful especially in memory leaks tracking BUT and this is a huge but the numbers you see are reference only memory that is managed by VM. There are a lot of subsystems in android that are implemented underneath VM - native. The simplest example Bitmap class. You will not see the whole memory allocated to a Bitmap in DDMS and garbage collector is not very good/fast at recovering this memory. so be careful.