


You can download Android Studio 3.5 for Windows, Mac, and Linux now directly from /studio.

Instead, it uses runtime instrumentation to redefine classes on the fly. The new system no longer modifies an APK during your build. The team also took a look at app deployment flow to a device, replacing Instant Run with Apply Changes. For the Android Emulator, the team decreased the CPU and memory impact. The team ultimately fixed over 600 bugs, 50 memory leaks, and 20 IDE hangs, and improved XML & Kotlin typing latency. To improve system health, Google created a new set of infrastructure and internal dashboards to better detect performance problems. For eight months, the team focused “on making the fundamental features and flows of Android Studio & Emulator rock-solid.” All the improvements were either to system health, feature polish, or bug fixes. Google today launched Android Studio 3.5, the latest version of its integrated development environment (IDE), with a specific focus on “product quality.” This release is the last one under Project Marble, a fancy name for an initiative Google announced late last year to improve Android Studio. Hear from executives from Service Now, Credit Karma, Stitch Fix, Appian, and more.

Register now for your free virtual pass to the Low-Code/No-Code Summit this November 9.
