Repo Link Handwritten-to-Digital-Text
- Windows: Microsoft® Windows® 7/8/10 (64-bit)
- macOS: macOS® 10.10 (Yosemite) or higher, up to macOS 11 (Big Sur)
- Linux: GNOME or KDE desktop
- Minimum: Intel® Core™ i3 2.5 GHz or AMD Ryzen™ 3 2.5 GHz
- Recommended: Intel® Core™ i5 3.0 GHz or higher
- Minimum: 8 GB RAM
- Recommended: 16 GB RAM or higher
- Minimum: 4 GB of available disk space
- Recommended: SSD with 128 GB of available disk space for faster performance
- 1280 x 800 minimum screen resolution
- Minimum: 2 GB of dedicated GPU memory
- Recommended: NVIDIA® GeForce® GTX 660 or AMD Radeon™ RX 480 or higher
- Android Studio requires JDK 8 (Java SE Development Kit 8) or later to be installed.
- An internet connection is required for downloading Android SDK components and updates.
- Download Android Studio from the official website.
- Follow the installation instructions provided for your operating system.
- Android Studio requires JDK 8 (Java SE Development Kit 8) or later. If you haven't already installed JDK, download and install it from the official Oracle website.
- Set up environment variables for Java if required.
- When you first launch Android Studio, it will prompt you to install the Android SDK components. Follow the on-screen instructions to complete the installation.
- Ensure that you have the necessary Android SDK tools, platform tools, and build tools installed.
- Launch Android Studio.
- Click on "Open an existing Android Studio project" and navigate to the directory where your Android project is located.
- Select the project folder and click "Open."
- You can run your app either on an emulator or a physical Android device.
- To set up an emulator, go to "Tools" > "AVD Manager," and create a new virtual device. Follow the wizard to configure the emulator.
- To run the app on a physical device, enable USB debugging on the device and connect it to your computer via USB.
- Once your project is open in Android Studio, you can build and run the app by clicking on the green play button in the toolbar.
- Select the target device (either the emulator or your connected physical device) and click "OK" to install and run the app.
- Android Studio provides powerful debugging tools to help you identify and fix issues in your app.
- Use logcat to view logs and debug messages.
- You can also run unit tests and instrumentation tests to ensure the correctness of your app.