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Diffstat (limited to 'docs/html/guide/practices/design/responsiveness.jd')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/html/guide/practices/design/responsiveness.jd | 13 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 13 deletions
diff --git a/docs/html/guide/practices/design/responsiveness.jd b/docs/html/guide/practices/design/responsiveness.jd index 2c7633d..b811d1b 100644 --- a/docs/html/guide/practices/design/responsiveness.jd +++ b/docs/html/guide/practices/design/responsiveness.jd @@ -19,19 +19,6 @@ page.title=Designing for Responsiveness <p><strong>Figure 1.</strong> An ANR dialog displayed to the user.</p> </div> -<p>It's possible to write code that wins every performance test in the world, but still sends users -in a fiery rage when they try to use the application. These are the applications that aren't -<em>responsive</em> enough — the ones that feel -sluggish, hang or freeze for significant periods, or take too long to process -input. </p> - -<p>In Android, the system guards against applications that are insufficiently responsive for a -period of time by displaying a dialog to the user, called the Application Not Responding (ANR) -dialog. The user can choose to let the application continue, but the user won't appreciate having to -act on this dialog every time he or she uses your application. So it's important to design -responsiveness into your application, so that the system never has cause to display an ANR to the -user. </p> - <p>It's possible to write code that wins every performance test in the world, but still sends users in a fiery rage when they try to use the application. These are the applications that aren't <em>responsive</em> enough — the |