page.title=<uses-sdk> @jd:body
<uses-sdk android:minSdkVersion="integer" android:maxSdkVersion="integer" android:targetSdkVersion="integer" />
<manifest>
Despite its name, this element is used to specify the API Level, not the version number of the SDK (software development kit). The API Level is always a single integer; the SDK version may be split into major and minor components (such as 1.5). You cannot derive the API Level from the SDK version number (for example, it is not the same as the major version or the sum of the major and minor versions).
For more information, read about Android API Levels and Versioning Your Applications.
Caution:
If you do not declare this attribute, then a value of "1" is assumed, which
indicates that your application is compatible with all versions of Android. If your
application is not compatible with all versions (for instance, it uses APIs
introduced in API Level 3) and you have not declared the proper minSdkVersion
,
then when installed on a system with an API Level less than 3, the application will crash
during runtime when attempting to access the unavailable APIs. For this reason,
be certain to declare the appropriate API Level
in the minSdkVersion
attribute.
Introduced in: API Level 4
With this attribute set, the application says that it is able to run on older versions (down to {@code minSdkVersion}), but was explicitly tested to work with the version specified here. Specifying this target version allows the platform to disable compatibility settings that are not required for the target version (which may otherwise be turned on in order to maintain forward-compatibility) or enable newer features that are not available to older applications. This does not mean that you can program different features for different versions of the platform—it simply informs the platform that you have tested against the target version and the platform should not perform any extra work to maintain forward-compatibility with the target version.
Introduced in: API Level 4