page.title=Using Java 8 Language Features page.keywords="android N", "Java 8", "Jack" @jd:body

In this document

  1. Supported Java 8 Language Features and APIs
  2. Enabling Java 8 Features and the Jack Toolchain

See also

  1. Jack (Java Android Compiler Kit)

Android N introduces support for Java 8 language features that you can use when developing apps that target the Android N. To start using these features, you need to download and set up Android Studio 2.1 (preview) and the Android N Preview SDK, which includes the required Jack toolchain and updated Android Plugin for Gradle.

If you haven't yet installed the Android N Preview SDK, follow the guide to Set Up to Develop for Android N.

This document describes the new language features supported in the Android N Preview, how to properly set up your project to use them, and any known issues you may encounter.

Note: Using the new Java 8 language features is not a requirement for developing apps that target the Android N Preview. After following the set up instructions in the Preview guide, you may use the Java 7 language features already supported by Android 6.0 (API level 23) and below.

Supported Java 8 Language Features and APIs

Android does not currently support all Java 8 language features. However, the following features are now available when developing apps targeting the N Developer Preview:

Additionally, the following Java 8 language feature APIs are now available with the Preview:

Note: The Android N bases its implementation of lambda expressions on anonymous classes. This approach allows them to be backwards compatible and executable on earlier versions of Android. To test lambda expressions on earlier versions, remember to go to your {@code build.gradle} file, and set {@code compileSdkVersion} and {@code targetSdkVersion} to 23 or lower.

Enabling Java 8 Features and the Jack Toolchain

In order to use the new Java 8 language features, you need to also use the new Jack toolchain. This new Android toolchain compiles Java language source into Android-readable dex bytecode, has its own {@code .jack} library format, and provides most tool chain features as part of a single tool: repackaging, shrinking, obfuscation and multidex.

Here we compare the two toolchains used to build Android DEX files:

Configuring Gradle

To enable the Java 8 language features and Jack for your project, enter the following in your module-specific {@code build.gradle} file:

android {
...
  defaultConfig {
  ...
    jackOptions {
      enabled true
    }
  }
  compileOptions {
    sourceCompatibility JavaVersion.VERSION_1_8
    targetCompatibility JavaVersion.VERSION_1_8
  }
}

Known Issues

Instant Run, introduced in Android Studio 2.0 (Beta), does not currently work with Jack and will be disabled while using the new toolchain.

Since Jack does not generate intermediate class files when compiling an app, tools that depend on these files do not currently work with Jack. Some examples of these tools are:

If you find other problems while using Jack, please report bugs.