754270601a
AIDL generates unnecessary "import" statements. These cause warnings within Eclipse when the default Eclipse warnings settings are used. This is inconvenient since the generated .java files are not editable. Some pesky organisations have a zero-warnings policy too, so there's no option but to fiddle with the Eclipse settings. This patch ensures that all usages of class names within the generated code are fully-qualified. In practice, they were nearly all fully-qualified already. And this patch also removes the generation of the import statements, since they are redundant if we're using fully-qualified names everywhere. This should fix issue 43 in the Google Code Android issues tracker. http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=43 I would appreciate if somebody who knows exactly how 'aidl' works could confirm that there's no reason 'import' statements would have been necessary except for the bits I've fixed. (I think unqualified names were used much more frequently in early versions of aidl, which might explain why import statements are generated so eagerly).