Merge "docs: Android Design typo and grammar fixes" into ics-mr1
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@@ -153,12 +153,12 @@ recently used app at the bottom.</p>
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</div>
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</div>
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<h2>UI Bars</h2>
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<h2>System Bars</h2>
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<p>The UI bars are screen areas dedicated to the display of notifications, communication of device
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status, and device navigation. Typically the UI bars are displayed concurrently with your app. Apps
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that display immersive content, such as movies or images, can temporarily hide the UI bars to allow
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the user to enjoy full screen content without distraction.</p>
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<p>The system bars are screen areas dedicated to the display of notifications, communication of device
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status, and device navigation. Typically the system bars are displayed concurrently with your app.
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Apps that display immersive content, such as movies or images, can temporarily hide the system bars
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to allow the user to enjoy full screen content without distraction.</p>
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<img src="../static/content/ui_overview_system_ui.png">
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@@ -177,8 +177,9 @@ the user to enjoy full screen content without distraction.</p>
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Recents, and also displays a menu for apps written for Android 2.3 or earlier.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<h4>System Bar</h4>
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<p>Combines the status and navigation bars for display on tablet form factors.</p>
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<h4>Combined Bar</h4>
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<p>On tablet form factors the status and navigation bars are combined into a single bar at the
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bottom of the screen.</p>
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</li>
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</ol>
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@@ -159,9 +159,9 @@ layouts that are visually engaging and appropriate for the data type and screen
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<img src="../static/content/app_structure_market.png">
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<div class="figure-caption">
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Market's start screen primarily allows navigation into the stores for Apps, Music, Books, and
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Games. It is also enriched with tailored recommendations and promotions that surface content
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of interest to the user. Search is readily available from the action bar.
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Market's start screen primarily allows navigation into the stores for Apps, Music, Books,
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Movies and Games. It is also enriched with tailored recommendations and promotions that
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surface content of interest to the user. Search is readily available from the action bar.
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</div>
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</div>
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@@ -131,7 +131,7 @@ return the user to the Home screen, or even to a different application.</p>
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<p>The Back key also supports a few behaviors not directly tied to screen-to-screen navigation:</p>
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<ul>
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<li>Back dismisses floating windows (dialogs, popups)</li>
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<li>Back dismisses contextual action bars, and remove highlight from selected items</li>
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<li>Back dismisses contextual action bars, and removes the highlight from the selected items</li>
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<li>Back hides the onscreen keyboard (IME)</li>
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</ul>
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<h2>Navigation Within Your App</h2>
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@@ -189,18 +189,19 @@ screen widget can bypass the Inbox screen, taking the user directly to a convers
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<h4>App-to-app navigation</h4>
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<p>When navigating deep into your app's hierarchy directly from another app via an intent, Back will
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return to the referring app.</p>
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<p>The Up button is handled is follows:
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<p>The Up button is handled as follows:
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- If the destination screen is typically reached from one particular screen within your app, Up
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should navigate to that screen.
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- Otherwise, Up should navigate to the topmost ("Home") screen of your app.</p>
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<p>For example, after choosing to share a book being view in Market, the user navigates directly to the
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Gmail's compose screen. From there, Up returns to the Inbox (which happens to be both the typical
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referrer to compose, as well as the topmost screen of the app), while Back returns to Market.</p>
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<p>For example, after choosing to share a book being viewed in Market, the user navigates directly to
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Gmail's compose screen. From there, Up returns to the Inbox (which happens to be both the
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typical referrer to compose, as well as the topmost screen of the app), while Back returns to
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Market.</p>
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<img src="../static/content/navigation_from_outside_up.png">
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<h4>System-to-app navigation</h4>
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<p>If the your app was reached via the system mechanisms of notifications or home screen widgets, Up
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<p>If your app was reached via the system mechanisms of notifications or home screen widgets, Up
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behaves as described for app-to-app navigation, above.</p>
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<p>For the Back key, you should make navigation more predictably by inserting into the task's back
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stack the complete upward navigation path to the app's topmost screen. This way, a user who has
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@@ -200,7 +200,7 @@ stacked (see <em>Stacked notifications</em> below) and references multiple items
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the user is taken to a hierarchy level below your app's top-level, insert navigation into your app's
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back stack to allow them to navigate to your app's top level using the system back key. For more
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information, see the chapter on <em>System-to-app navigation</em> in the
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<a href="../patterns/notifications.html">Navigation</a> design pattern.</p>
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<a href="../patterns/navigation.html">Navigation</a> design pattern.</p>
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<h4>Timestamps for time sensitive events</h4>
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<p>By default, standard Android notifications include a timestamp in the upper right corner. Consider
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whether the timestamp is valuable in the context of your notification. If the timestamp is not
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