page.title=Android NDK page.tags="ndk, native, c, c++", meta.tags="ndk, native, c++" fullpage=true section.landing=true header.hide=1 footer.hide=1 @jd:body <section class="dac-expand dac-hero dac-dark dac-invert" style="background-repeat:no-repeat;"> <div class="wrap"> <div class="cols dac-hero-content" style="margin-top:32px"> <div class="col-7of16 cdol-push-1of16"> <h1 class="dac-hero-title">Android NDK</h1> <p class="dac-hero-description"> The Android NDK is a toolset that lets you implement parts of your app using native-code languages such as C and C++. For certain types of apps, this can help you reuse existing code libraries written in those languages. </p> <a class="dac-hero-cta" href="/ndk/guides/index.html"> <span class="dac-sprite dac-auto-chevron"></span> Get Started </a><br> </div> <div class="col-8of16 col-push-1of16" style="margin-top:48px"> <span style="color:#00e5ff;font-family:'Roboto Mono', monospace;font-weight:400">public class <span style="color:#eee">MyActivity</span> extends Activity {<br> <span style="color:#ccc"> /**<br> * Native method implemented in C/C++<br> */</span><br> public <span style="color:#1DE9B6;font-weight:700">native</span> void <span style="color:#eee">computeFoo()</span>;<br> }</span> </div> </div> </div> </section> <div class="wrap dac-offset-parent"> <a class="dac-fab dac-scroll-button" data-scroll-button href="#latest"> <i class="dac-sprite dac-arrow-down-gray"></i> </a> </div> <section class="dac-section dac-gray dac-small" id="latest"><div class="wrap"> <h2 class="norule">Latest</h2> <div class="resource-widget resource-flow-layout col-16" data-query="type:blog+tag:ndk" data-cardSizes="6x6" data-maxResults="9" data-items-per-page="6" data-initial-results="3"></div> </div></section>