Another showstopper to full migration is lack of NDK support with
Studio, specifically NDK Debugging.  It is not clear to me what the
migration pattern will be for developers who require NDK debugging. 


On 7/2/14, 8:16 AM, Mark Murphy wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 2, 2014, at 11:18, Kevin Schultz wrote:
>> I have never met anyone that has used 
>> IntelliJ extensively but still prefers Eclipse
> I do not know how you define "extensively", but I definitely have met
> people who do not like IntelliJ. There are developers who use NetBeans
> too, or no IDE at all.
>
>> #2) Those that think Android Studio + Gradle are not yet stable enough. I 
>> think this is the bulk of those that haven't yet switched, and I think
>> this 
>> is largely a result of the messaging from the tools team. 
> #3) People who have limited English literacy. Android Studio knowledge
> is thin on the ground even in English, compared with Eclipse.
>
> #4) People who have limited Java experience (or, in many cases, limited
> programming experience). Again, there is a lot more written about
> Android development with Eclipse than there is with Android Studio.
>
> Etc.
>

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