Status Update
Comments
we...@gmail.com <we...@gmail.com> #2
Thank you for your patience while our engineering team worked to resolve this issue. A fix for this issue is now available in:
- Android Studio Ladybug Feature Drop | 2024.2.2 Canary 3
- Android Gradle Plugin 8.8.0-alpha03
We encourage you to try the latest update.
If you notice further issues or have questions, please file a new bug report.
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jl...@google.com <jl...@google.com>
jl...@google.com <jl...@google.com> #3
Hi
One possibility is showing recomposition counts as:
- "1 (90)" where 1 is the number of recompositions of the current node, and 90 is the max number of recompositions by any of its children.
- "1" is the number of recompositions of the current node, and since no children have recomposed we don't show the parenthesis.
Another possibility: a 3rd column ?
jl...@google.com <jl...@google.com> #4
Made a 3rd column (this was the easiest approach).
It will be available in canary.
an...@google.com <an...@google.com> #5
Thank you for your patience while our engineering team worked to resolve this issue. A fix for this issue is now available in:
- Android Studio Koala Feature Drop | 2024.1.2 Canary 4
- Android Gradle Plugin 8.6.0-alpha04
We encourage you to try the latest update.
If you notice further issues or have questions, please file a new bug report.
Thank you for taking the time to submit feedback — we really appreciate it!
an...@google.com <an...@google.com> #6
The fixes for this issue are now also available in:
- Android Studio Ladybug Feature Drop | 2024.2.2 Canary 6
- Android Gradle Plugin 8.8.0-alpha06
We encourage you to try the latest update.
If you notice further issues or have questions, please file a new bug report.
Description
This user's comment sums it up pretty nicely:https://twitter.com/webnakama/status/1643254547442462721
Essentially:
Probably we should have two counts displayed: (1) the number of times the particular widget recomposed (2) the number of recompositions which occurred within the children of a widget. This will allow users to notice and expand the parent nodes when they see large numbers.