page.title=Web Apps Overview @jd:body
There are essentially two ways to deliver an application on Android: as a client-side application (developed using the Android SDK and installed on user devices as an {@code .apk}) or as a web application (developed using web standards and accessed through a web browser—there's nothing to install on user devices).
The approach you choose for your application could depend on several factors, but Android makes the decision to develop a web application easier by providing:
Thus, your decision to develop a web application for Android can exclude consideration for screen support, because it's already easy to make your web pages look good on all types of screens powered by Android.
Another great feature of Android is that you don't have to build your application purely on the client or purely on the web. You can mix the two together by developing a client-side Android application that embeds some web pages (using a {@link android.webkit.WebView} in your Android application layout). Figure 1 visualizes how you can provide access to your web pages from either a web browser or your Android application. However, you shouldn't develop an Android application simply as a means to launch your web site. Rather, the web pages you embed in your Android application should be designed especially for that environment. You can even define an interface between your Android application and your web pages that allows JavaScript in the web pages to call upon APIs in your Android application—providing Android APIs to your web-based application.
Since Android 1.0, {@link android.webkit.WebView} has been available for Android applications to embed web content in their layout and bind JavaScript to Android APIs. After Android added support for more screen densities (adding support for high and low-density screens), Android 2.0 added features to the WebKit framework to allow web pages to specify viewport properties and query the screen density in order to modify styles and image assets, as mentioned above. Because these features are a part of Android's WebKit framework, both the Android Browser (the default web browser provided with the platform) and {@link android.webkit.WebView} support the same viewport and screen density features.
To develop a web application for Android-powered devices, you should read the following documents: