"Steve" <Gronicus@SGA.Ninja> writes: > I have a working .py program
(Do you mean a Python program? Or something different?) > that I want to get into my Android Moto G phone. To my knowledge, an Android app must be implemented, at some level, in Java and specifically linked to Android Java libraries. That's a hard limitation of the Android platform. That implies that any Python program will need to be written at least with partial awareness that it is not going to run in a native Python VM, but instead get compiled to somehow run in a Java Android environment. > A bit more than a year ago, I went through the Kivy set up and > actually had the Good Morning World program in my phone but at that > time I did not seem to be able to do it again. Yes, Kivy is one way to have a Python program that gets converted to an Android native app. > Is there an easier way to achieve my task? Easier than Kivy? Probably not. You might want to investigate the BeeWare suite as an alternative <URL:https://pybee.org/>. Bonus: a single Python program can be compiled to an app for multiple different platforms. -- \ “Compulsory unification of opinion achieves only the unanimity | `\ of the graveyard.” —Justice Roberts in 319 U.S. 624 (1943) | _o__) | Ben Finney -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list