194

In my Android Studio project there are two build configuration with some buildConfigField:

    buildTypes {
    def SERVER_URL = "SERVER_URL"
    def APP_VERSION = "APP_VERSION"

    debug {
        buildConfigField "String", SERVER_URL, "http://dev.myserver.com"
        buildConfigField "String", APP_VERSION, "0.0.1"
    }

    release {
        buildConfigField "String", SERVER_URL, "https://myserver.com"
        buildConfigField "String", APP_VERSION, "0.0.1"

        minifyEnabled false
        proguardFiles getDefaultProguardFile('proguard-android.txt'), 'proguard-rules.pro'
    }
}

I am getting and error as follows:

/path/to/generated/BuildConfig.java
    Error:(14, 47) error: ';' expected
    Error:(15, 47) error: ';' expected

the generated BuildConfig.java is as follows:

public final class BuildConfig {
    public static final boolean DEBUG = Boolean.parseBoolean("true");
    public static final String APPLICATION_ID = "com.mycuteoffice.mcoapp";
    public static final String BUILD_TYPE = "debug";
    public static final String FLAVOR = "";
    public static final int VERSION_CODE = 1;
    public static final String VERSION_NAME = "1.0";
    // Fields from build type: debug
    public static final String APP_VERSION = 0.0.1;
    public static final String SERVER_URL = http://dev.mycuteoffice.com;
}

I think the APP_VERSION and SERVER_URL are not getting generated properly as being String type they do not have quotes.

I am not sure why it is being generated in such a way. Please let me know how can I resolve this issues.

Raymond Chenon
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Abdullah
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    Just add single quotes around the value with double quotes: `buildConfigField "String", APP_VERSION, ' "0.0.1" '` (without spaces of course) – Pierre Sep 18 '19 at 07:50
  • https://stackoverflow.com/a/65624195/3970630 can be define on your gradle files :) – Ric17101 Mar 22 '21 at 02:42

10 Answers10

321

String type build config fields should be declared like this:

buildConfigField "String", "SERVER_URL", "\"http://dev.myserver.com\""

the field name in quotes, the field value in escaped quotes additionally.

Vladyslav Matviienko
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    The Question intended to use 'SERVER_URL' as a variable. Putting "SERVER_URL" in quotes makes the value a String literal. @madhead's answer is therefore more correct (and prettier). – Will Vanderhoef Jul 21 '16 at 19:48
  • My bad. I used Simas's answer as a base and just copied it. My point was not about third field (variable name), but about using double quotes for escaping variable value: if the variable itself does not have double quotes, you can simply single outer quotes to get rid of backslashes. I've edited both answers. – madhead Jul 22 '16 at 07:52
  • @VladMatvienko definitely works, I am actually using it the way I describe. `def FIELD_NAME = "SERVER_URL"` and `buildConfigField "boolean", FIELD_NAME, "false"` work just fine together. If you're missing the definition of SERVER_URL you'll crash, that's probably what you're doing wrong. – Will Vanderhoef Aug 01 '16 at 21:55
  • Use buildConfigField "String", "FILE_NAME", "\"{$fileName}\"" for variable names. – Adolf Dsilva Feb 09 '18 at 10:23
  • @Audi, thanks, but that is exactly what my answer states (for 3 years already) – Vladyslav Matviienko Feb 09 '18 at 12:35
  • If anything i declared like this, its shown when i decompile the apk... How will protect those kind of the secure values? – Saikumar May 22 '18 at 05:38
  • @Kums that does not relate to this question. If you have another question then ask a new question. – Vladyslav Matviienko May 22 '18 at 05:39
114

Why everybody is so mad about escaping double quotes? Looks ugly! This is Groovy, guys, you can just mix single and double quotes:

buildConfigField "String", 'SERVER_URL', '"http://dev.myserver.com"'
buildConfigField "String", 'APP_VERSION', '"0.0.1"'
madhead
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37

If by "resolving the issues" you mean not having to double quote literals, I haven't come across anything as it seems to be working as designed.

I've been experimenting with moving the literals into "gradle.properties" as a workaround, turning potentially multiple ugly lines into one ugly line.

Like so:

buildTypes {
def SERVER_URL = "SERVER_URL"
def APP_VERSION = "APP_VERSION"

def CONFIG = { k -> "\"${project.properties.get(k)}\"" }

debug {
    buildConfigField "String", SERVER_URL, CONFIG("debug.server.url")
    buildConfigField "String", APP_VERSION, CONFIG("version")
}

release {
    buildConfigField "String", SERVER_URL, CONFIG("release.server.url")
    buildConfigField "String", APP_VERSION, CONFIG("version")

    minifyEnabled false
    proguardFiles getDefaultProguardFile('proguard-android.txt'), 'proguard-rules.pro'
}
}

gradle.properties

version=0.1.1
...
debug.server.url=http://dev.myserver.com
...
release.server.url=http://myserver.com
...

Further thoughts:


def CONFIG = { b,k -> "\"${project.properties.get(b+'.'+k)}\"" }
def CONFIG_DEBUG = { k -> CONFIG('debug',k) }
def CONFIG_RELEASE = { k -> CONFIG('release',k) }

def CONFIG = { b,k -> "\"${project.properties.get(b+'.'+k)}\"" }
def CONFIG_INT = { b,k -> "${project.properties.get(b+'.'+k)}" }
...
N J
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Primexx
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  • i have a build config field and i want to access that variable in myn def in same gradle .. i am new to gradle plz helpp!! – Adeel Turk Mar 08 '18 at 14:35
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    Thanks for CONFIG script! In team we slightly improved it to throw exception if var doesn't exists: `CONFIG = { k -> if (project.properties.containsKey(k)) "\"${project.properties.get(k)}\"" else throw new RuntimeException("No such variable: " + k) }` – demaksee Aug 28 '18 at 15:55
13

Use

 buildConfigField "String", "FILE_NAME", "\"{$fileName}\"" 

for variable. Reference from here

Adolf Dsilva
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10

Escape your string quotes:

buildConfigField "String", 'SERVER_URL', "\"http://dev.myserver.com\""
buildConfigField "String", 'APP_VERSION', "\"0.0.1\""
madhead
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Simas
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9

I was confused as well. But there is a sense - "String" defines the field's type, whereas the field value isn't get quoted automatically in order to allow us to use expressions here:

buildConfigField "String", "TEST", "new Integer(10).toString()"

Otherwise, it wouldn't be possible.

geiger
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    It's possible if you use string interpolation, e.g: buildConfigField "String", "TEST", "\"${10}\"" This way you can use methods or variables in your build file as well. – Szörényi Ádám Oct 17 '19 at 14:32
2

We should scape our Gradle constant defined in our Gradle properties or somewhere else:

buildConfigField "String", "CONSTANT_NAME", "\"${CONSTANT_VALUE}\""

Where CONSTANT_VALUE is defined in our gradle.properties or somewhere else:

CONSTANT_VALUE=string_goes_here

It applies the same way when getting constants gotten from our environment:

buildConfigField "String", "CONSTANT_NAME", "\"${System.getenv('PATH')}\""

The most voted solution works in case we just need to add a String manually, this solution just goes a step further.

Dharman
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cesards
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0

in app build.gradle

def buildTimeAndVersion = releaseTime() + "-" + getSvnVersion()    
buildTypes {
debug {
    signingConfig signingConfigs.config
    buildConfigField "String", 'BIULD_TIME', "\"${buildTimeAndVersion}\""
    proguardFiles getDefaultProguardFile('proguard-android.txt'), 'proguard-rules.pro'
    }
}
...
}

static def releaseTime() {
return new Date().format("yyyyMMdd", TimeZone.getDefault())
}

def getSvnVersion() {
def pro = ("svnversion -c " + getBuildDir().parent).execute()
pro.waitFor()
def version = pro.in.text
Pattern p = Pattern.compile("(\\d+\\:)?(\\d+)\\D?")
Matcher m = p.matcher(version)
if (m.find()) {
version = m.group(m.groupCount())
}
try {
return version
} catch (e) {
println e.getMessage()
}
return 0
}

then in BuildConfig

public final class BuildConfig {  
public static final boolean DEBUG = Boolean.parseBoolean("true");   
public static final String APPLICATION_ID = "xxx.xxxxxxxx.xxx";   
public static final String BUILD_TYPE = "debug";  
public static final String FLAVOR = "";  
public static final int VERSION_CODE = 53;  
public static final String VERSION_NAME = "5.4.4";  
// Fields from build type: debug  
public static final String BIULD_TIME = "20181030-2595";  
}
yitai wei
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    Code only answers are really discouraged. To help future readers, please explain what you are doing too! – itsmysterybox Oct 31 '18 at 03:52
  • and next time reference to your previous answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/53056170/1084764 instead of just copy pasting – Raykud Mar 20 '20 at 18:47
0

I need the variable in buildConfigField and manifestPaceholder. To solve this I do

def appAuthScheme= "appauth.myscheme"
buildConfigField 'String', 'APP_AUTH_SCHEME',"\"$appAuthScheme\""

manifestPlaceholders = [lowerApplicationId : applicationId.toLowerCase(),
                        appAuthRedirectScheme : appAuthScheme]

BuildConfig.APP_AUTH_SCHEME is a String !

Gugelhupf
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-1

Only \"my stuff\" worked for me. And I have all sorts of weird characters in my stuff.

Sevastyan Savanyuk
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