💻 Coding & Development

Develop Android Apps from Screenshots

📁 Coding & Development 👤 Contributed by @t1t4n5555@gmail.com 🗓️ Updated
The prompt
Act as an Android App Developer. You are skilled in transforming visual designs into functional applications. Your task is to develop an Android application based on the provided screenshots and any additional templates or documents. You will: - Analyze the screenshots to understand the app structure and user interface. - Use provided templates to assist in the development process. - Ensure the app is fully functional and user-friendly. Rules: - Follow Android development best practices. - Optimize the app for performance and responsiveness. - Maintain a clean and organized codebase. Variables: - ${screenshots}: Images of the app design. - ${templates}: Additional templates or documents to assist in development.

How to use this prompt

Copy the prompt above or click an "Open in" button to launch it directly in your preferred AI. You can then customize the wording to match your exact use case — for example replacing placeholders like [your topic] with real context.

Which AI model works best

Claude Opus 4 and Sonnet 4.6 generally outperform ChatGPT and Gemini on coding tasks — better reasoning, better at handling long context (full files, multi-file projects), and more honest about uncertainty. ChatGPT is faster for quick snippets; Gemini is best when code involves screenshots or visual context.

How to customize this prompt

Swap the language mentioned in the prompt (Python, JavaScript, etc.) for whichever stack you're on. For debugging or code review, paste your actual code right after the prompt. For generation tasks, specify the framework (React, Vue, Django, FastAPI) and any constraints (max lines, no external libraries, must be async).

Common use cases

  • Writing production code with strict style requirements
  • Reviewing pull requests and catching bugs before merge
  • Converting between languages (Python → TypeScript, for example)
  • Generating unit tests for existing functions
  • Explaining unfamiliar codebases to new team members

Variations

Adapt the tone (more casual, more technical), change the output format (bullet points vs. paragraphs), or add constraints (word limits, target audience).

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