Launching today
Android CLI
Build high quality Android apps 3x faster using any agent
68 followers
Build high quality Android apps 3x faster using any agent
68 followers
Android CLI is a new agent-first toolkit that lets developers build Android apps directly from the terminal—faster and with less guesswork. It combines CLI commands, modular “skills,” and a live knowledge base to guide AI agents with best practices, enabling rapid setup, project creation, testing, and deployment while reducing token usage and speeding workflows up to 3x.



Android CLI brings agentic Android development to the terminal helping devs build apps faster with less guesswork. It solves slow setup, outdated workflows, and fragmented tooling by giving agents a structured interface.
What makes it different?
Built for AI agents + modern workflows
Reduces token usage & speeds tasks ~3x
Grounded with official Android skills + knowledge base
Key features:
SDK + environment management
Instant project creation from templates
Emulator + deployment via CLI
Auto-updating + best-practice guidance
Who it’s for: Android devs, AI-assisted coders, and teams building faster with agents
Use cases: Rapid prototyping, CI automation, agent-driven dev workflows.
If you're building Android apps with AI, this is worth a look!
P.S. I hunt the latest and greatest launches in tech, SaaS and AI, follow to be notified → @rohanrecommends
@rohanrecommends When an agent hits an ambiguous UI spec, how does it decide between Material 3 guidelines vs custom theming?
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Congrats on the launch! This is a really interesting approach to agent-assisted development. I'm curious about the "live knowledge base" you mention—how does it stay updated with the latest Android best practices and API changes? Does it require manual updates from your team, or have you found a way to make it self-updating?
been waiting for something like this — android dev setup has always been the worst part. the idea of giving agents a structured interface with built-in best practices is really smart, way better than just letting them guess at gradle configs