

Figure 1: Reached by Tools : SDK Manager that is also reachable from Files | Settings and navigating as shown to Android SDK In particular, you need to go to the SDK Tools tab and make sure to select and install Android SDK Build-Tools (latest). In particular, you need to install the Android SDK Command Line Tools, which Android Studio’s built-in SDK Manager ( Tools | SDK Manager ) will allow you to do. You can use that to install and manage the Android SDK. Before we get started, I advise you download and install Android Studio ( ). It’s also going on my Linux system because Google claims they worked directly with Canonical to develop this latest Flutter version, so I’m curious to see how it all works. I’m doing this because I don’t run Windows anymore and I want to keep Flutter off of macOS (I have enough going on with my macOS systems). I’ve installed Flutter on my basic AMD system running Pop!_OS 22.04, which is essentially Ubuntu 22.04. But hope springs eternal so I installed Flutter 3 (see ), the latest release. I never considered the tools or the final results all that polished. I’ve been on-and-off of Google Flutter ever since version 1 was released.
