{{+content:partials.site}}

Multi-Device Chrome

Overview

Chrome for a Multi-Device World

Chrome runs on computers, tablets, smartphones, and other devices. Learn how to tailor your sites and apps for a multi-device world.

Learn more

mobile devices running Chrome

Chrome for Android

Add to Homescreen

Add to homescreen lets Android users add an application shortcut icon to their device's homescreen. Applications launched from the shortcut icon run in fullscreen mode, and appear as separate applications in the task switcher.

Learn more

add to homescreen item

Chrome WebView for Android

Getting Started

Get started writing a WebView-based application. A primer on using the Android WebView to host web content.

Learn more

Android device running WebView app

Chrome WebView for Android

WebView Workflow

Add web libraries and tools to your WebView-based application. Update the Android Studio build scripts to add web-specific build steps, and integrate Grunt into the Android build process.

Learn more

Grunt and Yeoman logos

Chrome for iOS

Opening links in Chrome for iOS

In iOS, there are several methods for opening links in Chrome. On iOS, URLs are opened in Safari by default. However, applications can check whether Chrome is installed, and explicitly open links in Chrome if desired.

Learn more

Chrome for Android

Android Intents with Chrome

Using an Android Intent URI lets you launch Android apps directly from a web page or web application.

Learn more

Further Resources

Debug with DevTools

Use Chrome DevTools to debug apps running in your Android devices.

Learn more

Mobile Emulation

Use the Chrome DevTools Mobile Emulation features to test how your web app will work on different devices.

Learn more

{{/partials.site}}