I will address an implied question: "How do I prevent my questions from being downvoted?"
I reviewed your recent questions and found some common, concrete areas for improvement.
Prefer simple sentences
An excerpt from this question:
One day I started a Basic Layout program with a feature in Android Studio but once I was complete with the setup the "Hello World!" Text and other items from the palette that I dragged-and-dropped didn't show up on the design and in the blueprint. I made the items visible and I even changed the settings and the code of the program but nothing worked.
I see two and a half full lines of text before the first structural punctuation mark. I struggle to parse all of that in a single pass, and I am a native English speaker; many contributors are not. Tools like Grammarly may help identify run-on sentences before you post.
Omit needless words
Per Strunk and White's Elements of Style, "vigorous writing is concise." If you can cut part of sentence and retain the original meaning, then that excess is stealing attention from your issue and making it harder for others to read.
Here is a revised version of the quoted paragraph. There is room for further improvement; my edits were only to omit needles words and break up rambling sentences:
I started a Basic Layout program with a feature in Android Studio. Once I was complete with the setup, the "Hello World!" Text and other items from the palette that I dragged-and-dropped didn't show up on the design and in the blueprint. I made the items visible, and I changed the settings and the code of the program. Nothing worked.
Show your work
I don't know enough about Android to provide a detailed critique of your latest question, but there are aspects of it that make me suspicious. This seems like a problem that would be very common to have. There are 40 results for "emulator won't start [android-studio]." Is it really the case that none of these apply to your situation? Have you attempted any of the solutions in those questions? Have you attempted any solutions? (Have you tried turning it off and on again?)
See this question for a good example of the asker demonstrating their attempts to solve the problem before asking.
On a positive note, I do see significant improvement in your September questions over your early ones. The questions are well-structured, there are fewer useless details, and in general it seems you are making an effort to make it easy to read and answer your questions.