Recently, I've been seeing a lot of questions in android about a range of issues, but all with (or likely with) the shared root cause of outdated dependencies.
Here's a recent one: Error: 'Please fix the version conflict either by updating the version....'
Here's another: i want to add firebase with my app and i got teh following errors on build
And another: Caused by: java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: Failed resolution of: Lcom/google/android/gms/common/util/Function;
And another: Why does bthıs error happen when ı try to add fırebase to my androıd projcet
In the example I gave, OP has quite a few outdated dependencies (the probable cause of the error here is the implementation of firebase-core
11.8.0, while other Firebase dependencies are at 16.0.4+, although it could also be in part due to the google-services
classpath being a whole major version behind the latest). Their issue would almost definitely be solved by simply updating their dependencies, which is easy enough:
Click a yellow-highlighted dependency, hit Alt+Enter, and select the suggested version upgrade.
However, it seems like a lot of people just don't realize the yellow highlights mean outdated or badly implemented dependencies. I've either been commenting on or answering these questions with personalized suggestions, but I know it would be better to have a canonical duplicate target. I was considering making my own, but I don't want to do that if we already have a Q&A that definitively states how to update your Gradle dependencies.
Do we have one we could link to?