The Android Editing Screen — A Design Benchmark
The Editing screen is one of the most visible surfaces inside an Android app, and how it's designed often defines a user's first impression of the whole product. This page collects Editing screens from the Page Flows Android library, giving you dozens of real examples to compare at once.
Material Design and Custom Editing Approaches
Each example comes from a live Google Play app and reflects current Android design realities: Material Design 3 patterns, themed colors, system-bar handling, and device-specific considerations. Whether you're working on a Pixel-first design or a more custom visual system, you can find relevant references here.
Start Your Editing Design with Real References
Studying Editing screens this way is especially valuable when you're early in a project. Instead of designing in isolation, you start with a strong visual library of what top Android apps actually ship — grounded in production, not in Dribbble concepts.
Frequently Asked Questions
What Editing Android examples are included?
The library captures Editing screens from many leading Android apps, spanning categories like fintech, social, productivity, and consumer services.
Do examples follow Material Design or custom design systems?
Both. You'll find strict Material implementations alongside custom Android design languages from brands like Instagram, TikTok, or Snapchat — giving you a full range of references.
Can I see Editing screens from a specific app category?
Yes. You can filter by category to narrow Editing examples to apps in your industry, making benchmarking faster and more relevant.
How are the Android Editing screens updated?
New Editing captures are added whenever we record new Android flows or when leading apps ship redesigns, so the library reflects current Google Play design.