![]() Once those partitions have been wiped then you can tap on the Home button that is at the very bottom of the phone. Swiping to the right will initiate the wipe process. Tap on the check boxes to the left of the Dalvik Cache, System, Data and Cache partitions and then swipe the blue arrow(at the bottom) to the right. So tap on Wipe and then tap on Advanced Wipe so we can specify which partitions we need to wipe. ![]() As long as you have a Nandroid Backup, you can always restore those partitions so there is nothing to fear here. When you boot up into TWRP, you will need to wipe the appropriate partitions for your Galaxy Note 4. Once you have downloaded the custom ROM and the Gapps package onto your Galaxy Note 4, you can boot up into Recovery Mode. Again, most of the time these are nothing more than a generic Google Apps package for a certain version of Android but there can sometimes be differences. So it is always advised to download the Gapps package that is linked in the custom ROM thread that you are using. Sometimes the custom ROM threads will specify a different Gapps package though. Lately I have been downloading my Gapps packages from BasketBuild. Google Apps packages are made for the different versions of Android. Once you have created a Nandroid Backup then you will need to download both the custom ROM(for your specific Galaxy Note 4) as well as a generic Gapps package. You will just have to navigate the (different) menus with the Volume Up and Volume Down buttons instead of using the touch interface that TWRP has. The general idea is the same with CWM though. Since my custom recovery tutorial for the Galaxy Note 4 was for TWRP, this tutorial is for TWRP. The article I have written about this is linked in the tutorial so if you need help with this then you should follow that guide.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |