Post by @stani • Hey
Is there any experience difference between building mobile apps natively vs. React Native? Whats the recent fight on this, I personally feel that there isn
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I have zero idea on app development but I love each and every platform being built as a dex social app. On the User side of things, I don't think there's really any much difference to us
there's many limitations when building react native but using kotlin /java/ lets you flex your muscles how ever you want in case of cross platform or react nv you can't do that but building with react nv gives you less stress when shipping on cloud
Remember @ricburton.lens highlighting React as unacceptable sw supply-chain risk for wallets. So not specifically relevant for Lens mobile clients unless they start doing funky things to facilitate fee Collect on iOS
I want to create my first app this year (maybe on Lens, I have some cool ideas) after doing websites all my life and have the same question.
Out of topic..im feel like noob..im install & use lenster & phaver everyday, reason im use phaver more than lenster coz phaver have mobile application, easy use. Orb i donno what special about?..im already install orb and use it. Can some one make thread and explain how to use all the application on lens protocol? With simple explanation & how its just can link to 1 application. Now i need to sign in open lenster.xyz use mobile browser at metamask. Then check phaver...orb i dont have enough time coz thinking its same like phaver. The issue abt phaver same post, everyone keep mirror post..i can see more than 20 same mirror post in 10 minute when i explore at phaver feed.
@therealafrorick.lens
lenster best network i love you stani
Don't think so
!!!
Very interested to hear people’s thoughts on this!
This is something I'll be researching more as well to test my assumptions as a prior native Android developer with Kotlin and Java. Generally, I've noticed the UX of React apps don't have the same smoothness and look and feel as native apps. Traditionally cross-platform frameworks have always been behind native features because the frameworks need to wait for the support from the native Android and iOS levels to be added or bridged by contributors to their tools. I'm excited to see the JetBrains team who invented Kotlin to continue to progress on Compose Multiplatform which has been adopted by large companies for Android. The desktop, web, and iOS apps are looking promising too. https://www.jetbrains.com/lp/compose-mpp/