open-native
NativeScript
open-native | NativeScript | |
---|---|---|
8 | 30 | |
441 | 23,677 | |
0.7% | 0.4% | |
7.7 | 8.9 | |
8 days ago | 3 days ago | |
Java | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
open-native
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No, React Native is not the future
What they decided to do is really quite strange. Something like Capacitor makes much more sense but they said they wanted access to React Native libraries... I hope https://github.com/OpenNative/open-native can address their requirements in the future. It's goal is to make things like React Native native modules work across frameworks (e.g., react native libraries working in capacitor and native script)
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What's involved with NativeScript open source?
You can now use React Native plugins within NativeScript projects through the Open Native effort and it's only a matter of time before NativeScript can be used where the React Native community sees fit.
- Can you add a long press app menu for Android and iOS? Here is an example when I long press on Todoist on Pixel 7.
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Does Svelte Native bridge like React Native or is it more like Flutter?
As NativeScript offers a cross-platform UI abstraction, you can build your whole UI without writing platform-specific code. There are often cross-platform plugins available to avoid having to write any platform-specific code, and in fact we’ve recently built Open Native to allow you to use React Native native modules in NativeScript apps (Svelte Native included). But even when there is no plugin available, writing the native code is a breeze, as it has full TypeScript typings and you can pass real native values back and forth between native and JS rather than just JSON-serialisable ones. It’s really quite incredible!
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Introducing Open Native: vendor unlock React Native
Open Native is the long overdue Rosetta Stone that allows native modules to be used cross-ecosystem. It handles all the necessary auto-linking, type marshalling and API-binding to allow you to choose the highest quality native module for your project, no matter what ecosystem it comes from.
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Introducing Open Native: vendor-unlock React Native.
The complete steps to run the benchmarks are available in the main repo: https://github.com/OpenNative/open-native/blob/main/benchmark.md
- Show HN: Open Native – vendor-unlock React Native
NativeScript
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Svelte Native: The Svelte Mobile Development Experience
This is not so much the Svelte equivalent of React Native as it is just NativeScript (https://nativescript.org).
- NativeScript/NativeScript: Empowering JavaScript with Native Platform APIs
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Mobile App Development for both iOS and Andriod
There is also https://nativescript.org/ which would allow you to use Vue (or several other frameworks) to build a mobile app. Used it myself a while back for an iPad app using Vue 2 and it was pretty straightforward. It seems like there have been quite a few improvements since then so might be worth a look.
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Updating Expo and React Native sucks
Anyone who thinks this sucks should try NativeScript with hassle-free update experience, quick build time, HMR, direct access to native apis, use React Native plugins and more. Pick any style you like - vanilla, Angular, Vue, React, Svelte - and easily add some SwiftUI and Jetpack Compose views if you want a and connect it to your JS. Docs are a bit behind at the moment but a major update is in progress. https://nativescript.org/
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The right way to build multi platform apps in 2023 using web tech. ?
There are layers that offer access to native APIs like capacitor, cordova and nativescript. Apparently sometimes multiple of them should be used, but I didn't understand what are the differences even after reading the announcement. These seem to be frontend agnostic technologies and Capacitor is apparently the more modern choice at the moment.
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What's involved with NativeScript open source?
Maintaining NativeScript core is like maintaining any TypeScript library. In particular, it's maintenance revolves largely around:
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Websites vs Mobile App
PWA? You can then, with moderate difficulty use something like https://nativescript.org/ make native versions.
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Nativescript & Formily: A match made in heaven.
Using the amazing Preview environment that the Nativescript team together with Stackblitz have done, it was time to start hacking at it. (More information can be found here at https://preview.nativescript.org/)
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The different strategies to building a cross-platform app
8. NativeScript + PWA [hybrid]
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Mobile development with Angular?
There is something called NativeScript
What are some alternatives?
react-native-video-processing - Native Video editing/trimming/compressing :movie_camera: library for React-Native
capacitor - Build cross-platform Native Progressive Web Apps for iOS, Android, and the Web ⚡️
react-native-auth0 - React Native toolkit for Auth0 API
Apache Cordova - Apache Cordova Android
capacitor-android-shortcuts
Titanium - 🚀 Native iOS and Android Apps with JavaScript
awesome-native-modules - 🌉 Some React Native bridges in one app
react-native - A framework for building native applications using React
react-native-randomness - Secure generatation of random bytes using native functions in Kotlin and Objective-C.
Ionic Framework - A powerful cross-platform UI toolkit for building native-quality iOS, Android, and Progressive Web Apps with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.
webpack-chain - A chaining API to generate and simplify the modification of Webpack configurations.
Meteor JS - Meteor, the JavaScript App Platform