#cross-platform

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Cross-platform refers to the ability of a program or application to run on multiple platforms, such as different operating systems, hardware architectures, and mobile devices. This means that developers can write code once and deploy it across various platforms without having to rewrite or modify the code for each platform. JavaScript is well suited for cross-platform development due to its ability to run in any web browser or native application. Cross-platform development allows developers to create applications that can be used on any device or system, making them more accessible and easier to maintain.
inlang - Using Version Control to Solve i18n
JSNation US 2024JSNation US 2024
14 min
inlang - Using Version Control to Solve i18n
In this talk, you'll learn about the problem with internationalizing software and how the Lake Exchange Control System solves it. Internationalizing software involves adapting it for different markets and demographics, which includes design, translations, and currencies. The goal is to enable any software company to go global in a day. The challenge lies in the coordination required among developers, designers, translators, and other stakeholders. The current process involves a complex pipeline and manual processes for translation hand-off. The key to solving this challenge is an interoperable file format and a change control system called Lix, which allows for collaboration and automation. Lix will have a public pre-release on December 16th, followed by the .inlang file specification in Q1 2025.
Breaking through the Browser Barrier (With Expo)
React Advanced 2024React Advanced 2024
27 min
Breaking through the Browser Barrier (With Expo)
Cedric van Poethe from Expo talks about breaking through the browser barrier and shares the success story of Rosebud, an app that transitioned from a web app to a Native app using Expo. Chris Bader explains the concept of the browser barrier, the limitations of web-only growth, and the benefits of transitioning from web to Native. The Talk discusses using DOM components to make web apps work natively, implementing a basic navigational pattern using the tabs navigator in Expo, and using Expo Atlas to inspect the bundle and see the HTML elements bundled inside the app. It also explores using DOM components strategically in React Native apps and highlights examples of apps using DOM components. The Talk mentions the similarities between DOM components and RSC in terms of API design, and recommends a step-by-step migration approach for large apps. It also discusses interacting with native APIs from DOM components and the benefits of using React Native for greenfield projects.
Journey Into the Unknown: My Adventure Unravelling the Mysteries of the Netflix TVUI Universe
React Summit US 2023React Summit US 2023
30 min
Journey Into the Unknown: My Adventure Unravelling the Mysteries of the Netflix TVUI Universe
Watch video: Journey Into the Unknown: My Adventure Unravelling the Mysteries of the Netflix TVUI Universe
This Talk explores the journey of a software developer in unraveling the mysteries of Netflix TV UI. It emphasizes the importance of continuous learning in TV UI development and discusses the use of React and the TV signup process. The Talk also highlights the significance of widgets, navigation, and the TVUI Explorer app in building TV UI. It delves into the TVUI dev process, testing layers, and the value of continuous learning and fresh perspectives in the tech industry. The Talk concludes with insights on job opportunities, resources for TV development, and the Netflix hiring process.
Replacing Shell Scripts with Cross-Platform TypeScript
TypeScript Congress 2023TypeScript Congress 2023
8 min
Replacing Shell Scripts with Cross-Platform TypeScript
The speaker discusses the benefits of replacing shell scripts with TypeScript, highlighting the limitations of shell scripts and the advantages of TypeScript such as cross-platform compatibility and better tooling. Deno is presented as the ideal platform for single file scripting, with its built-in support for TypeScript, automatic dependency installation, and sandboxing. The dax library is mentioned as a useful tool for scripting, providing a cross-platform shell and other APIs. Overall, the Talk emphasizes the power and flexibility of using TypeScript and Deno for scripting purposes.
Go From Zero To Hero: Be Cross-Platform Devs With React Native
React Summit 2023React Summit 2023
10 min
Go From Zero To Hero: Be Cross-Platform Devs With React Native
Watch video: Go From Zero To Hero: Be Cross-Platform Devs With React Native
Cross-platform development allows you to build apps compatible with multiple devices or operating systems, reusing 50 to 80 percent of your code. React Native has a wide range of third-party libraries for using APIs. Code examples cover React Native standalone case and with content management system, exploring built-in core components and third-party library APIs. Content management systems simplify content editing and asset swapping, allowing real-time editing and easy asset uploads. The importance of knowing built-in APIs for mastering cross-platform technologies and building scalable, easy-to-maintain applications is highlighted.
Using PKCE to Communicate Between React and Native Mobile SDKs
React Summit 2023React Summit 2023
8 min
Using PKCE to Communicate Between React and Native Mobile SDKs
Watch video: Using PKCE to Communicate Between React and Native Mobile SDKs
The Talk discusses communication between React apps/web apps and native applications/SDKs. It explores the challenges of embedding web code in a WebView and proposes running the browser in an embedded mode. The use of deep links and the Pixie protocol is highlighted as a solution for securely exchanging data between the web code and native applications. The Pixie protocol involves generating an authorization code and comparing it with the original key for secure data exchange.
Bringing Your Web App to Native With Capacitor
JSNation 2023JSNation 2023
111 min
Bringing Your Web App to Native With Capacitor
WorkshopFree
Mike Hartington
Mike Hartington
So, you have a killer web app you've built and want to take it from your web browser to the App Store. Sure, there are a lot of options here, but most will require you to maintain separate apps for each platform. You want your codebase to be as close as possible across Web, Android, and iOS. Thankfully, with Capacitor, you can take your existing web app and quickly create native iOS and Android apps for distribution on your favorite App Store!
Contents: This workshop is aimed at beginner developers that have an existing web application, or are interested in mobile development. We will go over:- What is Capacitor- How does it compare to other cross-platform solutions- Using Capacitor to build a native application using your existing web code- Tidying up our application for distribution on mobile app stores with naming conventions, icons, splash screens and more
Building for Web & Mobile with Expo
React Day Berlin 2022React Day Berlin 2022
155 min
Building for Web & Mobile with Expo
Workshop
Josh Justice
Josh Justice
We know that React is for the web and React Native is for Android and iOS. But have you heard of react-native-web—for writing an app for Android, iOS, and the web in one codebase? Just like React Native abstracts away the details of iOS and Android, React Native Web extracts away the details of the browser as well. This opens up the possibility of even more code sharing across platforms.
In this workshop you’ll walk through setting up the skeleton for a React Native Web app that works great and looks awesome. You can use the resulting codebase as a foundation to build whatever app you like on top of it, using the React paradigms and many JavaScript libraries you’re used to. You might be surprised how many types of app don’t really require a separate mobile and web codebase!
What's included1. Setting up drawer and stack navigators with React Navigation, including responsiveness2. Configuring React Navigation with URLs3. Setting up React Native Paper including styling the React Navigation drawer and headers4. Setting up a custom color theme that supports dark mode5. Configuring favicons/app icons and metadata6. What to do when you can’t or don’t want to provide the same functionality on web and mobile
Prerequisites- Familiarity with building applications with either React or React Native. You do not need to know both.- Machine setup: Node LTS, Yarn, be able to successfully create and run a new Expo app following the instructions on https://docs.expo.dev/get-started/create-a-new-app/
Bringing your React Web App to native with Capacitor
React Summit 2022React Summit 2022
92 min
Bringing your React Web App to native with Capacitor
WorkshopFree
Mike Hartington
Mike Hartington
So, you have a killer React app you've built and want to take it from your web browser to the App Store. Sure, there are a lot of options here, but most will require you to maintain separate apps for each platform. You want your codebase to be as close as possible across Web, Android, and iOS. Thankfully, with Capacitor, you can take your existing web app and quickly create native iOS and Android apps for distribution on your favorite App Store!
This workshop is aimed at intermediate developers that have an existing React application, or are interested in mobile development with React. We will go over:
What is CapacitorHow does it compare to other cross-platform solutionsUsing Capacitor to build a native application using your existing web codeTidying up our application for distribution on mobile app stores with naming conventions, icons, splashscreens and more.
How to Share Code between React Web App and React Native Mobile App in Monorepo
React Summit 2022React Summit 2022
7 min
How to Share Code between React Web App and React Native Mobile App in Monorepo
This presentation focuses on sharing code between React web and React native mobile apps. The speaker demonstrates how to achieve feature parity using a Monorepo with NX. They highlight the importance of sharing non-UI code, such as business logic and state management, through shared libraries. This approach allows the apps to focus on UI code while keeping non-UI code separate. For more details, refer to the speaker's blog post.
React Native Everywhere
React Summit 2022React Summit 2022
22 min
React Native Everywhere
React Native Everywhere enables code sharing and platform individuality, responsive composition and navigation are key focus areas, the React Bangalore community has played a role in the development of React Native design systems, React Native URL Router provides a native feel with drag-from-edge navigation, collaboration with Software Mansion has been beneficial, and token-based centralization is important for consistent adaptation of design systems.
Building Cross-Platform Component Libraries for Web and Native with React
React Advanced 2021React Advanced 2021
21 min
Building Cross-Platform Component Libraries for Web and Native with React
Top Content
This Talk discusses building cross-platform component libraries for React and React Native, based on a successful project with a large government-owned news organization. It covers the requirements for React Native knowledge, building cross-platform components, platform-specific components, styling, and the tools used. The Talk also highlights the challenges of implementing responsive design in React Native.
Bringing Ionic (and Web Components) to React
React Summit Remote Edition 2020React Summit Remote Edition 2020
12 min
Bringing Ionic (and Web Components) to React
Ionic React is a framework for building cross-platform apps using HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. It has hit its stable release and brings Ionic to even more developers. The Q&A session covers topics like the target market for Mux and the use of div as a button in React Native web. Ionic supports native apps and allows for a mix of web UI and custom native views.