Comment on Several Lemmy iOS apps look to have left TestFlight!
TheRaven@lemmy.ca 1 year agoDepends on the app. Mlem is native, and Voyager is a web view app wrapper. But Voyager definitely doesn’t feel like a web view. It was written to feel like a native app, I’m really impressed. And that’s coming from someone who generally hates web apps.
Tatters@feddit.uk 1 year ago
Voyager used to be a web app, but has now gone native too.
MentalEdge@lemmy.world 1 year ago
A web app doesn’t magically turn into a native app when you put it on the app store. The way it gets installed, and the system access is different, and better for stuff like notifications…
But the word “native” refers to applications made using the native SDK, which in Apple’s case is Swift. I’d be extremely impressed if the devs re-wrote the entire app in new code. But that would be unnecessary.
You can have non-native apps on the app store. A lot of your apps probably aren’t native SDKs like flutter, used by liftoff and thunder, make development much easier in exchange for the resulting application running a bit less efficiently. Flutter applications can also run on both Android and iOS, and even desktop, with little additional work.
TheRaven@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
You’re right
spiritedpause@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
Yeah Voyager has both a native iOS app and an installable Progressive Web App
iOS App: apps.apple.com/us/app/…/id6451429762 Android App: play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=app.vger.vo… Installable Progressive Web App: vger.app
MentalEdge@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Did they actually re-code the whole thing to make it native? You can ship a web app via the app store just fine. Only making changes to take advantage of the better system access that provides.