What are the best cross-platform mobile development options *today*.
Bobo Brussels

Bobo Brussels @booboboston

Joined:
Jan 7, 2022

What are the best cross-platform mobile development options *today*.

Publish Date: May 19 '22
4 7

These frameworks and platforms are of various maturity levels, what would you say the best options are today? Do you anticipate that changing?

I tagged a couple options I know of, but I'd love to hear about others!

Comments 7 total

  • Andrew Baisden
    Andrew BaisdenMay 19, 2022

    I still think React Native and Flutter are the top 2.

  • Lucca Biagi de Paula Prado
    Lucca Biagi de Paula PradoMay 20, 2022

    Well, i'm not a expert in mobile development (actually, almost the opposite of that lol) but In my opinion, Flutter, Reactive Native, Ionic (+ capacitor) are the best.

    I'm really hoping that Kotlin Multiplatform get mature enough in the future.

    But I saw that there still some community around Xamarin and I'm hoping that NativeScript get popular. Anyways, I was researching about that some weeks ago to decide what I'm learning to do some applications (I chose Ionic + angular as this will make me learn angular for web too)

  • Shai Almog
    Shai AlmogMay 20, 2022

    Don't know about today but I co-created Codename One which I think still has advantages over pretty much anything if you like Java/Kotlin and WORA.

  • Ushieru Kokoran
    Ushieru KokoranMay 20, 2022

    Flutter if you come from Java or C family. React Native if you come from Js or react.

  • Muhammad Uzair
    Muhammad UzairMay 20, 2022

    not a mobile dev, but I'll vote for Flutter (even though I am JavaScript dev :D)

  • zoocityboy
    zoocityboyMay 21, 2022

    Flutter Is the best option now.

  • Ignas Bagdonas
    Ignas BagdonasJun 14, 2022

    Actually it depends what you want to build. If you need only nice crud application then flutter or reactnative works very well. If you need more native feel, native UX and lower level features like bluetooth, vpn, etc, then Xamarin is way to go. Xamarin actually use native components under the hood, but Xamarin is hard to learn and much native knowledge required framework, I would say.

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