Expo lets web developers build truly native apps that work across both iOS and Android by writing them once in just JavaScript. It's open source, free and uses React Native.
Expo supposedly helps you develop with react native and therefore can write the same/similar code for android and ios (library support is still not stable) which is awesome.
If your new state relies on your old state, arent we supposed to pass a function to the setState call where we get one argument and that argument is the state? For eg. this.setState((prevState) => prevstate.counter ++)
when I tried example you show in snack on touch event the application on device and also in snack emulator seems to restart. may be you share your snack link.
have a question about reactnative. lets say an iphone app takes about 200 hours to build from scratch. so the question is how many hours needed for exact same app in reactnative?
Anyone know how to manage login/dashboard/logout (protected screens), I'm trying to manage these screens but after login when I reload dashboard from emulator it's take me back to login screen. Also when I close app & reopen app again that time also open login screen but actually it should be dashboard. I tried many article from internet but none work correctly.
LOL, indeed. Fellow Emacs user here. And yeah, every now and then I catch myself using a proper IDE because it's just so much more convenient... but man... I have already wasted so much time studying the intricacies of Emacs and Vim... it's too late to turn back now.
I debate using react because its made by facebook.. I mean if no one other than facebook uses it, they can just kill it and devs will get no/minimum say in it, they got to move on, and kinda wasted their time spent learning the react syntax.. I think hybrid or web app is better if you dont want to build native, despite some of its known shortcomings.. Facebook at its core is a profit-based company, not like open source community, so if its not profitable for them in the long run, they will most likely gonna kill it sooner rather than later...
Dan Bellamy You've got a point. However taking a look at the showcase, it doesn't look like it's going anywhere anytime soon. Plus you've got a large open source community following.