You most have a look on Fuchisa os that runs on many platforms and the only ide to make apps for it, is Flutter ☺ (also you can install Android apps on Fuchsia) At the end you can make apps for three os Android, IOs and Fuchisa.
1 year experiance with RN and 3 months with flutter: amount of weird crashes and workarounds in react native was literally killing me. Flutter made my life easier.
I can finally make this comment: I learned flutter in 2 days 3 weeks ago and now I am a week or so away from releasing my first product to the Play Store. Prior programming experience was PHP eons ago. Flutter just feels very intuitive.
I have been working with javascript for +10 years and I knew about dart three weeks ago and I love how async logic and variable types works perfectly. I got a lot of compatibility problems but it’s worth If you need a job then learn React Native first.
I have been working with Javascript and Java for over 6 years and React for over a year and it seemed logical to go with React Native for a new app a few months ago. I started with React Native, but it seemed like a lot of work with constant crashes and performance issues. Headed over to flutter docs, gave a few days and started developing the app with Flutter. 3 months down the line I feel so happy I made that switch. I have made tremendous progress with Flutter, performance of the app is superb and it looks beautiful.
as a self taught web developer can u advice me plz to learn flutter or vue apps like vue native or native script vue i learned only html5 css3 tailwind php laravel 8 with taking in consideration compitability with laravel ??
Hi Akash! That's quite a lot of experience you have in the filed. Are you currently looking out for job opportunities? If you are, please let me know here.
I'd stick to React! Nice community, easier to use, familiar JavaScript, npm modules. I believe one of the reasons react native being used in the industry in large scale is due to JavaScript itself. As afterall react native was intended to be a tool for web developers to develop native apps. Companies can hire web developers easily... thus, react native is famous. I'm looking forward to flutter for web! It can be a game changer.
Yeah I think React Native would be by tool of choice just because I’m already really familiar with React. I think the future of these cross-platform tools is gonna be epic!
We created many apps with different similar cross-platform frameworks, like Appcelerator Titanium, Nativescript, React Native. Flutter is like a new milestone in native-like cross-platform development. Flutter wins big time. Why? It is absolutely fun and fulfilling to create something using flutter because everything just works the way it should.
@@hmm7458 fernando-herrera.com/#/home is in Spanish or you can search some change on youtube for example: ru-vid.com/show-UCFKZxStYsOVrzdN_FCZ0NGg ru-vid.com/show-UCJm7i4g4z7ZGcJA_HKHLCVw
I was taking a React Native course since I know JavaScript and some React but I dropped it: it's insane try to develop something on that, at least with Expo. Maybe Expo is crap, I don't know. But the course was made one year ago and I had to change several modules and new things I needed to run the code. And even with everything installed I had to restart the module and reload the app on the emulator pretty much all the time. Today, completely out of the blue, it showed me this error on one of the modules installed, that worked perfectly fine yesterday!! I reinstalled everything and it was pointess. The app died. I'm done with React Native. Today I started a Flutter & Dart course, the starting app with the hot reload feature is amazing for developing. 👍
@@shivanigaddagimath6105 I'm currently in last year of undergrad. Will be graduating in coming 2 months. I'm open for work meanwhile :D Here's my email: nachiketshelar321@gmail.com
I learn flutter without any mobile apps experience. And i love how darts and flutter almost easy to understand. I think if you want to learn react, first you must understand js, and it will take a long shot to just to understand react. But it is just my opinion. CMIIW.
I know this is not related but I have 2 years experience as ios native developer,today is my 2month as flutter developer and i can say i liking it so far plus it's not that hard to learn compared to if you learning native, still trying to master the concept of provider state management though
Hadn't tried Flutter, and have only done 1 RN Project so I don't have an opinion on which is better. However, I've worked in Angular 4-6 and current React, and to me Angular was close to perfection for my taste. I know it's a different subject, but I LOVED Angular when compared to React. Unfortunately Angular got a bad rep due to breaking changes from V1 to V2.
4:08 tensorflow is 2nd and guess what; tensorflow/keras is supported by google which also supports flutter! When Tiny ML gets huge flutter is going to get a huge boost
RN-PRO 1. RN because Flutter uses its own canvas and rendering engine, which will always play catch up to native controls. 2. RN has OTA updates, i have a team uses flutter, and it annoys me, everytime he updates his apk, he sends a new apk instead using OTA. 3. RN has more jobs, uses JS/TS and it easy to switch to web, or even backend-Node.js. yes flutter and react-native can build it's own web, but again client more prefer looking react-web instead of react-native-web / flutter -web later. 4. RN has bigger community 5. (personal) RN better state management, and better re-usable components/logic. eg: hooks Cons: 1. Optimization hard to do in RN, but it possible only not for beginner. eg: animations without js-bridge. but it could less noticable unless u had heavy animations and works in the apps 2. Lacking of build tools 3. More time to fix problems if u are inexperienced then u are doomed, even experienced dev already feel pain in the ass. COST MORE TIME
I was really interested in learning flutter but at the end i chose react native, the problem is that in flutter i found a lot of the packges i needed are still in developer preview, for example for i project i need a webview and it’s a developer preview and in the package page is also written that the keyboard feature is not ready for production, for another project i need a map and the mapview is also in developer preview
Map is working for over a year :) using it for one of our app. But the extensions got a lot better since then! Flutter packages are a community work. If features are missing for you, you just add them and do a merge request. It’s all about the community!
When I started with React Native I always had to build twice because the first build failed but partially setup env and the second then completed it. Also you have to use an absurd amount of workarounds to get just the simplest things running. In flutter you can just fly through the UI and code any app ui in no time providing you full flexibility. As a single developer having experience in web and backend development all self teached I was able to publish my app to production in 2 months with that also being my first flutter app ever which has now 30k+ registered users. Flutter still has some issues but for cross platform development its the best solution ive seen so far (compared cordova,phonegap, ionic, react native).
I don't see a lot of people saying this so I'm a little hesitant (cuz I might be wrong). Flutter can be scaled to cover more platforms a lot easier than React Native can. Flutter for web is up and desktop support is on the works. One code covers all platforms, won't that be nice?
I am a 2 yr app developer in ionic (coz I love angular).. recently learnt flutter.. I am so much in love with flutter now!! javascript is old now.. we should stop mixing web into native
What i really like about flutter is being about to right native java or swift in your project and getting access to it with dart. i think its really powerful for plugins and other things!!!!
Great video Filip!! I am a native Java-Kotlin Android Dev. Did not tried RN yet, but I did with Flutter, and just imagine that such amazing experience can be hard to get over. Just one thing concerning me a bit. I see it a bit slow sometimes. Also apps like Reflecty (Written in Flutter) looks a bit slow for what I saw, at least on Android. Is the only detail that stop me to use it in production. I am still researching about it though, maybe is me who is doing something wrong. Keep the good job, you got a new subscriber here!
Great Video Filip! I'm a computer science student and I started programming with flutter....I had doubts about the choice but now I'm convinced. Thank you
Learning curve that comes with flutter? Lets say you just got into programming and you are like 2 years into it, unless you want to do web development your first choice would most likely be python or a c-style language. just based on that fact, even if you didnt use dart before you can EASILY get into dart without so much as to looking into documentation for dart. As for React Native, not only should you mostly have a good grip on react native (which in it self takes a while) and javascript (lets be honest it wont be the first choice of almost 90% of people) and then react native itself, not to mention the difficulty you start facing as your code gets bigger definitely makes flutter way easier to get into and get working than react native. I switched from react native to flutter and flutter is definitely a win.
well i used both and in my opinion both are good for different kind of solutions but when u want to implement platform specific code with any of these, the winner is flutter. its is so easy to get used to implementing platform specific features in flutter.
Flutter will not just beat React Native, but also React. I'm not crazy, just that the web apps with flutter work with all wonders of app development with flutter, u don't need to know html, css, js and react(?)... U only need to know flutter(dart obviously). So
Learnt react and flutter recently , stayed with flutter cos it results in the same layout on both platforms and flutter is just so much nicer to work with. My app if called FarmTUBE on both app stores (free) took only a few days to learn build and deploy that flutter app.
@@Jerry-eh8xz I meant to say if you master in flebox grid table positioning float and display property of contents none block inline inline-block you can do anything you want
I am seeing alot of videos about flutter and react native and which is best, but to be honest, why not learn both? its not like your head is gonna explode learning more than one programming language right? As a programmer with 10 years of experience, i remember learning cobol programming, then i wasnt able to use it after graduating in college, so i studied web development and php, and i also studied java for desktop application development as I work. then transitioned completely to web development and learning alot of javascript frameworks. It short, a good programmer must always be willing to learn and never stop growing. if your a programmer and confused which one you should choose, then your not doing it right. you should just learn both and grow with it.
I believe most of the concepts can be translated from React native to flutter. stateless vs stateful Widgets=. dumb vs State components. SetState and re render. Typescript Types vs Dart Language. if you are. mid to senior RN dev like me I think you can change to flutter easily. And so far Flutter is doing far better. Hope RN pick up in new versions so we have two good cross-platform technologies.
From no experience in mobile development to 3 apps developed and deployed (single handedly) within past 4 months; I can definitely say Flutter is the best. The speed of development is brilliant and given that Dart is strongly typed language makes it so much fun to write code.
@@shivanigaddagimath6105 Hi. I'm currently working with multiple organisations helping them in leveraging potential of technical team while setting up a process to scale as well. I'll still be available for any work where someone need assistance just in case. Thank you
I'm new Here, And Tbh the way you Described them side by side, and Also took into consideration College students/Grads is Something not done here on yt. Keep up the Amazing Work Philip Hope This channel Grows at lightening Speed!👌👌
I'm learning to code at the age of 38 so I don't care about the job prospect. I'm just too old, no company would hire me. I want to know which one is better for this app I want to do. My app is quite basic and I already know React, so I'll go with React Native, perhaps in the future I'll learn Flutter. 👍
@@developerfilip I'm not killing it. But there's a lot of discrimination when it comes to age. So I'm realistic: most developers write their first lines of code when they're teenagers so recruiters and HR people expect you to be one of those and master an couple of technologies in your mid 20s. And in my country they love you if you also went to college and have a degree. I don't have college degree so my expectations are even worst. Unless I have friends in some tech company that would give me a chance, nobody would hire a 40 yr. old programmer, not matter how good he is, at least not in my country. I'll go freelancing. 👍
@@SeriesTube01 Hey! There are companies that give importance to talent and skills and not just experience! Where are you based? If you are interested in a job opportunity, get in touch?
Moral of the story Flutter is getting powerful and gaining popularity in market and has good scope in future But react native is already popular in market and also many past projects need react native developer as it was introduced first
I have build 4 different Apps on flutter 2 of them are on the respective stores too. I felt it to be easy, I have java background. I felt the development process is easier and faster.
@Filip . I really need your help, hope you will read this. I want to build a social media website and wonder if I should learn flutter just for performance. Today apps that have hundreds of devs to support them are very fluid so I need to replicate that fluidity. Would I have performance issues if I go with React Native? I know React and C#.
I don't think you would have perfomance issues. I think just because you know React I would use react-native (for now). If your social media app would ever reach millions of people, then I would hope that at that point you would be developing natively anyway! So I'd suggest go with React Native as you will be able to start developing instantly without too much of a big learning curve!
@@developerfilip Hi. Thank you for your advice. As for now I'd say, if you need very good performance and your app is not simple then don't go with React Native. RN team say they will remove js bridge but for now if you know javascript - sure. If you don't - Flutter. Better UX, more official tools, closer to native.
If only SwiftUI (Apple's UI Framework for iOS) is cross-platform, it would be much more popular than Flutter or React Native in my opinion because of how easy it is to learn. SwiftUI is amazingly easy to learn and the code is so much more readable than Flutter, the only caveat is it's exclusive for the Apple ecosystem.
Flutter is fun, its Nice to see à différent way of doing things. As a web developer i was excited to see how flutter works and the concepts are not hard to grasp. I dont know react but i am afraid it May not be that fun.
I picked up Flutter about three months ago, and I am really loving it so far! I still have an year to graduate college so hoping Flutter becomes more popular and the job prospects widens up, cause I would love to make apps with Flutter as a job.
@@sangamsaini8979 Researching anywhere I could, reading documentation and articles, and watching Flutter tutorials. And then trying things on my own over and over and over until I succeed. It's kind of fun, really.
@@shivanigaddagimath6105 Hello, sorry for the late reply. I am graduating from Agni College of Technology, Chennai. And yes, I am open for opportunities.
Hello Filip, just an addition since Flutter is dependent on Dart and both are developed by Google, so both have hand on hand, Whereas React native and JS don’t hence I think Flutter is much better than react native on the basis of above point
Hi Udit! Sounds like you have quite some experience in this. Are you working or studying currently? Would you be open for a job/internship opportunity?
I have 3 years experience in react-native, I hate it sometimes(eg: version upgrade or debugging with realmjs) but I also love it, it is getting better. and I am not interesting about flutter, just because I don't like Dart, JavaScript(not TypeScript) is much more beautiful for me😛😄
Hi, I'm seeing a lot of people shiting on flutter lately, saying it's only for UI and flutter is dead because adobe XD can export flutter code now, What's you take on this?
Thank you!! I use Adobe Premier Pro to edit my videos, and I do all the animations by hand and keyframes! The videos take me a long time 😅 Glad you like it! 😆
Due to Dart being a compiled language like c++ and coming from that education background I will be taking Andrea Yu's Flutter developer course on Udemy. React native is still good to know for now as it is heavily used. In the future I do see flutter growing!
If you already know JS, then it's pretty easy, just go for React Native. But if you're have to learn JS/Dart THEN it's a comparison: More job opportunities at present vs faster apps
The latest research from Statista places Flutter as the leading cross-platform mobile development framework in 2021. Flutter surpasses React Native by 4% (42% for Flutter against 38% for React Native)
I am web developer (php/js/html/css) and found Dart to be straight foreword programming language, Flutter is cool, fun and fast, I only hate the nesting widgets in widgets errors I get all the time for not closing the brackets in the right place... e.g ),),),),}),),),),),}),),),),
Hi I don't know which one to learn which will be a good job finding a good job for mobile programming fluttermi or android java thank you in advance for the answers
It's not safe for you to assume that Flutter would continue to grow and improve and React Native would not. I love Google and Google products but let's be fair here.
Good point, in fact no one say this "React Native’s new architecture has gradually removed Bridge and replaced it with a new component called Javascript Interface (JSI)." So at the end of this year, RN will be renewed completely, and without the bridge and with different threads for UI, JS and so on will have awesome benefits for performances
Very nice one my friend, good to see you. well I have been using flutter professionally in the past 4 month, building an upcoming mobile application and in my opinion flutter is already the winner
I'm trying to learn Flutter, but I stop in 3 months and back again to React Native. Flutter is truly faster, but speed does not matter to us, our focus I continuous and ease of development. With Flutter that uses Dart language, it is a pain when it coming to be spaghetti code. Especially Flutter is not good for web development in my opinion because we forced to change CSS to Dart. For me, there is no winner, the tools usable as their purpose.
@Filip . I really need your help, hope you will read this. I want to build a social networking app for both android and ios, like instagram so if i use flutter will it be best option or will it be fast it can handle it?? please reply thanks
Tariq Hussain It depends what your experience is like! If you know JavaScript, then go with RN, if you don’t know JavaScript then you might as well learn flutter! I’m guessing this development is only for the first deployment of the app you want to make, in the later future when wanting to design a social media site you should probably be making two separate applications for iOS and Android!
@Muddasir no. If you learn flutter you learn much more than only flutter. You learn a lot of concepts and how App programming works, that is much more than learning flutter.