Skip to main content

Mobile Application Development Frameworks


PhoneGap (Apache Callback):-

PhoneGap is an open-source mobile development framework developed by Nitobi Software. Now acquired by Adobe.


Appcelerator Titanium :-

Appcelerator Titanium is a platform for developing mobile, tablet and desktop applications using web technologies.



Rhomobile Development:-

Motorola’s Rhomobile offers a very impressive suite of polished tools -- Rhodes framework, RhoSync server, RhoHub Development as a Service (DaaS), and RhoGallery app store -- to quickly build and deploy powerful native mobile applications for all smartphones.



    




                              PhoneGap                                      Appcelerator Titanium     




PhoneGap :-

PhoneGap is an open source development tool for building fast, easy, cross-platform mobile apps with HTML5 and JavaScript. PhoneGap has been downloaded more than 600,000 times to date and thousands of applications built using PhoneGap are available in mobile app stores that span devices based on Android, iOS, BlackBerry and other operating systems.

Start With:-

Code:-





Appcelerator Titanium:-

Appcelerator is committed to open source and licenses the Titanium platform under the Apache Public License. All Titanium source code is available on github, including various third-party modifications.


Referential Site:-
http://www.appcelerator.com/


Start with:-
https://wiki.appcelerator.org/display/guides/Quick+Starthttps://github.com/appcelerator/titanium_mobile.


Rhomobile Development:-

Helps to quickly build and deploy powerful native mobile applications for all smartphones: iPhone, Android, Windows Mobile, BlackBerry, Symbian and tablet devices such as iPad & Samsung Galaxy Tab. These native device apps work with synchronized local data and take advantage of device capabilities such as GPS, PIM contacts, camera, native mapping, push, alerts and calendar.
If you want to do something cool with Rhomobile but need some development help, get in touch with us today to take advantage of the solid experience of our Rhomobile developers to help you create exceptional mobile applications.

Start with:-

Code & Tutorials:-



:-
Sujay












Comments

  1. It’s really amazing that we can record what our visitors do on our site. Thanks for sharing this awesome guide. I’m happy that I came across with your site this article is on point,thanks again and have a great day. Keep update more information..
    Mobile App Development Company in Dubai
    Android App Development Company in Dubai
    Mobile App Development Company in UAE

    ReplyDelete
  2. mobile application development company have changed the means of communication and today everyone wants to remain well connected and they expect immediacy in almost everything.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Short explanation on Gradle, minSdkVersion, maxSdkVersion, compileSdkVersion and targetSdkVersion in Android

Gradle : The Android build system compiles app resources and source code, and packages them into APKs that you can test, deploy, sign, and distribute. Android Studio uses Gradle . The Android plugin for Gradle works with the build toolkit to provide processes and configurable settings that are specific to building and testing Android applications. Gradle and the Android plugin run independent of Android Studio. Gradle architecture is shown below. Example: android { compileSdkVersion 27 buildToolsVersion “26.0.2” defaultConfig { applicationId “com.example.checkyourtargetsdk" minSdkVersion 15 targetSdkVersion 27 versionCode 1 versionName “1.0” } } minSdkVersion : minSdkVersion is the lower bound for your app . The minSdkVersion is one of the signals the Google Play Store uses to determine which of a user’s devices an app can be installed on.  your app’s minSdkVersion must be at least as high as your dependencies’ minSdkVe

Google re-branded the support Android libraries to AndroidX

It is important to note, you cannot mix AppCompat and Jetpack in the same project. You must convert everything to use Jetpack if you want to upgrade. The support library artifacts are being deprecated and all future development is going into AndroidX , so there's no avoiding this migration. Alan Viverette sums this up nicely: “There won’t be a 29.0.0, so Android Q APIs will only be in AndroidX” The stable release of 28.0.0 will be the final feature release packaged as android.support . All subsequent feature releases will only be made available as androidx-packaged artifacts. Below tips will give you a clearer transition path. The current version of AppCompat (v28.x) is exactly the same as AndroidX (v1.x). In fact, the AppCompat libraries are machine generated by changing maven coordinates and package names of the AndroidX codebase. For example, android.support.v7.app.AppCompatActivity is now androidx.appcompat.app.AppCompatActivity For a complete listi

Android Beginners Guide

                                                                                                               Android Operation System: Android is an operating system based on Linux with a Java programming interface. It provides tools, e.g. a compiler, debugger and a device emulator as well as its own Java Virtual machine (Dalvik Virtual Machine - DVM). Android is created by the Open Handset Alliance which is lead by Google. Android uses a special virtual machine, e.g. the Dalvik Virtual Machine. Dalvik uses special bytecode. Therefore you cannot run standard Java bytecode on Android. Android provides a tool "dx" which allows to convert Java Class files into "dex" (Dalvik Executable) files. Android applications are packed into an .apk (Android Package) file by the program "aapt" (Android Asset Packaging Tool) To simplify development Google provides the Android Development Tools (ADT) for Eclipse. The ADT performs automatically the conversion f