Senior Developer at a consultancy with 11-50 employees
Real User
2022-12-14T11:53:52Z
Dec 14, 2022
We are using it for mobile applications that we are publishing to iOS, Huawei, and Google Play Store. It's a very nice hybrid framework for mobile applications.
The main reason we use Ionic is because it is designed to be cross-platform. If you need to build an application with the same functionality on iOS and Android, you don't need to worry about maintaining two separate applications. We can build and deploy on Ionic, and then enter the apps into the Apple App Store and Play Store. With Ionic, only one source code needs to be managed across multiple applications. Ionic also provides their own tools to deploy the application along with Ionic Capacitor, but I was mostly using custom manual deployment along the lines of, "Let's run some commands in Android and Xcode", and then generating net-aware applications. Additionally, Ionic supports web applications and PWAs (Progressive Web Apps). In our company, we have multi-member developers where some are working on Ionic using React Native, some are working on web apps and Vue JS, and we are all working in a parallel fashion. In my group we currently have around 10 people working on Ionic, even though they're also working on React Native and other languages that have different skill sets. For myself, I have more than three years of experience in Ionic using Angular, until I switched to working on Ionic with React Native.
Senior Software Engineer at Huawei Technologies India
Real User
2022-09-16T20:06:21Z
Sep 16, 2022
I use Ionic to design the printing phase per customer requirements. I use the ID screen, which is usually coded, to create the pages of the Android and iOS mobile applications.
I didn't have the time to create applications for Android or iOS so I started using Ionic to code and deploy builds. For me, it was very easy to use. I didn't have to learn Android or Script for iOS and could use one source code for different platforms.
Ionic is an open-source UI toolkit for developing high-quality mobile and desktop apps with web technologies such as HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. Ionic focuses on the frontend UX and UI interaction of an app – UI controls, interactions, gestures, and animations. It is simple to learn and can be used without any frontend framework by utilizing a simple script inclusion.
While previous versions of Ionic were strongly connected to Angular, version 4.x of the framework was re-engineered to serve as...
We are using it for mobile applications that we are publishing to iOS, Huawei, and Google Play Store. It's a very nice hybrid framework for mobile applications.
The main reason we use Ionic is because it is designed to be cross-platform. If you need to build an application with the same functionality on iOS and Android, you don't need to worry about maintaining two separate applications. We can build and deploy on Ionic, and then enter the apps into the Apple App Store and Play Store. With Ionic, only one source code needs to be managed across multiple applications. Ionic also provides their own tools to deploy the application along with Ionic Capacitor, but I was mostly using custom manual deployment along the lines of, "Let's run some commands in Android and Xcode", and then generating net-aware applications. Additionally, Ionic supports web applications and PWAs (Progressive Web Apps). In our company, we have multi-member developers where some are working on Ionic using React Native, some are working on web apps and Vue JS, and we are all working in a parallel fashion. In my group we currently have around 10 people working on Ionic, even though they're also working on React Native and other languages that have different skill sets. For myself, I have more than three years of experience in Ionic using Angular, until I switched to working on Ionic with React Native.
I use Ionic to design the printing phase per customer requirements. I use the ID screen, which is usually coded, to create the pages of the Android and iOS mobile applications.
I use Ionic for app development.
I didn't have the time to create applications for Android or iOS so I started using Ionic to code and deploy builds. For me, it was very easy to use. I didn't have to learn Android or Script for iOS and could use one source code for different platforms.
My primary use case of this solution is for its web application development. We are customers of Ionic and I'm a project manager.