Skip brings Swift app development to Android. It is a tool that enables developers to use a single modern programming language (Swift) and first-class development environment (Xcode) to build genuinely native apps for both iOS and Android.
Cross-platform mobile app development without compromises
Skip brings Swift app development to Android. It is a tool that enables developers to use a single modern programming language (Swift) and first-class development environment (Xcode) to build genuinely native apps for both iOS and Android.
Skip is a tool that transpiles your SwiftUI iOS app into a Kotlin Jetpack Compose app, and enables you to use a single language to create a complete app that reaches the entire mobile marketplace. What it is: Skip stands in contrast to other cross-platform development tools like Flutter, React Native, and Xamarin, in that it enables the creation of genuinely native applications for both of the dominant mobile platforms. It doesn't embed a separate engine or runtime into your app, but instead let
Ohhh, congrats on the launch! Is this the tool we've all been waiting for? I think it is! native components for both OS's is GREAT! One question though; I can imagine there are components that are specifically built for iOS or Android. How do you handle those differences?
Sounds interesting, but I've seen similar claims from Flutter and React Native, isn't this just another cross-platform thing that's gonna perform worse than native dev, might be good for startups but kinda skeptical about its performance and long-term usability without proprietary runtimes, anyone tried it and had a good experience?
This is an awesome tool and I've been playing around with it over the past week. I'm putting together a demo app with it to test the platform and I have to say it's really going well. I'm so excited to ship an app with Skip on Android. Upvoted!
Okay, so we've got another cross-platform development tool, like Flutter, React Native, and Xamarin, but focusing on Swift and Kotlin, it's an interesting approach, but I'm not sure how it's different from the existing ones or if there's a real need for it, if it delivers on native performance would be cool, but we've seen promises like this before, and they often fall short in real-world scenarios, wondering if devs actually need another tool that makes big promises but might not live up to the
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