A month into it, I can honestly say I can't recommend using the platform (yet). While the idea is an interesting one, it's bloated, buggy, slow, and doesn't offer much over optimizing a website for mobile devices. That said, the team behind the platform is great, and I'm confident they'll work out the kinks over the coming months to make it more user/developer friendly.
But they said "Shoutem apps are slick and fast", how could this be???
[1] - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/brides-wedding-genius-5-1/id...
https://github.com/shoutem/ui/issues/327 https://github.com/shoutem/ui/issues/328
Currently I'm using Expo, which is rather nice, but I have to detach rather often, because of stuff like PDF annotations or binary file storage.
How does Shoutem compare to Expo?
With that said, I think Dart isn't really a language popular enough to replace JS in big projects right now.
“4.2.2 Other than catalogs, apps shouldn’t primarily be marketing materials, advertisements, web clippings, content aggregators, or a collection of links”.
And also can you fix "40+ full-featured extensions" section css/jquery on hover its moving in speed I am unable to check all list.
most of the extensions in their platform are open source: https://github.com/shoutem/extensions
The extension is a bit different: https://github.com/shoutem/extensions/blob/master/LICENSE
Their documentation[2] wasn't great. It was out of date (missing component attributes, icons etc.) and lacked good examples. Often I would have to dig into the source to figure out obscure errors. When I first starting using @shoutem/ui, I couldn't use the latest version of React Native because they locked themselves into an experimental feature[3] which even until now, seems like it hasn't properly resolved.
Again. I can't comment on their platform but I didn't have a good time using their UI library. Had I known this, I would have just gone with NativeBase[4].
[1] - https://github.com/shoutem/ui
[2] - https://shoutem.github.io/docs/ui-toolkit/components/typogra...
[3] - https://github.com/shoutem/ui/issues/241
[4] - https://nativebase.io/
When contacted, they admitted that the only apps published using the Shoutem platform are ones that the company custom-built for some clients (their services are $10k+ a pop).
It sounds like this is just a marketing ploy and a way to get around Apple's new rules about app-builders.