Square has been using it for awhile: https://developer.squareup.com/blog/developing-on-ios-and-an...
Exactly - the team from the article went with a shared architecture from the start. They set themselves up to make this kind of thing possible.
fyi Jetbrains is combining the js, jvm, and native compiler pipelines. All three will use the IR infrastructure currently used by kotlin/native.
They literally say in the article that 50% of their code is decoupled from the platform.
Mobile apps often achieve better conversion rates than mobile websites - at least for e-commerce.
Square has been using it for awhile: https://developer.squareup.com/blog/developing-on-ios-and-an...
Exactly - the team from the article went with a shared architecture from the start. They set themselves up to make this kind of thing possible.
fyi Jetbrains is combining the js, jvm, and native compiler pipelines. All three will use the IR infrastructure currently used by kotlin/native.
They literally say in the article that 50% of their code is decoupled from the platform.
Mobile apps often achieve better conversion rates than mobile websites - at least for e-commerce.