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AngularDart vs Flutter: What are the differences?

Key Differences between AngularDart and Flutter

  1. 1. Language and Framework: AngularDart is a web application framework that uses the Dart programming language, which is a statically-typed language optimized for web applications. On the other hand, Flutter is a mobile UI framework that uses Dart as its programming language, but it compiles to native code for both Android and iOS platforms.

  2. 2. Platform Support: AngularDart primarily focuses on web applications and can be used to build responsive, single-page web apps. It is compatible with web browsers and can be used across various desktop and mobile platforms. On the other hand, Flutter is specifically designed for building native mobile applications and provides a rich set of pre-built UI components for iOS and Android platforms.

  3. 3. UI Development: AngularDart follows a declarative approach, where UI elements are defined using HTML templates and data binding is used to reflect changes. It also provides a set of built-in directives and components to enhance UI development. Meanwhile, Flutter uses a reactive and widget-based approach, where the entire UI is represented as a tree of widgets. Developers can compose the UI by combining various widgets and can also easily create custom widgets for more customized UI elements.

  4. 4. Hot Reload and Development Experience: AngularDart provides a hot reload feature that allows developers to quickly see the changes they make in the code without restarting the application. It also provides a comprehensive development experience with tools like IDE support, code analyzers, and debugging tools. Flutter, on the other hand, takes the hot reload concept to the next level with "hot reload" and "hot restart" features that enable developers to see the changes instantly on both iOS and Android platforms. It also offers a rich set of debugging and development tools.

  5. 5. Ecosystem and Community: AngularDart benefits from the wider Angular ecosystem, which includes a large community, extensive documentation, and various third-party libraries and tools. It is built and maintained by Google, which ensures continuous support and updates. Flutter, on the other hand, has a growing community and ecosystem with a focus specifically on mobile app development. It is also backed by Google and has gained popularity due to its cross-platform capabilities.

  6. 6. Performance and Native Integration: While AngularDart provides good performance for web applications, it is not optimized for mobile platforms and may not offer the same level of performance as native mobile apps. Flutter, being a mobile UI framework, focuses on delivering high-performance apps by compiling to native code. It also provides easy integration with native device features and APIs, allowing developers to create apps with a native look and feel.

In Summary, AngularDart is primarily designed for web applications using the Dart programming language, while Flutter is a mobile UI framework that allows developers to build native apps for iOS and Android platforms using Dart. The frameworks differ in terms of language, platform support, UI development approach, development experience, ecosystem, and performance.

Advice on AngularDart and Flutter
Nikhilesh Goyal
Senior Embedded Engineer at GreyOrange · | 5 upvotes · 500.3K views
Needs advice
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FlutterFlutterReact NativeReact Native
and
UnityUnity

Hi Friends, I am new to #MobileAppDevelopment and I need to make a #CrossPlatformMobileApp. I want guidance regarding which tools should I use to build a mobile app. Main requirements: integrate Unity game engine and provide a platform for social chats.

Past experience - C++ and Python

I have tagged Flutter and React Native but if anything better than both please suggest them.

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Replies (3)
Sahil Singh
Product Manager at AutoVRse · | 11 upvotes · 454.4K views
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on
UnityUnity

Hey, If you are using Unity you are going to have to do the end to end development on Unity, you can directly build for android and iOS on Unity. I dont see how Flutter or React Native fit into this equation. Unity is a standalone engine. As for Social Chats, you could use Firebase or your own API and integrate that in Unity in C#

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Recommends
on
UnityUnity

I agree with Sahil. If Unity is a requirement, best way is to use just that to create your app.

If you really want, it should be possible to use Flutter and Unity together. Using Flutter Unity Widget. Although I wouldn't recommend it just yet. It's too early days.

If you do end up using it, I would be very interested in reading about your experiences.

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Mathieu Grenier
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on
UnityUnity

You can start by small steps with Flutter and after Unity. Flutter = best choice to build a small cross-platform mobile app. With or no flutter, use directly Unity. Y'll have complete control but it's harder for new mobile developers. Keep in mind, the requirement is Unity!

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Needs advice
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AngularDartAngularDartFlutterFlutter
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WordPressWordPress

I'm very keen to dart language. I'm looking for a simple way of creating a web version of my app: https://onelink.to/guiadebulas.

I don't know yet whether I'll need a back-end server, since my app database is so simple. Maybe some search functionality could be handled by the user browser. I also need to implement ads.

I appreciate every suggestion. It could also be an unmentioned framework. Thanks

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Replies (1)
Sergii Shyran
Developer at Shyran Systems · | 2 upvotes · 4K views
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Stick with Flutter to keep things simple for now... When PWA-WP plugin migrates to wp-core, then you'll have a good option to consider migrating to headless WordPress & Gatsby...

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Needs advice
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FlutterFlutter
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React NativeReact Native

Hi, I'm a web dev and am using Electron for a desktop app. Now I have to develop a mobile app with the following features:

  • Posting/uploading files by users, private messaging between users, download files, moderation of the uploads, push notification of new posts.
  • Mods can ban users and delete files.
  • Share buttons from the library folder of the user phone.
  • When a user uploads a photo, a pencil tool for deleting staff on the pic.

Which tool is better for such a project?

Thanks in advance

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Replies (2)
Lee Dydo
Technology Development Manager at Outform · | 5 upvotes · 402.8K views
Recommends
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React NativeReact Native

Given your experience in electron I think the shortest hop is going to be React Native. Especially since half of the requirements are server-side. Google is doing a pretty great job bringing up Flutter and the tooling is pretty great. For me however, dart seemed like quicksand and not everything is in its final home. React Native is mature, and considering my cursory analysis of your experience and the low complexity of this project, you've got quite a lot of room to grow into Javascript Land. Ultimately, my recommendation is always "play with both, see what you like, and get to know the documentation and the community." Keep your head on a swivel and set aside time to peek greener pastures, but spend most of your time delving deeply into what you're already doing.

But yeah, go with React Native first, get bored of it, learn what the shortcomings are through experience and then see if something else is really more attractive or just a new shiny.

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Varun Sharma
CTO at Nugen Computer & I.T. Services · | 5 upvotes · 402.8K views
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React NativeReact Native

Well, I will personally recommend to go for React Native as I have worked in both of them. React native has big community and it is easy to opt as compared to Flutter. There no doubt about the fact that Flutter is a great framework for developing both Android/IOS apps. However, you should have some experience to go for the same. Both will require prior knowledge as for React Native you have to go through Javascript first with which you are already familiar and for Flutter you need to go through Dart. So being familiar with Javascript you should go for React Native. You can go expo which has lot of inbuilt functionalities for the React Native developers.

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Needs advice
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Hi, we are an early startup (with an iPOC prototype) but need to get started on our MVP, and our tech developers in India recommended a hybrid, and they use Ionic, then we spoke with a software company in the US and he recommended Flutter or React Native. Any advice or input for us on the differences between these? Our app will need Bluetooth GPS for "near me" and social media sharing reviews capability, and also link on the backend with businesses. Thanks in advance for any help you can give!

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Replies (6)
Dario Alves
Arquiteto de Software at Senior sistemas · | 2 upvotes · 525.3K views
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on
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Maturity, Community, Facility, Libs React Native is the principal platform of mobile cross-platform development today, Flutter is it's a promise.

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Ahmad Khan
Recommends
on
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I would never recommend you to go with Ionic, Because of the User experience it provides is subpar. Flutter is most promising, Can be easily used to develop great user experience in no time. React native is also good, but it's phasing out in my opinion, while Ionic has already phased out. Flutter also provides great developer experience, resulting in fast and productive developers. I would have to press hard to think of a CON about flutter when recommending it for your needs.

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on
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Flutter is built on DART which is written in GO. GO compiles to binary. Hence is faster than any java based framework. It provides superior performance and has a simplified UI process for designing apps.

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Nicolas Kovacs
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on
FlutterFlutter

Even if React Native is older (I didn't say mature) you should go for Flutter, It's works really well and the developer experience is great (auto-completion, plugin etc). I spent years with React Native and now I am using Flutter and I don't regret It. Even if you have to learn a new language, It's pretty simple even more If you know some OOP, Java and Javascript ES6 syntax in some case. One other advantage is the facility to design app in Flutter, you have widgets for everything and you can adapt any design made by your designer. For example you can't make a simple custom box shadow with React-Native ...

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Recommends
on
IonicIonic
at

I don‘t have practical experience with flutter but between ionic and react native I‘d say both a perfectly viable options and we have used both for a number of production apps. We normally go with ionic on capacitor because we build a lot of pwa/web apps so we can use the same code for all. We don‘t use much of ionic elements, we do most styles on our own.

The comments that the user experience is bad I cannot agree with. A well designed and developed ionic apo can hardly be distinguished from a native app. But obviously that depends also on the usecase and type of app.

I hope this helps

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Kevin Lücke
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on
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It depends also on your team skills. Flutter is fast to learn, fast to develop with and the performance is much better in comparison to React. If your team is already highly skilled in React Native it could be the better option - if not Flutter is my 100% recommendation. We rapidly prototype and deliver MVPs with Flutter since two years.

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Alexis Poveda
Needs advice
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ElectronElectronFlutterFlutter
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IonicIonic

Hi! I have to develop a software solution for a youth church group, for my graduation project. In the first meeting that I have with the coordinators, they did not have a clear idea of what they want. The biggest problem they have is the attendance control, they do it manually and that causes errors.

I was thinking of developing an Android app in Android Studio because that is the tool I master, but a friend told me that I consider using a tool that builds for iOS, Android and web. I have like 6 months. I own a MacBookAir but I do not know Swift (for iOS). I am familiar with MySQL, PHP, Apache, JSP,HTML,CSS.

Summary: What tool can I use that is easy to learn and easy to scale?

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Replies (5)
Recommends
on
IonicIonic

It's probably not relevant anymore, but I think Ionic with Angular as the frontend is the right choice. For IDE I would choose Visual Studio Code. You can just create a basic web application with responsive design, which is already included if you are going to use Ionic components with Material Design to create your app. You don't need to know Swift, you don't even have to create mobile apps, just create a responsive (Ionic already is) web app, or PWA. Upon browsing your website from a mobile device for example using google chrome, you will be prompted to create a shortcut of the website in your mobile phone. After you do this, there will be an icon in your phone that looks like an icon to launch an app, it will launch your website in full screen mode - for the user's perspective it will look like he is using a native app. Access https://ionicframework.com/docs/angular/pwa from your android chrome browser, go to tab options (3 vertical dots), click on Add to Home screen. When you launch the website from the shortcut, you'll see that it behaves and looks like a native app.

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Recommends
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IonicIonic

I think you should chose between Flutter and Ionic. With those two options, the main question is about graphs and performance. Are they really important for your application? If the answer is yes, your tool is Flutter but, if the answer is that you need an easy tool to create an app with some basic components I would choose Ionic. You have a library with lots of components that you can use and they have native UI by default (for Android and iOS).

You will find more support if you use Ionic with Angular as frontend framework (you have the option to use Vue or React but this is a new feature for Ionic and I think there are more difficult to learn than Angular).

You can develop and debug the majority of features on PC (I don't know if that is possible with Flutter). And when you will finish the app, create iOS and Android versions is simple.

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Flutter is easy to use and easy to understand. Once you have completed the android platform, you can easily build it to ios, Web or desktop on a single code base.

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Carlos Esteban Lopez Jaramillo
Recommends
on
IonicIonic
  1. Electron is for desktop apps, so not useful for you.
  2. Flutter has better performance, but Ionic is decent as well, I would use Ionic unless you're making a game or graphic-intensive app.
  3. Ionic is more flexible since you have the whole NPM ecosystem available, while flutter is more recent, thus libraries for it are less in quantity and battle-tested than the ones in NPM.
  4. Ionic 4 introduced CSS variables, which improved immensely the theming process for the app, which was the hardest issue Ionic development had.
  5. Ionic has extended to many frameworks so it's compatible with Angular and React frameworks, meaning more flexibility, personally I would recommend Ionic with Angular over React since it's more suited to enterprise-level apps.
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Alejandro Ulate Fallas
Mobile Developer at Build SRL · | 2 upvotes · 321.8K views
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on
IonicIonic

Hi there. So Electron embeds everything in a webview, which means that what you would have to develop would be a Node project most probably. Ionic does the same (kindof but won't bore you with specifics) but it does it much more efficiently. Usually you do Ionic apps with JS frameworks like Angular or React (this one recently added). Flutter on the other hand does native apps, it does it really good but it's support for Web is in beta and it's relatively simple to setup if you already know the SDK and the environment.

My recommendation would be that you do your app using Angular/Ionic if you reaaally need the multi-platform environment and there's different reasons in this case:

  • Since it's a graduation project you need it to be as simple as it can be and adding a new technology adds to the learning curve.
  • Flutter is great if you have different complex UI or if you have specific performance needs that require native support and in your case it does not seem like you need that.
  • Flutter is also an incredibly powerful tool but it's learning curve might be tricky if you have not developed native apps before so I wouldn't recommend you start off like this if you have time sensitive projects like a graduation project. It does have great docs and an awesome community but I'd suggest you stick as close to what you know as you can.
  • Ionic/Angular uses Typescript (a type javascript wrapper) and Angular (JS framework) so you will have to learn a little bit but if you already know HTML, CSS and Javascript you won't have that much of a hard time. Also there's quite a lot in terms of documentation and tooling already tested around this combination.
  • Ionic/Angular has a really good CLI that helps you stick to the architecture they recommend so you wouldn't have to worry about it that much.
  • Ionic/Angular helps you test either locally in the web browser as well as your devices which is in the end what you want if you are looking for a multi-platform system. Flutter also does this but is not quite in a stable state (yet!).

Anyway, in the end, if you go for the multi-platform suggestion I think, because of time you would be better off with Ionic. If you decide that you don't need that as of right now (which is fine as well) you can start with just the Android app and plan on the different things you might eventually need like a website or other different stuff. Cheers!

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Decisions about AngularDart and Flutter
Thuan Nguyen
FE Lead at SOLID ENGINEER · | 5 upvotes · 650.8K views
  • Javascripts is the most populated language in the world.
  • Easy to learn & deployed production
  • Fast development
  • Strong community
  • Completed Documents
  • Native performance with lower RAM used.
  • Easy to handle native issues by using native code like Java / Objective C
  • Powered by Facebook.
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awesomebanana2018
Chose
FlutterFlutter
over
IonicIonic

While with Ionic it is possible to make mobile applications with only web technologies, Flutter is more performant and is easy to use if you are willing to learn Dart, which is a fun language. Plus, it has awesome documentation and, while its ecosystem isn't near as big as JavaScript's is, it has a good package manager called Pub and its packages are generally high quality.

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Nick Skriabin

We built the first version of our app with RN and it turned out a mess in a while. A lot of bugs along with poor performance out of the box for a fairly large app. Many things, that native platform has, cannot be done with existing solutions for RN. For instance, large titles on iOS are not fully implemented in any of existing navigations libraries. Also there's painfully slow JSON bridge and many other small, yet annoying things. On the other hand Flutter became a really powerful and easy-to-use tool. A bit of a learning curve, of course, because of Dart, but it worth learning. Flutter offers TONS of built-in features, no JSON-bridge, AOT compilation for iOS.

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Pros of AngularDart
Pros of Flutter
  • 1
    Dart Language
  • 144
    Hot Reload
  • 124
    Cross platform
  • 106
    Performance
  • 90
    Backed by Google
  • 74
    Compiled into Native Code
  • 62
    Fast Development
  • 59
    Open Source
  • 53
    Fast Prototyping
  • 50
    Single Codebase
  • 48
    Expressive and Flexible UI
  • 37
    Reactive Programming
  • 35
    Material Design
  • 31
    Dart
  • 30
    Widget-based
  • 26
    Target to Fuchsia
  • 21
    IOS + Android
  • 17
    Easy to learn
  • 16
    Great CLI Support
  • 15
    You can use it as mobile, web, Server development
  • 14
    Tooling
  • 13
    Good docs & sample code
  • 13
    Have built-in Material theme
  • 13
    Debugging quickly
  • 12
    Community
  • 12
    Target to Android
  • 11
    Support by multiple IDE: Android Studio, VS Code, XCode
  • 11
    Written by Dart, which is easy to read code
  • 10
    Easy Testing Support
  • 10
    Real platform free framework of the future
  • 9
    Target to iOS
  • 9
    Have built-in Cupertino theme
  • 8
    Easy to Unit Test
  • 8
    Easy to Widget Test
  • 1
    Large Community

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Cons of AngularDart
Cons of Flutter
    Be the first to leave a con
    • 29
      Need to learn Dart
    • 11
      Lack of community support
    • 10
      No 3D Graphics Engine Support
    • 8
      Graphics programming
    • 6
      Lack of friendly documentation
    • 2
      Lack of promotion
    • 1
      Https://iphtechnologies.com/difference-between-flutter

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    - No public GitHub repository available -

    What is AngularDart?

    It is a leaner, meaner version of the framework. A number of conventions, services, and other code is part of Angular only to fill in JavaScript’s gaping holes in functionality.

    What is Flutter?

    Flutter is a mobile app SDK to help developers and designers build modern mobile apps for iOS and Android.

    Need advice about which tool to choose?Ask the StackShare community!

    What companies use AngularDart?
    What companies use Flutter?
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    What are some alternatives to AngularDart and Flutter?
    React
    Lots of people use React as the V in MVC. Since React makes no assumptions about the rest of your technology stack, it's easy to try it out on a small feature in an existing project.
    TypeScript
    TypeScript is a language for application-scale JavaScript development. It's a typed superset of JavaScript that compiles to plain JavaScript.
    AngularJS
    AngularJS lets you write client-side web applications as if you had a smarter browser. It lets you use good old HTML (or HAML, Jade and friends!) as your template language and lets you extend HTML’s syntax to express your application’s components clearly and succinctly. It automatically synchronizes data from your UI (view) with your JavaScript objects (model) through 2-way data binding.
    Hummingbird
    It is a library for compiling trained traditional ML models into tensor computations. It allows users to seamlessly leverage neural network frameworks (such as PyTorch) to accelerate traditional ML models.
    JavaScript
    JavaScript is most known as the scripting language for Web pages, but used in many non-browser environments as well such as node.js or Apache CouchDB. It is a prototype-based, multi-paradigm scripting language that is dynamic,and supports object-oriented, imperative, and functional programming styles.
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