Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by firloop 3112 days ago
The OP wasn't talking about users, but rather best practices on how to get the App Store makers to feature you. I've heard the App Store editorial team specifically give the "go native" advice.

It's definitely not required, it just helps. Our app got featured in one of the App Store's daily stories despite it being written in React Native.

1 comments

I kind of doubt that whoever does the feature pics looks at the binaries to figure out if it is native or not. As long as the end result is not easily distinguishable from native, I'm sure you are just as likely to be featured.
Yea if you play around you can really make an app look like native. Even in desktop it's difficult to figure out web apps wrapped under electron when they are done right..
> Even in desktop it's difficult to figure out web apps wrapped under electron when they are done right..

Name one.

VSCode is close if you squint or don't know where to look for the evidence of Electron.
Its UI paradigm looks out of place on macOS–it very much looks like a website in an app wrapper.
For you, but not for most people I’d guess. Or most people don’t care enough and that’s why VSCode is hugely popular.
"Its UI paradigm looks out of place on macOS "- Which part?
Sorry, didn't see the reply. You want a web app as close to native? Look no further - https://www.nylas.com/download, source https://github.com/nylas/nylas-mail.
It's close, but not quite there. I don't see vibrancy or features from standard text controls.
Telegram desktop