It is fully interoperable with Android apps and can be embedded easily for a single button or an entire screen. ![]() With this 1.0 version release, Compose is ready for prime time. And, to show that the Android team really believes in their product, the Play Store app itself uses Compose. “With a fully declarative approach you just describe your UI and Compose takes care of the rest,” she said.Īccording to Google, there are already 2,000 apps in the Play Store using Compose. ![]() “We built Jetpack Compose to make it faster and easier to build beautiful apps in way less code so you can more time spend bringing your app to life.”Īdopting a new framework is a big change, explained Bellini, but Compose makes it easy because it’s native and fully interoperable with all Android code. “With Jetpack Compose in 1.0 it means it’s fully stable and so it’s time to start using it in your apps,” said Anna-Chiara Bellini, product manager at Google. It is deeply integrated with Android Studio, which is why these announcements are paired. The Android team has been working on Compose for two years, with its alpha first introduced in August last year. It helps Android developers streamline UI development and lower the time it takes to get to production. ![]() Google LLC’s Android developer team today announced two major product releases: the 1.0 version of Jetpack Compose, Android’s toolkit for building native user interfaces, and the stable release of the Android Studio Arctic Fox visual code editor to take advantage of its features.Ĭompose is designed to make it easier for developers to design interactive, intuitive, native UIs for apps with as little coding as possible.
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