![]() I don’t want to start a long argument, you can find a lot of interesting (and sometimes contradictive ) information by googling “webview vs iframe”.īut anyway: from mobile app perspective, in my personal opinion, I’d suggest avoiding using such type of integrations unless absolutely needed. In some frameworks like Electron both may exist, but this is a specific case. Webview is a separate “minibrowser” which displays web pages: WebView | Android Developers Just to clarify: iFrame is an HTML element: : The Inline Frame element - HTML: HyperText Markup Language | MDN ![]() Hi knew that you would mention the apps accessing the other companies’ websites Also you can use APIs to connect to other services - either to store the data (this is called External Collections, and Airtable could be used), or to process it (for example, send email to new subscriber via SendGrid). In Adalo you can create an app which have the frontend screens and logic, as well as a backend infrastructure to store the data. And then it renders the data to the user based on this app’s own built-in logic. It gets all the information from the backend server(s) - could be its own servers, could be 3rd party servers. It doesn’t use iframes to display product data, ad banners, or user questionnaires. Same story with Typeform - the best option will be trying to include this form as a link directly to Webview.Īs for your other question - again, try to think from the mobile app’s point of view. Not sure how it will work in native app, would be interesting to test). ![]() (I’m viewing this from desktop, so airtable content is displayed in a desktop mode checked PWA on my phone - displays correctly. ![]()
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