Do you prefer to use UI frameworks which make a distinction between UI files and application code (e.g. Qt, GTK, Angular) or do you prefer to define the UI in the application code (e.g. Flutter, Jetpack Compose, React)?

  • @Lmaydev@programming.dev
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    511 months ago

    Always separate where possible. In my experience things can end up a tangled mess really easily.

    I’m a big fan of mvvm. Keeps everything separate and simple.

  • @nargacu83@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I did both, separated is my way to go. Having both separated makes things easier and cleaner IMHO. You can have a designer to create these seperated layouts, which is pretty cool when you’re a UI/UX designer. The ability to reuse the same code with a different UI layout. And of course generates less conflicts on Git when someone worked on the code while you where on the UI.

  • @nachtigall@feddit.de
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    211 months ago

    I prefer to define the UI in application code, because separation introduces a lot of overhead for bindings.

    Nevertheless, I think it is important separate UI code from business logic.

  • glibg10b
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    111 months ago

    Separating them allows you to add additional interfaces, such as command-line interfaces, APIs and web pages

  • fusio
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    111 months ago

    depends what you mean by application code… I’d say if your business logic is exclusively used by a ui feature the best is to keep them together. but you probably want to abstract away things like data access. I found working with a nx monorepo helps reasoning about how to structure your code.