this post was submitted on 22 Jan 2025
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Right, I mentioned that you can do this at the OS level in my comment. However, the way iOS does it is not general, it's something devs have to do on case by case basis. What I'm talking about is the decoupling of the UI from the logic being the default. The OS can present a single unified UI to the user, and the apps just provide service functionality. The app can then add a default view for itself, but the user could adapt it any way they wanted.
I'm not sure I fully understand. Having a pre-made UI would limit what functionality could be implemented. And it sounds like the OS developer making 90% of an app then just letting third parties plug in their back end. Like a white label kind of thing? Or do you mean something more like UIKit/SwiftUI?
No more than the GUI toolkit that the OS already provides. You'd just build UIs like you normally do, and then specify the endpoints that the widgets connect to for the data. The key here is that all apps should be forced to explicitly provide an API layer that the UI component talks to, and that anything you as the user want should be able to talk to that API.
Ahh, yeah that would be pretty good, but I doubt it would ever happen in the West.
I do too unfortunately. Incidentally, this could even be handled by the GUI toolkit itself since native apps have to rely on it to build the user interface. The toolkit could just automatically generate a JSON API based on that for example.