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What a Low Code Platform Offers Frontend Developers
Frontend Development / Software Development

What a Low Code Platform Offers Frontend Developers

Low code platforms such as Appian can be a tool to speed application development and create business alignment.
Oct 6th, 2022 11:00am by Loraine Lawson
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Development has been the story of one abstraction after another, starting with abstracting away from machine language to modern programming languages.

Low code is simply the next step, contends Adam Glaser, a former developer and senior vice president of engineering at Appian, a low code workflow automation and application platform.

“Low code is simply the next level of abstraction,” Glaser told The New Stack. “It’s got all the same capabilities, all the same power, all the same flexibility, [it’s] just a new way of telling the computer what you want it to.”

Glaser compared it to Excel users — one type would be a basic user, another user might be able to go a bit more advanced with formulas, and an advanced user might be writing macros; but they’re all users.

“Low code allows people with different levels of fluency to create applications,” he said.

Organizations are using low code solutions as a way of speeding up the development process and democratizing development, he said.

Where Appian Fits in with Developers

Appian is a platform for building automation-based applications, he explained. Low code isn’t the only feature of the platform, of course. It also incorporates other technology tools, including Robotic Process Automation (RPA), intelligent document processing, and artificial intelligence.

“We’ve everything you need to connect to data in the enterprise through integrations, everything you need to model that data, everything you need to visualize and execute workflows, everything you need to create interfaces that end users or knowledge workers use, that are both web and mobile,” he said.

Often that’s where web developers come into play — they use Appian to create interfaces that are harmonious with enterprise brand standards or fit in with their information architecture, he added.

Low code can also speed the development process because it’s faster than custom code, he said. It combines a WYSIWYG, drag-and-drop experience with the ability to tweak the code in an editor.

“You can start with the idea of an application, break it down into the first part you want to bring online, and bring it online within weeks,” he said.

Low code tools offer common ground for business stakeholders and developers to work together, he added.

“Those kickoffs are literally done in the same room with the business stakeholder and the developer. They start to model out the application that they’re going to end up producing,” he said. “It’s very common for them to bring their UI team and show examples of what they’re hoping to get or what their users are accustomed to, if they’re replacing something.”

How Appian Works

Appian uses SAIL — Self-Assembling Interface Layer — a framework that takes declarative UI definitions to generate dynamic, interactive and multiplatform user experiences. It’s a scripting type language underlying the platform, Glaser explained.

“It lets that local developer describe the interface they want, describe the applet parts of the application, and then lets us handle things like accessibility, making it automatically available on web and mobile, automatically making it offline, things like automatic parallelization of the logic — which is crazy good for performance,” he said. “If different parts of the interface can be updating in parallel, then you cut down on the wait time for the users.”

Appian also supports converting enterprise apps to web or mobile apps that run natively, he said. The low code approach can also support native cloud developers.

Democratizing Business Apps

Appian clients are primarily enterprises, he said, with customers come from a variety of industries — including energy, the Department of Defense, financial services and insurance. One popular use cases in the financial services sector has been creating loan origination apps, Glaser said. The DoD used Appian to build Common Access Card (CAC) readers and incorporate GPS into the app.

Low code can help businesses break away from one-size-fits-all software solutions, he added.

“The more we can democratize technology, the more we empower businesses to take control of their own destiny and have whatever software they need to run their business,” he said. “By making it more accessible, we’re really augmenting the uniqueness with which each enterprise can express the way they want to do business in their software.”

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Loraine Lawson is a veteran technology reporter who has covered technology issues from data integration to security for 25 years. Before joining The New Stack, she served as the editor of the banking technology site Bank Automation News. She has...
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