Book Image

Build Customized Apps with Amazon Honeycode

By : Aniruddha Loya
Book Image

Build Customized Apps with Amazon Honeycode

By: Aniruddha Loya

Overview of this book

Amazon Honeycode enables you to build fully managed, customizable, and scalable mobile and web applications for personal or professional use with little to no code. With this practical guide to Amazon Honeycode, you’ll be able to bring your app ideas to life, improving your and your team’s/organization’s productivity. You’ll begin by creating your very first app from the get-go and use it as a means to explore the Honeycode development environment and concepts. Next, you’ll learn how to set up and organize the data to build and bind an app on Honeycode as well as deconstruct different templates to understand the common structures and patterns that can be used. Finally, you’ll build a few apps from scratch and discover how to apply the concepts you’ve learned. By the end of this app development book, you’ll have gained the knowledge you need to be able to build and deploy your own mobile and web applications. You’ll also be able to invite and share your app with people you want to collaborate with.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction to Honeycode
7
Part 2: Deep-Dive into Honeycode Templates
13
Part 3: Let's Build Some Apps

Technical requirements

To follow this chapter, you'll need to have access to Amazon Honeycode, which requires a laptop with a web browser, preferably Google Chrome, and optionally, a mobile device running either Honeycode's supported version of Android (currently Android 8.0 and up) or iOS (currently iOS 11 or later).

Furthermore, we'll use the Honeycode terminology and refer to the components that we covered in Chapter 2, Introduction to Honeycode; Chapter 3, Building Your First Honeycode Application; Chapter 4, Advanced Builder Tools in Honeycode; and Chapter 5, Powering the Honeycode apps with Automations. The instructions in this chapter for various tasks are provided with the assumption that you are familiar with those operations and, therefore, I recommend you to complete the referenced chapters before we start with this chapter.