DECEMBER 2022CIOAPPLICATIONS.COM6Copyright © 2022 ValleyMedia, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part of any text, photography or illustrations without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts, photographs or illustrations. Views and opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the magazine and accordingly, no liability is assumed by the publisher thereof.DECEMBER - 19- 2022, Volume 08 - Issue 13 (ISSN 2644-240X) Published by ValleyMedia, Inc. To subscribe to CIO ApplicationsVisit www.cioapplications.com Managing EditorJoe PhillipEmailsales@cioapplications.comeditor@cioapplications.commarketing@cioapplications.comEditorialLow-Code and No-Code Fuelling Digital TransformationAccording to Expert Market Research, the market for low-code development platforms would expand at a CAGR of 25.26 percent from 2022 to 2027 and reach a value of USD 64.56 billion by 2026. Low-code application development is not a new concept, but a convergence of digital disruptions, hyperautomation, and the advent of composable business has resulted in an influx of technologies and increasing demand.The corresponding rise of low-code application platforms, or LCAPs, is driving the increase of citizen development, and the growth of business technologists who report outside of IT departments and create technology or analytics capabilities for internal or external business use. This is shifting the way applications are built. Application development will shift to assembly and integration, with the teams that use them assembling and composing them. In fact, it's likely the percentage of new applications developed in LCAP environments will go way beyond the 70 percent.Building with low-code is faster than traditional coding, but it's not as fast as it could be. The applications you end up building with low-code are rarely optimized for efficiency. With low-code, code is inserted into the configuration before being interpreted and rendered by the browser. You'll still have to go in and test the code you wrote, meaning you'll inevitably spend a lot of time debugging errors that you didn't catch--which is one of the primary reasons that hand-coded projects take longer than anticipated in the first place.No-code is totally visual, thus it was designed to be quick. The entire programme is configured graphically as opposed to low-code, which is then parsed and presented by the browser. Because the changes you make in Unqork are immediately visible, you may make any necessary adjustments in the moment and take care of any problems before continuing with the building process. Businesses shouldn't completely shun other approaches to enterprise app development because of a negative low-code experience. We needed a better approach to build, which is why low-code/no-code trends for the workplace evolved. Today, no-code has outperformed its predecessor in usability, functionality, and speed.Let us know your thoughts.Joe PhillipManaging Editoreditor@cioapplications.comJoe PhillipGraphics & ArtEditorial StaffBen JacksonDaniel HolmesEzra BenjaminCatalina JosephRose DcruzSenior WritersClara MathewLeah JaneRoyce D'SouzaAsher BlakeDisclaimer: *Some of the Insights are based on our interviews with CIOs and CXOs
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