Build a Native Mobile Category Page with SAP AppGyver Tutorial (Part 3 of 3)

In the first part of the Build a Native Mobile Category Page tutorial, we implemented the required metadata and main page canvas required for our category page. If you missed the first part of the tutorial, click here to read the first installment of Build a Native Mobile Cateory Page with SAP AppGyver. In the second part of the tutorial, we configured JSON data stored on Mockachino's mock JSON API site to our Chair App. Click here to review the second installment of Build a Native Mobile Category Page with SAP AppGyver. In this final installment of the three part …

Build a Native Mobile Category Page with SAP AppGyver Tutorial (Part 2 of 3)

In the first part of the Build a Native Mobile Category Page tutorial, we implemented the metadata and main canvas required for the category page. If you missed the first part of the tutorial, click here to read the first installment of Build a Native Mobile Category Page with SAP AppGyver. In this second part of the tutorial, we will configure the mock categories JSON data stored on Mockachino to our application, which will be configured to our category page. One thing to note, the mock JSON data is an abbreviated dataset from a live SAP Commerce Cloud site. As …

Build a Native Mobile Category Page with SAP AppGyver Tutorial (Part 1 of 3)

We will build a native mobile e-commerce category page using SAP AppGyver over a three-part tutorial. In this first part of the tutorial, we will implement the required metadata and main page canvas. In the second part, we will configure the category page to mock JSON data stored on Mockachino. One thing to note, the category page's data is an abbreviated JSON dataset from a live SAP Commerce Cloud site. In the third part, we will configure the JSON data to the AppGyver's Image list item repeatable component. The app truly comes to life to display a great looking category …

SAP AppGyver: Low-Code/No-Code Application Development Envrionment

As a development team, we began our SAP Commerce implementation journeys in 2014 as individual developers either working in the industry or implementation partners. We originally landed on the SAP Commerce platform because of our respective Java development backgrounds. I started learning Java in 1996, and deployed my first production Java application in 1997. Even though I have been working as a professional software engineer for over two decades, I am still very excited to learn something new that can help our clients save money and/or deliver solutions more quickly. Low-Code/No-Code (LCNC) Application Development I had been hearing so much …