Low Code vs. Traditional Development: A Comprehensive Comparison

Low code development has gained significant momentum in recent years as a trend in software development. According to MarketsandMarkets, the low code development market is expected to achieve a substantial growth rate of 28.1% and reach a value of $45.5 billion by 2025. This significant growth demonstrates the growing demand and adoption of low-code platforms across various industries and businesses of all sizes.

But how does low code compare to traditional development, which relies on coding languages and frameworks? Is low code suitable for complex and scalable projects? What are the benefits and drawbacks of each approach? And most importantly, how can you determine which one is best for your needs?

Low Code and No Code: The Security Challenge

This is an article from DZone's 2022 Low Code and No Code Trend Report.

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Many companies are looking to low-code and no-code platforms to build apps in the visual environment. They provide the opportunity for faster app development and reduce the dependence on highly skilled developers. Companies may hire less experienced or only minimally trained staff (I’ll call them citizen developers) to meet service gaps and to respond to skills shortages, ensuring their larger dev team can focus on more advanced projects. 

Migrating Legacy Applications and Services to Low Code

This is an article from DZone's 2022 Low Code and No Code Trend Report.

For more:


Read the Report

Low code accelerates and optimizes software development with a visual approach. It automates the development process and makes it easier to deliver solutions by providing visual tools that simplify and democratize development. But low code isn't just for new projects. It's a good candidate for migrating legacy applications, too. When moving an existing application to low code, you shorten development time and effort, save money, and take a big step toward cloud migration. 

Increase Your DevOps Productivity Using Infrastructure as Low Code

As an individual developer or as a part of a wider software development or IT team, you will find that time is rarely on your side, with many competing priorities throughout the working week. This naturally focuses you to look for ways to increase your productivity through the use of technology and tools to help you achieve more in less time. Throughout this blog post, we’re going to look at DevOps productivity and compare traditional tools with infrastructure as low code tools. 

Automate Software Development Tasks With DevOps Tooling

Everyone has heard of DevOps, yet many people struggle to understand exactly what DevOps is. Fundamentally DevOps is a perfect mixture of the philosophy of DevOps along with daily practices and supporting technology tools to enable you to deliver value through technology rapidly to your customers. 

Low Code and No-Code Considerations

Low-code and no-code development platforms have been the trending IT topic for some time now. Experts in this field speculate as to how they could change the future of the industry. Some publications predict the gradual decline of traditional IT, as low-code and no-code products continue to reshape the very approach to solutions development. But, before we get into a discussion on the future of low-code and no-code, let’s define what these terms actually mean.

What Is Low-Code/No-Code?

Low-code and no-code tools help scale and maximize software delivery. The grid below explains, defines, and differentiates low-code vs. no-code tools.

Build a Mobile App With Language Translator Service Without Coding [Video]

I recorded a three-part video that shows how to build a mobile application without any code. I'm very passionate about Low Code/No Code platforms. I think there is a resurgence of Low Code/No Code tools. As demand for more applications is only going to grow, Low Code tooling can help technical people (and non-technical) to build applications much faster.

In this three-part video you will learn: