Which no-code tool is good to start with?

Rajan Verma (Aarvy)
10 replies
I am a full-stack developer for 6 years and now want to shift to new tools for faster developments. Which is the good one to start with a simple learning curve?

Replies

Sandeep Acharya
They are all good at building the homepage and landing page. But not good if you want to do content marketing. That's why I suggest using a tool like docswrite.com to add a /blog to your website. With DocsWrite, you can create a blog from Google Docs in 30 seconds.
Mariam Yusuf
Depends on what you want to do. There are many other good no code tools as well in addition to above.
Mariam Yusuf
@rajanverma Adalo. Siteoly. AppGyver are worth checking. You can check this list I made: https://www.nocodeportal.com/lis...
Leigh
Webflow for building sites has the most customization. If you need to extend Webflow functionality then I would use Make (used to be Integromat) and Airtable.
Anil Meena
Webflow & Bubble are the best but both of them have totally different learning curve. If you are from design background, start with webflow and if you understand how technology works a little or have fair understanding of excel, start with bubble. With webflow you'll also get to learn about zapier, airtable, etc other no code tool which are brilliant in their own way. Start with any one of these, within a month or so you'll easily grasp the others as well.
Hélène SAN
Webflow is really hard to use to my point of view but if you watch a lot of tuto it can be magical trust me
dhanilan m.s.
you can try undaku platform cuts short the digital barriers to create solutions for businesses without the need for coding. Now anyone in your team - business analysts, process associates, IT professionals - can build intent-based apps as quickly as dragging and dropping features into a custom interface. https://www.undaku.com/
Edun Kerry
Webflow and bubble are the best on the list currently for me but it still requires some technical know how knowledge