low-code

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

First used in a report by Forrester published on June 9, 2014 (see quotation).

Adjective[edit]

low-code (not comparable)

  1. (computing) (of a development environment) Primarily involving a graphical user interface rather than a text-based one.
    • 2014 June 9, Clay Richardson, John Rymer, “New Development Platforms Emerge For Customer-Facing Applications”, in Forrester[1]:
      Some firms are turning to new, "low-code" application platforms that accelerate app delivery by dramatically reducing the amount of hand-coding required.
    • 2021, Business Modeling and Software Design, page 345:
      Whereas no-code software aims at creating software applications entirely without writing any code in a programming language, low-code development takes a slightly relaxed perspective and is directed towards simplifying software development with less coding effort.
  2. (computing) (of an application) Programmed using a low-code development environment.
    • 2021, Leveraging Applications of Formal Methods, Verification and Validation, page 205:
      Low-code applications can hence accumulate high complexity, bugs and other forms technical debt just as badly or even worse than traditional applications. However, the languages created for low-code platforms commonly lack features that would assist in their understanding and maintenance, such as the ability or organize them into files and modules, or even to add detailed comments attached to individual code elements.

Noun[edit]

low-code (uncountable)

  1. (computing) The practice of developing applications via a low-code development environment.
    • 2022 September 21, Giulia Interesse, “The Low-Code/No-Code Industry in China: Opportunities for Foreign Investors”, in China Briefing[2]:
      However, the distinction between no-code and low-code is not always evident, and this extends to the low-code and no-code platforms themselves. Many technology product analysts regard no-code to be a subset of the low-code market because even the most powerful platforms need some amount of coding throughout the application development and deployment process.

Related terms[edit]