Capacitor vs Cordova: What are the Differences Between Them

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Capacitor vs Cordova: What are the Differences Between Them

For developers and teams evaluating new approaches to app development, this guide compares Capacitor vs Cordova, evaluates the differences, and provides an overview of how Capacitor vs Cordova stacks up as the preferred foundation for hybrid mobile app development.

What is Capacitor by Ionic?

Capacitor is an open source project that runs modern Web Apps natively on iOS, Android, Electron, and Web (using Progressive Web App technology) while providing a powerful and easy-to-use interface for accessing native SDKs and native APIs on each platform. As a PhoneGap and Cordova alternative, Capacitor delivers the same cross-platform benefits, but with a more modern approach to app development, taking advantage of the latest Web APIs and native platform capabilities.

It might be helpful to think of Capacitor as a powerful new browser for modern Web Apps that unlocks the full native functionality of each platform through consistent cross-platform APIs. Using Capacitor, developers can build one app and target one set of APIs regardless of the platform the app is running on, as opposed to managing multiple APIs for each target platform.

This means that, for example, accessing the Camera uses the same code on iOS/Android as it does on Electron and on the web. This makes it easy to build one web app that runs natively on mobile, desktop, and the web as a Progressive Web App!

At the end of the day, Capacitor apps are native apps. They can incorporate native UI controls and access any native SDK or API available on the platform. But unlike more traditional native apps, Capacitor apps  will likely have the bulk of the app running in an embedded WebView control that unlocks desired cross-platform benefits and efficiencies.

What is Cordova or PhoneGap?

Like Capacitor, Cordova is an open source project that runs web apps across multiple platforms, though not Electron nor web as a Progressive Web App. 

Cordova is the open source core of the commercial Adobe PhoneGap project, and for the purposes of this discussion they can be considered equivalent.

While Cordova and Capacitor have some similarities, the projects make very different decisions at several key points, such that the experience of the two projects is very different. Capacitor, released in 2018, also uses many new modern APIs that were not available when Cordova was created back in 2009.

Why are more developers using Capacitor?

First-class Progressive Web App (PWA) Support

Capacitor is the only native runtime to deliver first-class support for web apps and Progressive Web Apps.

In fact, we’ve taken it a step further by building out a collection of UI experiences for APIs like Camera that bring the native app UI experience users expect to Progressive Web Apps. We call this the Progressive Web App OS.

On top of that, building plugins that offer web functionality as a fallback is just as easy as adding a few files to your plugin! Capacitor will only use your web implementation if the native one is not available, so users can use the exact same API when running on iOS, Android, Electron, and the Web.

Capacitor takes a “web first” approach, and believes that the core of every great cross-platform hybrid app is a quality, modern Progressive Web App. This keeps your app aligned with the rapidly evolving web platform while enabling powerful native device functionality on platforms that support it.

Simple yet powerful CLI tooling that is version managed per app

Capacitor provides a small CLI tool that is installed locally to each app. That means there are no global dependencies to manage and it’s easy to use different versions of Capacitor across every app you build.

This is a boon to teams that are building multiple apps with potentially differing dependency versions or version management processes.

Native and web development teams can work side-by-side

Since Capacitor apps are actual native apps and a key design consideration of Capacitor is embracing native tooling, Capacitor enables teams that have a mixture of traditional native mobile and web developers to collaborate on mobile app projects.

Cordova, in contrast, works through an abstraction layer that manages the underlying native platform project and source files for you. This makes it harder to drop down to native code or work with a traditional native mobile development process, and can result in custom changes being lost.

In Capacitor, traditional native mobile developers can use their programming languages of choice (Swift/Objective-C on iOS, Java/Kotlin on Android) to build UI experiences or business logic and then expose them to the Web layer through Capacitor’s JavaScript-to-native APIs.

Additionally, developers can quickly add custom native code for specific platforms and optionally expose that code to the Web layer, ensuring an app team never gets stuck implementing the functionality it needs.

Add hybrid and web to an existing native app

Capacitor adds superpowers to the traditional Web View control available on each platform, and it was designed to be used anywhere a Web View would be used. That means it can easily be dropped into an existing native app codebase, making it possible to build certain screens of the app using Web Technology without the need to make any sweeping changes to the rest of the app codebase.

This is also a great way to let other teams that may have more of a traditional web development skillset participate in the development of the app without getting in the way of a traditional native development process.

Strong and growing adoption

Capacitor today is installed over 1.5 million times a year, and is currently powering major production enterprise apps with hundreds of millions of users.

Companies like Southwest are building out all new hire onboarding experiences on Capacitor and Ionic, and major brands like Burger King have built their primary consumer-facing mobile applications on top of Capacitor.

That’s just a small sample of teams building on Capacitor. Suffice to say that Capacitor is taking the hybrid app development ecosystem by storm and is a growing part of Ionic’s enterprise mobile business.

Capacitor has even convinced native developers or users of alternative platforms that see the benefits of web development on mobile and are happy that Capacitor is finally providing the development experience they desire.

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Discover how Burger King uses Capacitor to bring their custom design system to mobile. >

Capacitor is Enterprise ready and support and enterprise-specific functionality available

Capacitor is truly unique as an open source project in that it has a real company behind it that is in the business of enterprise app development. That means it’s our business to provide teams building mission-critical apps the support and enterprise-specific functionality they need to be successful and reduce risk.

Ionic is the creator of Ionic Framework and works with hundreds of enterprise customers building everything from major consumer transportation apps, fast-food retail apps, internal B2E apps, and a whole lot more.

Ionic is here to help with dedicated support across Capacitor and its native APIs, as well as providing advanced enterprise native features like secure token management, encrypted offline storage, and OpenID authentication. Additionally, teams can build best-of-breed user experiences on top of Capacitor using the highly popular Ionic Framework.

Capacitor is well maintained

Capacitor is a key aspect of Ionic’s mobile infrastructure and the infrastructure of its customers. That means security and functionality issues are discovered, fixed, and released quickly. Cordova, in contrast, works on a more classic group consensus system and, as it is not driven by business or support goals, does not prioritize the needs of any specific users. Cordova is also a volunteer driven effort.

Capacitor has a full time team of engineers, product management, marketing, and customer success experts dedicated to customer and project success.

Migrating to Capacitor is easy: Capacitor is backwards compatible with Cordova

If your team is currently using Cordova and curious about moving to Capacitor, then it will be welcome to know that Capacitor has backwards compatible support for a large swath of existing Cordova plugins. 

Additionally, migrating to Capacitor from Cordova is well documented and straightforward. If you are interested in migrating and would like assistance from our team, contact us to learn more about our professional Support and Advisory services that will make moving to Capacitor a breeze.

Getting Started with Capacitor  

Capacitor was designed to drop into any existing modern web app project and instantly add native and cross-platform capabilities.

To get started, follow the Capacitor Installation guide on the official Capacitor developer documentation site.

Capacitor can accelerate your organization’s mobile and web development efforts, and the Ionic team is here to help along the way.

Interested in learning more about Capacitor as a Cordova and PhoneGap alternative, enterprise support and advanced integrations, or the Ionic platform in general? Get in touch, we’d love to see how we can help your organization build market-leading apps in a fraction of time compared to traditional app development.

About Ionic

Ionic is the leading cross-platform developer solution with 5 million developers worldwide. It powers 15% of apps in the app store, not including thousands of apps built internally at enterprises for every line-of-business need. Ionic is unique in that it takes a web-first approach, leveraging HTML, CSS, and Javascript to build high-quality iOS, Android, desktop, and Progressive Web Apps.

Ionic is a leader in enterprise app development. Thousands of enterprise customers use Ionic to build mission-critical apps for their customers, both external and internal.

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