![]() The Developer Edition allows us to extend Experience Builder with our own widgets, templates, and themes. If you need customise your web application further, the ArcGIS Experience Builder Developer Edition could help you with that too. To get a preview of your page just toggle the live view switch, then change the target device to preview what it looks like on a selection of screen sizes. Like Web AppBuilder it automatically supports adaptive design but you also have the option to switch to Custom and create a modified experience for different screen sizes. In my opinion, one of the most powerful things about Experience Builder is that you can configure and create different page layouts for your web experiences, so they perform well on all screen sizes. ![]() As a result, we can build map-centric or non-map apps, and display them on a fixed or scrolling screen, on single or multiple pages. These layout containers can be used to position and organize content side by side in an aligned row or column on a page. For example, you can customise your page layout from scratch using Experience Builder’s page elements - such as the Row or Column widgets. In other words, we don’t have to stick to the layouts of the templates that are provided to us. Unlike Web AppBuilder, Experience Builder also gives us full control of the layout and contents of our web applications. Likewise, Experience Builder also gives us templates we can choose from, to quickly get an application up and running. With Web AppBuilder’s intuitive templates, we can easily create captivating web applications. It is also designed to offer even more flexibility than any of Esri’s other out-of-the-box app builder tools, namely, Web AppBuilder, StoryMaps, and ArcGIS Dashboards. Released earlier this year, Experience Builder takes advantage of modern web development technologies (React, TypeScript, and ArcGIS API for JavaScript 4.x) and allows us to transform data into compelling GIS-centric web applications - without writing a single line of code. If you are like me and require more flexibility, well, fear not! ArcGIS Experience Builder might be able to help you with that. However, I sometimes find myself in a situation thinking, ‘oh I need that real-time monitoring feature from ArcGIS Dashboards’ or ‘I wish I could have a 3D map and a 2D map in my web application’ but limited to the templates given to me. Supported values are default (which will use OpenGL and fall back to ANGLE if OpenGL encounters errors), opengl, and angle.I enjoy creating visually appealing web applications using ArcGIS Web AppBuilder. renderingEngine-Only supported on Windows. ![]() This is intended for applications that need to use actual window system coordinates.
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