I would like to build the prototype on the same stack as I'll use for the final product to start getting my head around architecture choices and third party libraries to include.
I'm predominantly a web developer, having experience in Ruby on Rails and Django on the backend side of things and having worked with React, Cordova (Phonegap) and Angular. I've built some mobile apps using these technologies, as well as a small mobile app using Kivy.
The app will largely be informational with some data capture and lots of updates pushed to users, probably several times a week.
So based on my experience, I was thinking of going with Django Rest Framework and React Native, as I've built an app with this before a few years ago. But I remember dealing with the state on the UI side being a bit of a pain and was wondering if maybe going with Django, GraphQL (Apollo) and React Native wouldn't be better (even though I don't know GraphQL yet).
Do I have better options? Would my suggested stack be able to eventually handle the workload? Obviously the API will have to sit on some solid cloud infrastructure as well.
We tried GraphQL, it added a lot of complexity on the backend that you don’t really need
We like to keep things simple, so we avoided state management libraries and all we needed was https://github.com/async-library/react-async
We also liked onesignal to manage push notifications
It seems like there is a strong productivity gain from using rails here since it’s extremely productive and you can make simple wrapper apps to release to the Play and App Store that really just wrap the web view.
The biggest gain is obviously reusing most of the web app across three different platforms, and the ability to add native navigation and interaction as needed, later. You also avoid needing a big javascript library.
If you feel bad about all the boilerplate code you need to write in server side. There are many node libs/blackbox services that can help you, such as prisma, hasura. You can also take a look at a lightweight library that makes your life easier when building GraphQL server: https://github.com/charlie0077/graphql-server-crud/
I am the author of that library.
or, if you want to be more independent
React Native and FeathersJS