![]() We’ve heard from you that performance is something you care about, and that it’s not always clear how to create performant Compose applications. You can find all changes in the May 2023 release and the latest alpha versions of the Compose libraries. Since we released the first Compose Bill of Materials in October last year, we’ve been working on new features, bug fixes, performance improvements, and bringing Compose to everywhere you build UI: phones, tablets, foldables, watches, TV, and your home screen. Inspired? Start by reading our guide How to Adopt Compose for your Team, which outlines how and where to start, and shows the areas of development where Compose can bring huge added value. It’s great to see how these teams experience faster development cycles, and also feel their UI code is more testable. Our Google Drive team cut their development time nearly in half when using Compose combined with architecture improvements. They also shared that they were interested in adopting Compose “because of its first-class support for design systems and tooling support”. 24% of the top 1000 apps on Google Play have already chosen to adopt Compose! For example, Dropbox engineers told us that they rewrote their search experience in Compose in just a few weeks, which was 40% less time than anticipated, and less than half the time it took the team to build the feature on iOS. In the last year, we’ve seen many companies investigating and choosing Compose to build new features and migrate screens in their production applications. With new tooling and library features, extended Material Design 3, large screen, and Wear OS support, and alpha versions of Compose for homescreen widgets and TV… This is an exciting time! Whether you write an application for smartphones, foldables, tablets, ChromeOS devices, smartwatches, or TVs, Compose has got you covered! We recommend you to use Compose for all new Wear OS, phone and large-screen apps. ![]() It has been almost two years since we launched the first stable version of Jetpack Compose, and since then, we’ve seen its adoption and feature set grow spectacularly. Posted by Jolanda Verhoef, Android Developer Relations Engineer
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