Any documentation of using  Cordova or Kivy using a web2py app? Lets say 
the welcome app? may be we can put that in the slice then. I am looking at 
this slice post:

http://www.web2pyslices.com/slice/show/1490/how-to-install-web2py-on-android-for-fun-without-rooting-the-device

What if I have a web2py app running in pythonanywhere and I want to be able 
to just link it to that?


On Tuesday, January 12, 2016 at 9:12:01 AM UTC-5, eric cuver wrote:
>
> you can also do this with web2py you just need to create a webview with 
> Cordova or Kivy with the URL of your mobile website view. Me this is what I 
> do and it works without problems
>
> Le lundi 11 janvier 2016 22:31:58 UTC+1, Alessio Varalta a écrit :
>>
>> Sorry, , you are right. Now i have developed only in Android now in these 
>> day for a project i start to study cordova and is true that you can upload 
>> on Google market this my first time with Hybrid app
>>
>> Il giorno lunedì 11 gennaio 2016 13:17:14 UTC+1, Andrew Buchan ha scritto:
>>>
>>> Just to butt-in on what Richard said:
>>>
>>> "But this kind of app are often not that interresting from user stand 
>>> point... I mean you don't have a good mobile app user experience with them 
>>> most of the time because they to simple that you can just access the real 
>>> web app and it could be even better..."
>>>
>>> That's not really true anymore...
>>>
>>> What you are referring to are hybrid apps, which is essentially a 
>>> mini-website (HTML, JS, CSS) wrapped in a package and rendered in a native 
>>> webview, as opposed to a native app which is built in objective-C or Java.
>>> Hybrid apps can access the phone's features such as camera, battery, 
>>> geolocation, accelerometer etc... So you can do much more than you would by 
>>> accessing a web app in the browser!
>>> Hybrid performance is also more than adequate for most applications, and 
>>> many of today's top apps are hybrid (in fact I challenge you to find out 
>>> which apps on your phone are hybrid and which are native...)
>>>
>>> What's more, with tools like cordova you can target both Android and iOS 
>>> (with caveats) with the same code.
>>> You also get to use the latest Javascript frameworks, such as AngularJS 
>>> or ReactJS.
>>>
>>> My advice would be to learn js and angular then go down the ionic (
>>> http://ionicframework.com/) path. I really don't see a case for 
>>> bringing web2py into android.
>>>
>>> Edit:
>>>
>>> What Alessio said isn't true either. You can publish hybrid apps to 
>>> Google play and Apple's app store.
>>>
>>> Here's a useful page:
>>>
>>>
>>> http://www.joshmorony.com/the-step-by-step-guide-to-publishing-a-html5-mobile-application-on-app-stores/
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Monday, January 4, 2016 at 9:20:53 PM UTC, RAGHIB R wrote:
>>>>
>>>>

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