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Jasonelle Framework
Wrap your Web App and access native features

What is Jasonelle Framework?

Jasonelle Framework is a specialized iOS development tool designed to bridge web applications with native iOS functionality. It allows developers to convert existing web apps into native iOS applications by wrapping them within a native container. This approach enables access to core iOS features such as deep linking, secure keychain storage, and other native capabilities that are typically unavailable in standard web environments.

The framework supports both local HTML files and remote URLs, with the ability to inject JavaScript files during page loading. It is built with extensibility in mind, allowing developers to customize functionality using Swift, JavaScript, or Objective-C. Jasonelle is open-source under AGPLv3 for free use, with a commercial license option (Mozilla v2) available for business applications.

Features

  • Native Features: Access to iOS native features such as deep links and keychain storage
  • Extendable: Customize functionality using Swift, JavaScript, or Objective-C
  • Local/Server Support: Use local HTML files or remote URLs with JavaScript injection
  • Open Source: Available under AGPLv3 (free) or Mozilla v2 (commercial license)

Use Cases

  • Converting web applications into native iOS apps
  • Adding native iOS features to existing web apps
  • Developing hybrid iOS applications with web technologies
  • Extending web app functionality with native iOS capabilities

Blogs:

  • Best AI tools for Product Photography

    Best AI tools for Product Photography

    Explore top AI tools that can elevate your product photography, helping you enhance images, streamline workflows, and create professional visuals with ease.

  • Top 6 AI note-taking tools for 2026: in-person, online, and hybrid use cases

    Top 6 AI note-taking tools for 2026: in-person, online, and hybrid use cases

    Most AI note-taking lists are really lists of meeting bots, which join your video call and transcribe it. That's useful, but it's half the picture. Decisions happen in hallway conversations, client dinners, on-site visits, and hybrid rooms where nobody is on a video link. This guide covers different parts of the note-taking workflow: hardware capture for in-person settings, platform-native tools for online calls, and AI layers for organizing and synthesizing what you've captured. It compares six tools by capture context, workflow fit, pricing, and limitations.

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