Thanks for clarifying. I will be looking into Lua from this standpoint.
Now for a separate question -- do you find MOAI practical for complex mobile apps? Is it one of the most productive ways to build cross-platform mobile apps? If not, why not?
(I came across MOAI a while back and wondered this. Would be good to get an opinion from someone with hands-on experience).
Personally, I'm 100% a raving MOAI fanboix, I can't stop promoting it as a neat way to develop cross-platform apps.
Okay, its not a way to get a native app developed - other frameworks are better for that, although I'm hesitant to recommend any.
MOAI itself is geared towards games, and gaming-style user interfaces. This means, of course, that you can develop all the standard paradigms for UI that exist in the mobile world, with the benefit (or disadvantage, depending on how you look at it) that it will look and feel the same on all platforms.
I was given the task this year to develop a utility app with MOAI (Rauchfrei Durchstarten - a German-language app to assist smokers with quitting their habit, available in Google Play as well as iOS appstores) and while I wouldn't consider it the prettiest looking app in the world, it was definitely a rewarding experience. The project fell into the "learn on someone elses' dime" angle a little, though, so there was a bit of a controversy over the use of MOAI for this project by the company that requested it. However, the job got done. I'd get it done a lot faster, slicker, and with better results now, if I had to do it again (also, I would definitely not work with the original designer, who didn't understand much of what MOAI can do and enforced a rather bland set of rules on me in their work).
But .. one of the great things about MOAI right now is that there are a lot of 3rd-party frameworks popping up specifically for MOAI, which at face value might seem a little unusual since MOAI itself is supposed to be all you need as a framework - but products such as Hanappe, moaigui, and Rapanui are all frameworks for MOAI which give it advanced features with ease - such as scrolling listviews, buttons, dialogs, menus, etc. All of this on top of a very powerful games system which provides a lot of high-end features (Grids, Tiledmap support, pathfinding, etc.)
If you take the stance that MOAI is a lower-level framework which provides performance and portability in an extremely tight package, then add any of the above frameworks (please use Google to find them, they're easy: "hanappe moai" will get you there..) you may see that MOAI can be built upon with extreme power returns.
On the other hand, if you absolutely have to have a native UI, and the idea of implementing your own characteristic UI elements seems abhorrent, then you might get tripped up a bit. I (almost) did, with the Rauchfrei app, anyway .. in that case I used moaigui to provide form and basic UI elements. From a broader standpoint, it probably would've been better to build the app in HTML5 with Titanium or something .. but again, I wouldn't have learned much MOAI that way. ;)
As for whether MOAI is practical for complex mobile apps, I would say it really depends on your competence level, in general. I would say that MOAI is not something that beginning/slightly-less-than-fully-confident programmers should pick up and try to use, if they are under the gun.
But if you actually like the idea of inventing new paradigms and delivering them in a cross-platform package, then MOAI can kick some really serious ass. Since most of the mobile GUI these days is derived from gaming-style interfaces, it could be that a MOAI-based app will revolutionize the mobile market soon enough. Its certainly a great gaming toolkit, and in that sense, would make for some nice new paradigms to be invented ..
You've really sold me on this. Just letting you know. This is something that I would have liked to see or bite on for a while now. Didn't know something like this existed already. I haven't heard exactly good things on developing with Marmalade or PhoneGap from friends or HN. This sounds like a much better alternative to both.
Now for a separate question -- do you find MOAI practical for complex mobile apps? Is it one of the most productive ways to build cross-platform mobile apps? If not, why not?
(I came across MOAI a while back and wondered this. Would be good to get an opinion from someone with hands-on experience).