The first-generation low-code platforms required considerable adaptations and months of development in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Gartner expects that by 2024, low-code/no-code automation will account for 65% of all app development.
Low-code technologies make it simple for both developers and non-developers to engage with code. Visual modeling and drag-and-drop interfaces are used in these. The technologies are preferred by enterprise customers with some programming skills who wish to speed up automation initiatives. Non-developers can also design forms, data-collection applications, business procedures, and custom user interfaces for customers using little code.