React
Web portal interface for app builder workflows.
App builder platform
App builder portal that lets non-technical users assemble app modules for PWA, Expo, and React Native products.

One X Platform is an app builder portal for assembling app modules across PWA, Expo, and React Native products.
The work combined web app development, backend APIs, real-time functionality, cloud deployment concerns, and product builder workflows.
One X Platform targets non-technical creators, so the core challenge was turning app assembly into a visual, module-based workflow. Users compose products from configurable building blocks that can target PWA, Expo, and React Native outputs, which meant the web portal had to translate friendly configuration choices into structured app definitions.
The full-stack work spanned a React front end for the builder interface, Node.js APIs for saving and serving configuration, MongoDB for persistence, Socket.io for real-time builder and operational updates, and AWS infrastructure for deployment. The result is a portal where product structure, modules, and settings stay in sync across the build pipeline.
This case study documents One X Platform as a app builder platform project with a focus on the product behavior, user-facing workflows, and technical delivery considerations that matter when building a similar application. The work is listed under the role of Full Stack Developer, so the page is written around practical implementation responsibilities rather than a generic showcase description.
The main product scope centers on Module-based app builder workflow for non-technical users. Visual configuration that targets PWA, Expo, and React Native outputs. Real-time updates for builder and operational workflows. Backend APIs and database persistence for saved app configuration. These details show the type of screen design, state management, data handling, integration work, and release planning required for the project. For portfolio visitors comparing mobile and web products, this gives a clear view of what had to work in the real application, not just the visual surface.
The delivery stack includes React, Redux, Sass, AWS, REST, Node.js. In this project, the technical choices were tied to the product requirements: reliable user journeys, maintainable UI components, predictable data flow, integration with external services where needed, and support for production behavior across the target devices or web surfaces.
The screenshots, links, features, and technology notes on this page are kept together so search engines, clients, and collaborators can understand the project in context. The goal is to make the page useful for people evaluating experience in app builder platform, app development, full-stack delivery, and product engineering work.
The technology stack below summarizes the major implementation areas behind One X Platform. Each item is included because it connects directly to a product need such as cross-platform delivery, backend data exchange, payment or account behavior, app-store readiness, localization, real-time updates, or internal workflow management.
Web portal interface for app builder workflows.
Backend APIs for platform behavior and data operations.
Storage for app builder configuration and records.
Real-time communication support.
Cloud infrastructure support for product delivery.
Structured styling for the builder portal interface.
Service layer connecting the builder UI to backend operations.

The engagement scope for One X Platform was shaped by the product category, the target users, and the operational expectations behind the app. A app builder platform needs more than screens: it needs stable navigation, clear feedback states, resilient data loading, accessible content structure, and enough technical flexibility to evolve as product requirements change.
From an engineering perspective, the important work is connecting the visible product experience to the systems behind it. For One X Platform, that means treating features such as Module-based app builder workflow for non-technical users. Visual configuration that targets PWA, Expo, and React Native outputs. Real-time updates for builder and operational workflows. as complete workflows with edge cases, loading states, error handling, and release implications. These are the details that make a portfolio project useful for judging delivery quality.
This page is based on the project information available in the portfolio archive and focuses on the implementation scope that can be described publicly. The page also links to related projects that share technologies or product patterns, making it easier to compare similar React Native, Expo, Next.js, dashboard, ecommerce, marketplace, and mobile app work.