Module federation has been one of the most popular topics in development lately. People love the way it allows teams to develop applications independently and integrate them all into a single final application. While that seems good for the web, how could Module Federation look in a mobile native application? Let’s get the elephant out of the room first. The whole point of module federation is that teams can deploy their applications independently, but native apps have their bundles and code shipped holistically with the app. Even if they didn’t, having the user wait or be unable to load your app in bad or no connectivity would lead to terrible UX. Before going down this path, you need careful thought and a really good reason. So let’s start with a use case. One of our large enterprise clients has a WYSIWYG editor for NativeScript, complete with their own native components library.…