diff --git a/content/docs/en/introduction.md b/content/docs/en/introduction.md index a64dbb8f..797c0f1a 100644 --- a/content/docs/en/introduction.md +++ b/content/docs/en/introduction.md @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ There are many options to build mobile apps. Here are some situations where we t If you have existing Vue experience, there are two big things you’ll need to learn to be successful with NativeScript-Vue. * **Working with the NativeScript CLI**: NativeScript is a framework for building iOS and Android apps, not web apps. You’ll need to learn how a few commands work in the NativeScript CLI, and some basics of how iOS simulators and Android Virtual Devices work. -* **Learning the NativeScript UI components**: Because NativeScript uses native user interface components, HTML controls like `
` and `` don’t exist in NativeScript. Instead you’ll need to learn a [new set of components](https://docs.nativescript.org/ui/components) you can use to render your interfaces. +* **Learning the NativeScript UI components**: Because NativeScript uses native user interface components, HTML controls like `
` and `` don’t exist in NativeScript. Instead you’ll need to learn a [new set of components](https://docs.nativescript.org/ui/overview) you can use to render your interfaces. Don’t worry though. Although there is a learning curve for working with NativeScript-Vue, you should find things much easier than learning iOS or Android from the ground up. After all, you’ll still be writing your source code in JavaScript and Vue.