No-code
An approach to building software through visual, configuration-driven interfaces that require no traditional programming.
In more detail
No-code tools let people build working software, apps, automations, and integrations, through visual interfaces and configuration rather than by writing code. The promise is to move building capability from a scarce pool of engineers to the much larger group of people who understand the process but cannot program.
No-code trades ceiling for accessibility. It handles a wide range of common needs quickly, but genuinely novel or highly complex requirements can hit the limits of what the visual model expresses. The sweet spot is the large middle ground of useful software that never justified scarce engineering time.
Where this shows up at Ceven
Ceven pushes past visual no-code to plain language: you describe the outcome in words and Ceven builds the workflow, rather than dragging and configuring nodes yourself. It also builds and hosts no-code apps, so the thing you describe can become a working, hosted app without you writing or operating any code, and it is free to start.