GUI libraries

Xavier Bigand flamaros.xavier at gmail.com
Mon Dec 2 11:09:26 PST 2013


Le 02/12/2013 08:42, Jacob Carlborg a écrit :
> On 2013-11-28 21:54, Xavier Bigand wrote:
>
>> Yep, that the goal, having applications with a real personality. I don't
>> think it's an issue especially when application is full screen and
>> respect pictographs (icons and texts) standards,...
>>
>> Having custom UI can help applications to improve ergonomic with
>> dedicated behaviors when it's needed.
>>
>> D itself isn't limited to one policy, you can do objects or not,... the
>> only things that is important is to let a strong default couple of style
>> and ergonomic without adding complexity for users want do some custom
>> stuff.
>>
>>
>> What is native on windows ?
>>   - Win32
>>   - Winforms
>>   - Qt Widgets (that is near Win32)?
>>
>> And on linux ?
>>   - GTK (with gnome and KDE)
>>   - Qt QML (KDE future)
>>
>> A native UI isn't necessary considered as the standard one, maybe Qt
>> have a chance to be a real standard (on many platforms).
>
> I would say that the native GUI is the one that is installed by default
> and you can always rely on being available. Sure, that may mean multiple
> native GUI's.
>

I think you are right


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