On четверг, 13 апреля 2017 г. 08:24:39 EEST Randall O'Reilly wrote: > In the context of all this recent discussion about modernizing Qt to > accommodate updates to C++, has anyone given any thought to the radical > idea of creating a brand new product using Go? Go (golang) is rapidly > gaining in popularity, and seems to embody everything that is great about > Qt (simplicity, elegance, strong concern for readability, etc), and it has > many features of Qt built directly into the language (reflection, i.e., > moc, goroutines and channels for signal / slot functionality). One of its > main limitations is lack of a dominant, fully-featured GUI toolkit. There > are existing bindings to Qt and QML, but it seems like creating a brand new > native GUI framework in the Qt mold could be a great opportunity to make a > huge impact on a language that has a bright future. All the lessons > learned as Qt has evolved over the years could be consolidated into a fresh > new design, based fundamentally on a 2D & 3D scenegraph, using OpenGL ( / > Vulkan, etc) as the underlying renderer, or something like that… Obviously > a huge undertaking, but something that could produce transformative effects > for future programmers (whereas it seems that continued improvements to the > C++ product are likely to be much more incremental). Maybe some funding > from Google could be obtained to support such an endeavor? > > - Randy
Why Go? Isn't Rust more close to the C++ niche? _______________________________________________ Development mailing list [email protected] http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/development
