Hi John, IMHO,
if ("You already have a Qt desktop application or planning it" && "You are planning to use Qt beyond GUI - Networking, Containers, QString, etc.") { "Yes, it is worth to do it." } else { Since it is still rather buggy, be ready to spend your time on workarounds. Since many features are out and some are looking not native, you will write a lot of native code. Thus, it could be a time consuming overkill for you. A good alternative could be to separate business logic to some Generic Layer and Presentation Layer in the native-written code. } Hope this has help. Regards, Robert On Sat, Jul 11, 2015 at 7:22 PM, John C. Turnbull <ozem...@ozemail.com.au> wrote: > Thanks very much Jason for this helpful info. > > When I asked this question, I was referring to the times you want to embed a > web browser in your app. I believe in both iOS and Android you are forced to > use the native browser so how can you integrate that effectively into your > scene graph if you wanted to rotate it, move it and resize it or apply some > effects on it? > > 7. How does Qt integrate the native mobile browser in such a way that the > standard effects and transformations that can be applied to other Qt objects > be applied? > > > -jct > > _______________________________________________ > Interest mailing list > Interest@qt-project.org > http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest > _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest